Kate is a young woman who has a habit of making bad decisions, and her last date with disaster occurs after she accepts work as Santa's elf for a department store. However, after she meets Tom there, her life takes a new turn.
This movie contains 21 potentially triggering events.
(Not in the typical sense. However, we're told by the doctor that Kate's mother, who wants something to help her sleep, that she's already had pretty much every kind of medication the doctor could think of.)
The main character drinks a lot, usually to excess and especially when she’s upset. Other characters point this out but she makes no effort to drink less.
Kate drinks to drown her emotions, and she does get more than tipsy, but it's not extreme, and I don't think she's actually suffering from alcoholism... With my limited insight, I don't know if it's abuse as such.
In the beginning of the movie, a rather brief scene reveals that a man is cheating (at least on this one occasion) on his wife or girlfriend, as she comes home unexpectedly and finds the other woman naked in their home. Neither of the couple is a main character, and we don't see the aftermath.
Yes, there's a clown named Klaus who shows up in the street outside the store more than once and interacts with Kate. He's also there at the benefit show towards the end.
It could be interpreted this way, but it’s more wholesome / bittersweet than scary. Without spoiling it, a woman gains access to thoughts and memories that aren’t hers.
There are multiple references to the lead character being “sick” that might make someone with emetophobia nervous - but don’t worry, it’s not that kind of sick.
I don't know enough to answer with certainty... There are two female cops who show up a couple of times. They're portrayed in a somewhat positive light (one more so than the other), but they're not saints or heroes, just regular people.
Character falls to the ground and hyperventilates when she finds out bad news. The same character is shown having an anxiety attack on a stretcher in hospital (close up of her face). It’s a tense scene for someone with health anxiety.
Not explicitly, but in an extended sequence a character talks about how she is a ‘mess’ and feels like her life isn’t worth living. It’s very sad and could affect people who’ve dealt with similar thoughts.
Two people walk through a very narrow alley (we're specifically told that it's London's narrowest alley). Triggered me. There's also a somewhat claustrophobic hallway when Tom takes Kate home to his place.
No explicitly disordered eating, but a character’s bad diet, especially in relation to her health, is mentioned. Her well-meaning mother tells her to eat more and says she looks ‘like a skeleton’. Her family is annoyed with her when she refuses cake at dinner.
A baby is born between the beginning and the end of the movie, but it's way off-screen. We just see the parents expecting it, and then later on, the baby is there.
It gets very sad before the end, but the end is pretty happy, several things having changed for the better, and several people feeling happier than they did before. There's dancing and singing and smiling and laughing and cheering and hugging, but the recent sad part may still linger for the viewer. On the whole, I'd say it's bittersweet.