With an effortless handle on the passage of time and generously observed details, 'Another Day' feels gentle and immersive even when it briefly errs on the side of didacticism.
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Courtesy of Studiocanal From Billy Wilder’s “The Lost Weekend” to the Sandra Bullock-starrer “28 Days” and beyond, cinema has a long tradition of substance abuse and recovery stories. There is something inherently cinematic and moving about a struggling person’s by-the-bootstraps journey to healing, with a lifetime’s worth of trials and tribulations. Just two years ago, Nora Fingscheidt’s tough but ultimately restorative “The Outrun” emerged as one of the best in this subgenre, showing both the all-consuming chaos of alcoholism with its unruly structure, and the serenity of the one-day-at-a-time mindset. More tame in its nature but still powerful, writer-director Jeanne Herry’s 2026 Cannes Competition entry “Another Day” is an addiction drama that is honest, patient and deceptively understated when it doesn’t err on the side of didacticism.
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