All Too Well: The Short Film is a film adaptation of the 10-minute version of the song "All Too Well" by the American singer-songwriter Taylor Swift.[1] It also functions as a music video for the song.[2] A literary quote from the Chilean poet Pablo Neruda—"Love is so short, forgetting is so long", from his poem "Puedo Escribir Los Versos"—opens the film.[note 1] The story chronicles the relationship of two doomed lovers, Her and Him, compounded by an age gap.[4] "All Too Well (10 Minute Version)" plays throughout the film, except during a dialogued conflict between Her and Him.[5] The song details a blooming romance between two people, and its subsequent dissolution and resulting heartbreak.[6] The nearly 15-minute film is divided into seven chapters—"An Upstate Escape", "The First Crack in the Glass", "Are You Real?", "The Breaking Point", "The Reeling", "The Remembering", and the epilogue "Thirteen Years Gone"—describing the relationship between Her and Him through various phases.[7]
The story starts with the couple lying in bed together, Her mesmerized by Him. They venture into upstate New York in a car. Her leaves her red scarf at a house belonging to Him's sister. Their relationship takes a turn at a dinner party, where Him ignores his girlfriend with a hand gesture, as he is busy catching up with his friends, making Her uncomfortable. They fight afterwards; Him is arrogant and dismissive, while a distraught Her is heartbroken but still wants to stay with Him. He apologizes and kisses Her to end the argument, and they dance in the refrigerator light. Him starts to distance himself from Her, eventually breaking up with her. A devastated Her weeps in bed, ignoring his phone calls. Her is seen typing on her typewriter and crumpling paper sheets. A montage shows Her alone at parties and sorrowful on her 21st birthday.[note 3] Him's life carries on as he walks alone down a Brooklyn street, recalling some of the happier moments in his relationship with Her. The film then jumps 13 years into the future, where Her has become an author and released her book All Too Well,[note 4] presumably detailing the heartache she went through with Him. She reads from the book to an audience in a packed bookstore. Outside the store, an older Him stands in the snow, watching Her through the window, wearing the same scarf she left behind 13 years ago.
Conception and production
Sadie Sink (left) and Dylan O'Brien (right), both of whom were Swift's first choice to play the leads, instantly accepted the offer.
Swift said she wanted tell a story about "girlhood calcifying into this bruised adulthood" with the film.[17] On Late Night with Seth Meyers, she said she cast Sink and O'Brien because they were the only two people she imagined playing the roles, noting that she was a fan of O'Brien's works and that she would not have proceeded with making the film had Sink turned down the offer. Swift explained that she likes "working with friends or people who I think would be excited about working with me" and added that she was "just blown away by what [Sink and O'Brien] did—they went out and left it all on the field".[18] Sink stated she accepted Swift's offer without hesitation as she was a fan of Swift and was also interested in playing a "more rounded and mature" role while portraying her Stranger Things character Max Mayfield during production of the series' fourth season.[19]Stranger Things director Shawn Levy makes a cameo appearance as the father of Sink's character in the short film.[20] Swift further revealed that Sink and O'Brien "were so electric and [improvising] a lot of what they were doing that we just couldn't take the camera off [them]".[7] At the end of the film, Swift played an older version of Sink's character.[21]
Release and promotion
In June 2021, Swift announced that her re-recorded album, Red (Taylor's Version), a re-recording of her fourth studio album Red (2012), would be released on November 19, 2021; the release date was later moved up to November 12.[22] It contains both the re-recorded version of the track "All Too Well" and its 10-minute uncut version as a bonus track "from the vault".[23][24] On November 5, 2021, Good Morning America revealed a teaser for the short film.[25][26] The teaser featured a vintage car driving down on a quiet road surrounded by autumnal trees, as well as the names of the cast members.[11]All Too Well: The Short Film is a dramatized account of the incidents and dynamics of the relationship described in the song.[27] It is about "an effervescent, curious young woman who ends up completely out of her depth", stated Swift.[28] She described it as an expression of her gratitude to her fans for their reception to the song "All Too Well" over the years.[29]
The film's world premiere took place on November 12 at the AMC Theatres in Lincoln Square, New York City[30] with handpicked fans among those who attended.[27] Each audience member received an autographed movie poster and a custom packet of tissues.[31] Swift performed "All Too Well (10 Minute Version)" in the theatre after the screening.[32] The film was later released on the same day on YouTube, 19 hours after the album's release at midnight.[33] It had a limited theatrical release in major cities.[34]
A video of behind the scenes from the short film was released on December 8, 2022.[36]
Reception
Commercial performance
