Four Good Days Link
Four Good Days is not that movie.
By the end of the four days, whether Molly gets the shot or not is almost beside the point. The film is about the four days themselves. It is about the Tuesday morning where you didn't use. The Wednesday afternoon where you apologized. The Thursday night where you held your mother’s hand because you were too sick to lie.
In the pantheon of films about addiction, we are used to a certain kind of spectacle. We expect the dramatic rock bottom: the stolen heirlooms, the violent outbursts, the screaming matches in the rain, and the triumphant, soaring finale where the protagonist walks out of rehab into a golden sunset. Four Good Days
The film does not offer a cure. It does not offer a miracle. It offers something rarer: a portrait of persistence. It asks the question: How many times can a heart break before it turns to stone?
The clock starts ticking. We are accustomed to seeing Mila Kunis as the witty, sharp-edged best friend or the quirky love interest. In Four Good Days , she is a ghost. Kunis underwent a physical transformation that is shocking, but it is the internal work that stuns. Four Good Days is not that movie
The film hinges on a brutal bargain. There is a new, experimental injection that can block the effects of opioids, but it requires the patient to be completely clean for four consecutive days before administration. Deb agrees to let Molly stay, but only for four days. If Molly uses again, she is out. Forever.
Close delivers a performance defined by exhaustion. Her face is a map of sleepless nights. She has a line that cuts to the core of the family addiction dynamic: “I love you, but I don’t like you anymore.” It is about the Tuesday morning where you didn't use
4.5/5 Watch if you liked: Beautiful Boy , Candy , The Lost Daughter (for the mother-daughter tension).
Directed by Rodrigo García and based on a true story (from Eli Saslow’s 2016 Washington Post article, “How’s Amanda?”), this film is a masterclass in claustrophobic intimacy. Starring Glenn Close and Mila Kunis, the movie strips away the melodrama of addiction to reveal something far more terrifying: the mundane, grinding, soul-crushing reality of loving someone who is actively dying by the milligram.