Great - Someone

Someone Great works because it understands a specific, modern truth: grief and joy are not opposites; they are roommates. You can sob to a Lorde song while simultaneously feeling the most alive you have in years. It is a film for anyone who has ever looked at a person they love and realized that love isn't enough to stop time. It is messy, loud, deeply funny, and unexpectedly profound. It isn't about finding "the one." It’s about realizing, with terrifying clarity, that you have to become "the one" for yourself. And that, the film suggests, is the messiest and most worthwhile journey of all.

At first glance, Someone Great (dir. Jennifer Kaytin Robinson) fits neatly into the "post-breakup comedy" subgenre: a thirtysomething woman, Jenny (Gina Rodriguez), secures her dream job, promptly gets dumped by her long-term boyfriend, and decides to cram a lifetime of catharsis into one wild, final night in New York City with her two best friends. But to dismiss it as just another hangover movie with a feminist sheen is to miss its profound, almost anthropological exploration of a specific, terrifyingly relatable moment: the end of an era. Someone Great

The film’s title comes directly from the LCD Soundsystem lyric: Someone Great works because it understands a specific,

In the lexicon of modern pop culture, certain phrases transcend their origin to become shorthand for a specific, universal human experience. "Someone Great" is one of those phrases. It is messy, loud, deeply funny, and unexpectedly profound

The song contains the lines: