Preparation for the Next Life

2025

Action / Drama

2
Rotten Tomatoes Critics - Certified Fresh 97% · 34 reviews
Rotten Tomatoes Audience - Upright 97%
IMDb Rating 5.9/10 10 1127 1.1K

Director

Top cast

Fred Hechinger as Skinner
Michelle Fang as Angela
Sharon Gee as Zhang Zhuojin
Clem Cheung as Kitchen Boss
720p.WEB 1080p.WEB
1.04 GB
1280*536
English 2.0
R
us  
23.976 fps
1 hr 56 min
Seeds 14
2.14 GB
1920*804
English 5.1
R
us  
23.976 fps
1 hr 56 min
Seeds 46

Movie Reviews

Reviewed by teufreitas 6 / 10

A Slow-Burning Portrait of Precarity and Desire

"Preparation for the Next Life" is a romantic drama about a Uyghur immigrant trying to survive in the impersonal vastness of New York and an American veteran marked by his military past that becomes an intimate portrait of two lives that find support in each other. The film explores immigration, relationships, labor conditions, mental health and the weight of memory with sensitivity, finding strength in the way their connection grows out of small encounters, shared workouts, empty bars and conversations that swing between vulnerability, frustration and anger.This attention to the everyday gives the film a very patient, almost observational rhythm. For me, this was the main issue: the narrative spends long stretches reinforcing atmosphere and repeating routines, which does not always push the story forward and can feel a bit dispersive. Still, for those who appreciate more contemplative approaches, it may resonate more deeply.When it circles back to the elements that truly define its world, such as precarity, the search for belonging and the effort to believe in a better life, it regains much of its emotional force. The performances by Sebieye Behtiyar and Fred Hechinger, delivered with sincerity and vulnerability, bring us back when the rhythm falters.
Reviewed by aboyahya-80790 4 / 10

Prayer scene and Imam scene

There are millions of Muslims in America, thousands of whom work in film and television. Millions of minutes of prayer footage are available on YouTube, and there's artificial intelligence you could ask. So why are these prayer scenes so ridiculous?Where are the prayer rows? Women don't dress for prayer like this, and this isn't how they prostrate and bow. Furthermore, the imam looks like she's sitting with her husband, not the imam. An imam doesn't sit in a gathering with a woman on the same sofa to sip tea; that's a grave sin and cannot be tolerated.
Reviewed by brentsbulletinboard 4 / 10

Unconvincing

An essential element of any love story is chemistry between the lead characters, even if it takes an unconventional form. Regrettably, however, that's exactly what's missing in director Bing Liu's debut narrative feature, based on the novel by Atticus Lish. Told in the form of a narrated letter/journal entry to her late film, the film chronicles the unlikely love story of Aishe (Sebiye Behtiyar), an ambitious, sharp-witted twentysomething Uyghur woman who illegally immigrates to the US, and Skinner (Fred Hechinger), a troubled young American soldier who just returned stateside after three tours of duty in the Middle East and is now apparently unsuccessfully battling PTSD. They meet by chance in New York, where Aishe toils to make ends meet working long hours in a Chinatown restaurant and Skinner tries to sort out his life and his mental state. Together they embark on a rollercoaster romance with a series of breakups and reconciliations as Aishe tries to decide on marriage or a life of solitude, peace of mind and independence, all the while staying ahead of immigration authorities, and Skinner seeks to find a stable existence that may or may not involve the love of his life, depending on his mood, focus and ever-changing inclinations for a steady, traditional relationship. To be honest, the basic premise behind this release is inherently something of a stretch, made worse by a narrative that becomes meandering and redundant after a time. But the bigger issue here is that I never bought the sincerity of the connection between the protagonists, right from the moment they met and at virtually every turn during the course of their on-again/off-again partnership. The reason? Despite her inexperience with romance, Aishe seems far too smart and determined to chart the course of her life to put up with Skinner's unpredictability and capriciousness. In fact, after their first emotionally tense confrontation, I was astounded by their subsequent reconciliation, given that she seems like the type who would have walked away and not looked back without a second thought. Granted, an immigration-driven marriage might resolve some of the issues of her legal status in the US, but with Skinner? It's true that she has an apparently deep sense of compassion for his condition, but, being the fiercely headstrong individual that she is, I can't see that empathy being enough in itself to make her want to stay with him on a long-term basis. What's more, Aishe's back story often feels incomplete, and Skinner's is even more nonexistent, an aspect of the story that makes their actions and responses all the more perplexing at times. In all, this offering is half-baked and implausible across the board, making for a screen romance that's unengaging and unrealistic, one not worth the time.
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