Anemone
Directed by: Ronan Day-Lewis
Written by: Daniel Day-Lewis, Ronan Day-Lewis
Starring: Daniel Day-Lewis, Sean Bean, Samantha Morton
Release Date: October 3rd, 2025
Rating: ★★★★☆
Daniel Day-Lewis returns to the screen in Anemone, a powerful drama of brotherhood, trauma, and emotional reckoning. Read Reelscope’s Catch-Up 2025 review exploring his intense comeback performance alongside Sean Bean and Samantha Morton.
The Return of Daniel Day-Lewis
If anyone doubted that Daniel Day-Lewis had lost his love for acting — or the fiery passion that made him one of cinema’s greatest performers — Anemonedispels that thought within minutes. One unbroken gaze from Day-Lewis to his co-star Sean Bean is enough to remind audiences just how locked in he can be. The passion, the precision, and the quiet devastation are all still there as he confronts trauma, family history, and undiagnosed PTSD in a film that feels both intimate and haunting.
A Cabin in the Woods and the Ghosts Within
Anemone unfolds at a cabin on the border between England and Ireland. The woods are deep, silent, and isolating — home to Ray Stoker (Day-Lewis), a man who’s long ago chosen solitude over society. His life of cutting wood and listening to a battered old radio is disrupted when his estranged brother Jem (Sean Bean) arrives unannounced.
Neither brother says much at first, but through silence and small gestures, we feel the decades of resentment, guilt, and pain between them. We soon learn Jem’s visit has purpose: Ray’s estranged son — whom Jem raised with Ray’s former wife (Samantha Morton) — is in crisis. Jem believes only Ray can reach him before tragedy strikes.
Brothers, Trauma, and Masculinity
Ronan Day-Lewis’s direction keeps the focus tight — two men trapped by their past, surrounded by woods that feel like an extension of their minds. The conversations that unfold over a few days are tense, raw, and uncomfortably real.
Ray is a man raised in violence and silence — where emotion was weakness and trauma was buried under work and war. He’s lived by the belief that pain is best endured, not shared. Jem’s visit forces those walls to crack, and though Anemone doesn’t force catharsis, it leads us right to its threshold.
The film’s final image — an open doorway — invites us to decide whether Ray will finally step forward or remain trapped in the past. It’s an ending that feels both haunting and hopeful.
A Meta Edge: Sean Bean and the Power of Expectation
There’s a fascinating meta tension in seeing Sean Bean play Jem. Known for dying in many of his most famous roles, Bean carries an unspoken sense of danger into every frame. When the camera lingers on Day-Lewis chopping wood with an ax, it’s hard not to imagine violence lurking beneath their reunion. The movie never indulges this possibility — but it adds a layer of suspense that heightens the unease of their fragile peace.
Daniel Day-Lewis, Unmatched
Day-Lewis remains one of the few actors who can make silence feel symphonic. A late monologue — delivered with stomach-churning imagery and gut-wrenching honesty — cements why his return matters. In lesser hands, it might have tipped into shock or melodrama. Instead, it becomes a moment of pure, painful truth.
Sean Bean gives one of his best performances in years, grounding Jem’s guilt and compassion in subtlety. Samantha Morton, in limited screen time, provides the emotional anchor that ties the entire family’s pain together.
A Confident Directorial Debut
Ronan Day-Lewis’s direction is understated and confident. For his first feature, he resists any temptation to over-style the material. His camera lingers in the right places, capturing faces rather than landscapes, though the cinematography still finds haunting beauty in foggy woods and the lonely gray of a coastal beach.
It’s a debut that suggests both respect for performance and confidence in mood. He knows the story doesn’t need embellishment — it only needs truth.
Final Thoughts
Anemone is an emotional excavation of masculinity, guilt, and generational trauma, powered by a magnetic Daniel Day-Lewis performance. Whether this is a brief return or the start of a new chapter, it’s proof that his craft — and his fire — remain undiminished.