Dan Levy goes on a new journey in Good Grief trailer

The Schitt's Creek alum's feature-length directorial debut premieres January 5 on Netflix

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Dan Levy goes on a new journey in Good Grief trailer
Dan Levy in Good Grief Photo: Netflix

Ever since 2020, the amount of unprocessed grief we’ve all had to carry within us is almost hard to comprehend. Still, Dan Levy is giving it his best shot in his feature-length directorial debut, Good Grief.

“I lost my grandmother toward the tail end of the pandemic, and I was in a very strange headspace in terms of feeling the weight and the profound sense of tragedy of what the COVID pandemic had done for all of us, while at the same time trying to honor the passing of someone who meant so much to me,” the Schitt’s Creek alum told Entertainment Weekly of the genesis of his upcoming Netflix film. “It was hard for me to feel the specificity of loss when all I was feeling was grief for so long. It was that conversation that really expedited the concept of the movie.”

Good Grief | Official Trailer | Netflix

The film, which Levy describes as a “drama or a dramedy,” sees the director and writer also starring as Marc, a children’s book illustrator living in London. Marc is content with his life, even if he’s often overshadowed by his charismatic husband Oliver (Luke Evans), whose novels have brought him worldwide success. But everything changes when Oliver suddenly dies on the night of the couple’s annual Christmas party, which inspires Marc and his two closest friends Sophie (Ruth Negga) and Thomas (Himesh Patel) to travel to Paris while dealing with the tragedy.

In addition to exploring how we process grief, Levy also wanted the film to highlight the power of friendship and found family. “I feel like the older we get, the more profound our relationships are with our friends and the more complicated they get,” he said. “Sometimes the people that are closest to us, we excuse the most… It’s an uncomfortable conversation to have, and yet that intimacy exists within these friendships.”

Despite its subject matter, the film is far from melancholy. “I had to access the most vulnerable parts of my own self and my relationships in the hopes that they were universal,” Levy said. “I think the level of honesty is still there and a desire to remind people that things are going to be okay.”

Good Grief premieres January 5 on Netflix

21 Comments

  • dsgagfdaedsg-av says:

    I’ve been eagerly awaiting Levy’s next project and hoping that it was something more substantial than co-hosting the Canadian version of British Bake-Off or whatever so I’m looking forward to this. 

  • guy451-av says:

    This is a good reason to reactivate my Netflix account.

  • kingofdoma-av says:

    Headcanon: this is elaborate Peanuts fanfiction. (This is a positive.)

  • colukeh-av says:

    Big fan of a lot of people involved but I’m going to need to be in a really good headspace to watch this. It doesn’t look easy.

  • tedturneroverdrive-av says:

    Dan Levy seems to have joined Steve Carell on the list of “people not interested in being funny any longer.”

    • phleg-o-matic-av says:

      yeah! don’t these clowns know they’re supposed to dance for our amusement until the end of time? dance, monkeys! dance!

    • refinedbean-av says:

      Well yeah, who wants to laugh when instead we could see these guys be maudlin, disappointed, or sad? With at LEAST three different expressions in their repertoire to get those feelings across!

    • vegtam1297-av says:

      I mean, Schitt’s Creek was a lot more than funny. What made it so special was that it was funny while also being so full of heart. Clearly this movie has some humor to it also. It’s just heavier on the drama.

    • adamtrevorjackson-av says:

      he did a speedrun of it, too.

  • disparatedan-av says:

    This will sound insensitive, but I can’t help rolling my eyes when I read about how another movie/ tv show/ game is going to explore grief/ trauma/ mental health. Just feels like there have been a lot of them over the last 6 or 7 years, and what was once brave and different is now hackneyed.

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