Viewer Rating
Combines user and critic ratings from four sources

Can You Stand The Rain (2025)
Drama. Lifelong friends reunite after the sudden death of their spiritual anchor, a famed children's author, forcing them to confront buried dreams, tensions, and regrets. Directed by and starring Eden Marryshow as one of the friends, with Devale Ellis and Jasmin Walker.
Drama. Lifelong friends reunite after the sudden death of their spiritual anchor, a famed children's author, forcing them to confront buried dreams, tensions, and regrets. Directed by and starring Eden Marryshow as one of the friends, with Devale Ellis and Jasmin Walker.
The film's focus on interpersonal dynamics and individual reflection amid mourning provides no evident alignment with political ideologies, maintaining a neutral perspective. Available descriptions emphasize apolitical emotional narratives without ideological critiques or endorsements.
The film employs a diverse, predominantly Black ensemble to depict bonds of friendship and personal growth amid loss. Its narrative highlights resilience within a Black community context without delving into explicit critiques of traditional identities.
The narrative centers on friendships and personal reckonings after loss, with fractured relationships mentioned but no substantive depiction of family units, roles, or values. This absence of family content leads to a neutral portrayal.
The film features no LGBTQ+ characters or themes in its narrative of friends reuniting to confront personal regrets and dreams.
No transsexual characters or themes appear in the film. The narrative focuses on personal reflection among friends without any reference to gender identity exploration.
The movie does not contain any action or adventure elements.
The film presents an original story of friends reuniting after a death, featuring newly created characters without ties to prior canon, historical figures, or adaptations that could involve gender swaps.
The film presents original characters in an ensemble drama about friends reuniting, with no prior source material establishing racial baselines for any roles, resulting in no race swaps.
Combines user and critic ratings from four sources























