Looking for a fresh start after a miscarriage, a couple find themselves being gifted the house of their dreams with one caveat - they can never open the cellar door. Whether they can live without knowing triggers shocking consequences.
This movie contains 10 potentially triggering events.
No - we don't see any parent/child interactions - but... well, this one is a bit tricky. Semi-spoiler coming... In the end, we know that a child will be born to parents of which one will psychopathically do absolutely anything to get their way. If it were a real situation, and I knew everything, I would be afraid for the child, since it would most likely be at risk of abuse - emotional, and perhaps physical as well. If you have an issue with manipulative and/or cold-hearted parents (or parental figures), this movie may be triggering towards the end, even though there's no child yet.
Semi-spoiler ------ The obsessive, slighted ex-mistress of a married man won't let go and vindictively tries to ruin his life. At one point, she sneaks around the man's house while his wife is there, unaware.
There's one sudden instance of physical domestic violence towards the end. Most of the movie by far doesn't show an abusive relationship between a domineering, violent person and their suppressed partner. But things change near the end.
We only hear about the alcohol problem in one scene towards the end of the movie, in which the person tells that the addiction ruined his life. We know next to nothing about the person before that; we've only seen him briefly in a scene in which he says a few ominous sentences that aren't about alcohol(ism). If you skip the scene where the main male character visits the previous inhabitant of the house he lives in to get some answers, you should be okay.
We only hear about the alcohol problem in one scene towards the end of the movie, in which the person tells that the addiction ruined his life. We know next to nothing about the person before that; we've only seen him briefly in a scene in which he says a few ominous sentences that aren't about alcohol(ism). If you skip the scene where the main male character visits the previous inhabitant of the house he lives in to get some answers, you should be okay.
It IS shown, in a flashback - intercut with a flashback of the man's wife simultaneously having a miscarriage and desperately trying to reach him by phone.
At one point the woman character leans forwards over a paint can and looks like she’s going to vomit i looked away but my friend said the woman only spat and wasn’t actually vomiting can’t confirm for sure tho