Parents' Guide to All of You

Movie R 2025 98 minutes
All of You movie poster: Imogen Poots hugs Brett Goldstein from behind, smiling, as they look out to sea

Common Sense Media Review

Kat Halstead By Kat Halstead , based on child development research. How do we rate?

age 15+

Near-future romantic drama includes sex, language, drug use.

Parents Need to Know

Why Age 15+?

Any Positive Content?

Parent and Kid Reviews

What's the Story?

In ALL OF YOU, Simon (Brett Goldstein) and Laura (Imogen Poots) have been best friends since university, sharing a deep connection that helps them navigate the ups and downs of young adulthood. When Laura decides to visit Soul Connex, a company offering a scientific test to find your soulmate, their relationship quickly changes when she's paired with nice but "square" partner Lukas (Steven Cree). As their lives connect, separate, and intertwine over the years, Simon and Laura realize their love for each other is strong, even if it's not scientifically proven.

Is It Any Good?

Our review:
Parents say : Not yet rated
Kids say : Not yet rated

Debut feature director William Bridges re-teams with co-writer Goldstein after the success of their similarly themed 2020 TV anthology Soulmates for this thoughtful exploration of relationships. All of You is another near-future romance with a sci-fi edge that refuses to oversimplify the complexities of love in the modern world. Goldstein's performance aches with a sense of want, need, and desire, made all the more difficult because his love isn't unrequited, it just seems impossible. It's not hard to empathize with Poots's character either, and she's not made the "bad guy" as she struggles to figure out a path to happiness, while loving two men in very different ways. It's an age-old, star-crossed tale, and much comes down to the chemistry between Goldstein and Poots, and the realism of a situation where two paths look destined yet don't quite fall into place. It certainly confirms Bridges and Goldstein as collaborators to watch, and the two lead actors as compelling in their own right.

Talk to Your Kids About ...

  • Families can talk about how the idea of soulmates was explored in All of You. Do you believe they exist? If you could choose to find yours with a scientific test, would you? What might be gained and what might be lost in the process?

  • What romantic stereotypes did the movie include? What scenes or situations felt familiar to the romance genre? Did anything feel different or unusual?

  • How were sex and relationships portrayed? Was it affectionate? Respectful? Parents, talk to your teens about your own values regarding sex and relationships.

  • Discuss the strong language used. Did it seem necessary or excessive? What did it contribute to the movie?

  • How were drinking, smoking, and drugs portrayed? Were there consequences? Did it glamorize them?

Movie Details

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All of You movie poster: Imogen Poots hugs Brett Goldstein from behind, smiling, as they look out to sea

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