Movie Background

If I Had Legs I'd Kick You

With her life crashing down around her, Linda attempts to navigate her child's mysterious illness, her absent husband, a missing person, and an increasingly hostile relationship with her therapist.

Director(s)

Mary Bronstein

Kate Branom

Carly Krim

Gordon Bell

Jasmin Osean Thomas

Callum Stembridge

Cast & Crew

Ivy Wolk

Ivy Wolk

Diana

Christian Slater

Christian Slater

Father

Conan O'Brien

Conan O'Brien

Therapist

Ronald Bronstein

Ronald Bronstein

-

Rose Byrne

Rose Byrne

Linda

Josh Pais

Josh Pais

Brad

Carly Krim

Carly Krim

-

Daniel Zolghadri

Daniel Zolghadri

Stephen

Delaney Quinn

Delaney Quinn

Child

Lark White

Lark White

Vanessa

Danielle Macdonald

Danielle Macdonald

Caroline

J. Alan Scott

J. Alan Scott

-

A$AP Rocky

A$AP Rocky

James

Manu Narayan

Manu Narayan

Landlord

Jodi Michelle Pynn

Jodi Michelle Pynn

-

Mary Bronstein

Mary Bronstein

-

Mark Stolzenberg

Mark Stolzenberg

Parking Attendant

Eva Kornet

Eva Kornet

Breathworker

Ella Beatty

Ella Beatty

Kate

Helen Hong

Helen Hong

Eva

Laurence Blum

Laurence Blum

Police Officer

Amy Judd Lieberman

Amy Judd Lieberman

Melanie

Char Sidney

Char Sidney

Nurse

Jason Matthews

Jason Matthews

Puppeteer

Victor Broadley

Victor Broadley

Puppeteer

Kate Branom

Kate Branom

-

Gordon Bell

Gordon Bell

-

Jasmin Osean Thomas

Jasmin Osean Thomas

-

Callum Stembridge

Callum Stembridge

-

Details

GenresDrama
Runtime1h 53 mins
Released on10 Oct 2025
Languageen
Produced InUnited States of America
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Reviews

Brent Marchant

9/10

In an age where life’s everyday challenges can test our wits, becoming overwhelmed is a real possibility when they pile up. Just ask Linda (Rose Byrne), a therapist who struggles to sincerely and sensitively assist her troubled patients. But that’s just the start of her problems. She’s also tending to a sick child (Delaney Quinn), the demands of which are considerable, both from the whiny, often-unappreciative youngster and her annoyingly insistent caregivers. To make matters worse, a burst pipe in the ceiling of her apartment has forced mother and child to move into a hotel, a stay that’s become unexpectedly extended due to the lack of repair work by her inattentive landlord. And, through all of these ordeals, Linda is on her own, given that her unfeeling husband (Christian Slater) is frequently away on business. As a consequence, this palette of issues has forced Linda into therapy herself with a peer counselor (Conan O”Brien), whose incessant indifference not only offers little help, but also tends to exacerbate the stress in her life. Over time, the specific pressures associated with each of these incidents begin to snowball, making coping nearly impossible. And, as time passes, Linda feels as though she’s losing herself and descending into her own personal madness. So what is she to do? That’s what this intense offering from actress-writer-director Mary Bronstein seeks to explore. This exceedingly dark comedy-drama examines what a woman on the edge might go through as the breaking point approaches. There’s an undeniably raw, edgy, realistic quality to this release, one that sometimes makes this a decidedly uncomfortable watch. The barrage of challenges to simply get through the day keeps coming at the protagonist (and, hence, viewers) relentlessly, presented here in nonstop fashion at breakneck speed. And it seems that, no matter what good faith efforts Linda makes to resolve her dilemmas, they’re never enough, often exposing her to petty, undue criticism that, in turn, prompt undue, unfair and unfounded accusations of blame and shame. All of these foregoing attributes are routinely intensified by the picture’s regular use of macabre comic relief, serving up laughs about incidents and subjects that many of us might genuinely feel guilty chuckling about. But this film’s real standout asset is the superb performance turned in by Byrne, easily the best work of her career and handily worthy of awards consideration, capably backed by Quinn, O’Brien and other cast members in fine supporting portrayals. To be sure, “If I Had Legs I’d Kick You” won’t suit everyone, and even avid cinephiles may at times find their patience, tolerance and sensibilities sufficiently challenged. Nevertheless, this is one of those “sign of the times” pictures that unflinchingly exposes much of what’s wrong with contemporary society and that we’d all be wise to take seriously if we ever hope to see improvement in a world where a lack of compassion, understanding and support are being allowed to run rampant. It’s no wonder that so many of us might feel like kicking back under conditions like this. Indeed, maybe it’s time we should all seek to grow some legs of our own.

CinemaSerf

6/10

Rose Byrne turns in a terrific performance here, but I found the thrust of the plot to be just a bit too much like a contrived horror movie. She is “Linda”, a therapist whose husband is off piloting a boat and whose un-named daughter has some form of undefined illness that is putting huge pressure on her mother. Then, just to add to her woes, a water leak in their apartment turns her ceiling into a Swiss cheese and forces them to take refuge in a rather basic motel. With the sounds of the child’s feeding machine never far from her dreams, “Linda” heads firmly into the realms of a sleep-deprived and booze-induced nervous breakdown that her own psychiatrist (Conan O’Brien) is unable to help with. She is steadily losing the plot, and so are we. Just what is going on with the woman, and with her faceless offspring? At times this is quite an intensely written and potent observation of mental stress and Byrne really does manage to convey her character’s increasing hysteria quite compellingly, but there are too many pieces of the puzzle missing for us to make any meaningful assessment or to do really much more than recoil from her predicament. A little sense of the proceedings is made right at the very end, but by then I had become too lost, and actually disinterested, in it’s maelstrom of despair. The film does convey quite a powerful message about the importance of listening, and of the frustrations and dangers of not listening, but too many of the ancillary characters are either absent, undercooked or just simplistically portrayed - personally or via the telephone, as little more than excuses for her character to present us with someone ostensibly abandoned by those who might and should want to care for her. In the end it came down to a lack of plausibility for me as it built to a conclusion that became a little more expected as we got to know more about “Linda”. It is worth a look, but really only for a Byrne at the top of her game.

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