I watched this about a month ago, and it’s one of those films that has stayed with me. I couldn’t wait to watch it after seeing the trailer. It felt like something I was going to connect with straight away, and it didn’t disappoint.
Brett Goldstein shows a completely different side of himself here. Known for Roy Kent in Ted Lasso and the more vulnerable Louis in Shrinking, he brings a quieter, more romantic energy to this role, effortlessly charming, funny, and easy to root for as the story follows his perspective. You can see where his character is heading, and you find yourself wanting him to get there, to be happy, which makes the whole journey feel grounded and real.
Goldstein and Imogen Poots feel completely natural together as Simon and Laura. Their dynamic carries the film, and it is easy to see why the trailer describes them as having “electric chemistry”.
A thoughtful take on love, timing, and whether one person can really be your everything.
All of You
This is a romantic drama with a science fiction edge, built around the idea of a test that can identify your one true soulmate.
Simon and Laura have been close since college, but never quite crossed the line into something more. When Laura takes the test and is matched with someone else, their lives move in different directions, while something unresolved continues to sit just beneath the surface.
Over time, relationships form, paths diverge, and then reconnect. What follows is less about big moments and more about the slow build of emotional tension, the kind that comes from timing never quite lining up.
What makes it work is how grounded it feels despite the premise. The idea of a scientifically determined soulmate could easily feel forced, but instead it quietly amplifies a much more familiar question, what do you do with a love that arrives at the wrong time?
It leans into that tension rather than resolving it neatly. There is no easy answer here, just the weight of choices, and the sense that some relationships exist more in possibility than reality.
It’s reflective, a little bittersweet, and stays with you long after it finishes.