Following its release to YouTube, the film was the number-one trending video on the platform with over 14 million views.[12] It amassed 32 million views in its first three days.[37] The short film helped its source material, "All Too Well (10 Minute Version)", debut atop the Billboard Hot 100 chart, garnering Swift her eighth number-one song in the US, and the longest song ever to top the chart—a feat recognized in Guinness World Records.[38] As of December 2023, the film has 94 million views on YouTube.[39]
Critical response
All Too Well: The Short Film received acclaim from film critics,[40][41][1] with particular emphasis on Swift's vision as a filmmaker.[42]Variety's Ramin Setoodeh dubbed the short film "a music video on steroids meets a Noah Baumbach movie".[2] Brittany Spanos of Rolling Stone called it a "dramatic and moving" film that "digs deep into heartache and scarf lore".[43] Rhian Daly of NME said the film underscores "the emotional power of [Swift's] storytelling" with "devastating cinematography" and "electric performances" by Sink and O'Brien.[44]Collider's Ryan Louis Mantilla reported that "Sink and O'Brien bring Swift's characters to life with vividly emotional performances telling an incredibly moving tale of love, power, gaslighting, and heartache in the 15-minute film."[45]
Karl Quinn, in his review for The Sydney Morning Herald, complimented the "gorgeously cliched Notebook-style" screenplay, Swift's direction, and the "finely tuned" performances of Sink and O'Brien.[37]Vogue's Sarah Spellings said many of the film's scenes felt like "in-jokes with the audience" and commended the midway dialogue featuring an argument between Sink and O'Brien's characters: "It felt less like a real fight and more like how you describe a fight to your friends later. In other words, it was a depiction of how a fight feels."[46] In USA Today, Patrick Ryan wrote that the film was "operatic in its emotions and scope" and felt the argument scene was "particularly gut-wrenching".[47]Billboard's Paul Grein also praised the argument, saying the writing in the scene is "so vivid that it's easy to see Swift winning an Oscar for screenwriting one day".[5]
Laura Coates, publishing on RogerEbert.com, commended Swift's direction, the "meticulous lighting and eye for production design", Yang's camerawork, and the "electric" chemistry between Sink and O'Brien. Coates highlighted the argument scene as well: "Though the instinct may be to emphasize the volatility of their relationship with quick, jarring cuts, the unflinching persistence of the single take means the viewer is left with nothing to do but squirm and despair as we watch their relationship fall apart before our eyes."[41] In a less favorable review, Renaldo Matadeen of Comic Book Resources described the film as a "powerful character portrait" with "great cinematography and clever pacing", but felt that Swift's appearance near the end as a grown Sink "takes away from the artistic, auteur feel" of the film, preventing it from being a "perfect indie film".[48]
The film briefly had the highest rating on film review site Letterboxd before Parasite (2019) regained the status.[34][12]
Canadian singer Michael Bublé, in the music video for his 2022 single "I'll Never Not Love You", referenced and recreated iconic "love scenes" from various films with his wife, Luisana Lopilato; it included All Too Well: The Short Film, with Bublé as Him and Lopilato as Her.[71]
The Department of English of the Queen's University at Kingston, a public research university in Ontario, Canada, offers a fall semester course titled "Taylor Swift's Literary Legacy (Taylor's Version)", with a syllabus requiring students to analyze many of Swift's works, such as All Too Well: The Short Film, to understand their literary references and sociopolitical relevance in contemporary culture.[72]
Following the success of the short film, Swift was inspired to venture further into filmmaking.[73][74] In December 2022, Searchlight Pictures announced that Swift has written an original script and will direct her debut feature film; details about the cast, plot, and title were withheld "until a later date".[75] She took part in Variety's Directors on Directors series opposite British-Irish filmmaker Martin McDonagh to elucidate her filmmaking approach.[76]
According to Kodak, the short film, which was photographed in 35mm Ektachrome by Yang, contributed to generating an "enormous interest" in the format.[77]
Miss Americana, a documentary about Swift's life and career.
Footnotes
^The poem is popularly known by its English-language title "Tonight I Can Write". The original Spanish-language line of the quote is "Es tan corto el amor, y es tan largo el olvido." Swift previously included the quote in the liner notes of Red (2012).[3]
^At the red carpet premiere, when asked if his character was based on American actor Jake Gyllenhaal, whom the song is speculated to be about, O'Brien said that his character's name is Brandon.[8][9]
^Her is also seen in her bed wearing a plaid shirt that Him once wore during their trip upstate.[3]
^ abPooley, Jack (September 17, 2022). "20 Movies That Will Win Oscars In 2023". WhatCulture. Archived from the original on September 17, 2022. Retrieved September 17, 2022. The short, starring Sadie Sink and Dylan O'Brien as an embattled couple, received strong acclaim upon release [...]