Top Billed Cast
Popularity Trend
Last 30 Days
This chart shows the popularity trend over the past 30 days.
Media

Official Trailer
Trailer

Official Trailer
Trailer

The worldwide release of My Dead Friend Zoe has begun!
Teaser

Merit Comes Back To Pay Her Respects
Clip

Pay it Forward for Veterans
Featurette

My Dead Friend Zoe is certified fresh with 95% on Rotten Tomatoes.
Teaser

Huge thanks to Travis Kelce (MDFZ Exec Producer) for highlighting My Dead Friend Zoe on @newheightshow
Featurette

A Special Thanks from The Cast of My Dead Friend Zoe
Featurette

We are just 10 days from My Dead Friend Zoe hitting theaters on February 28th!
Teaser

A Veteran's Journey - The Making of MY DEAD FRIEND ZOE
Behind the Scenes

:30 Spot
Teaser
Social
M
A review by Manuel São Bento
7.0
Written on April 5, 2025
My Dead Friend Zoe dives deep into the wounds left by war, grief, and unspoken regrets, incorporating a narrative that, while following a familiar structure, never feels emotionally hollow. It's the kind of film where the strength lies not in groundbreaking plot mechanics, but in the sheer honesty of its characters and the delicate care with which their pain is portrayed. Sonequa Martin-Green delivers a magnetic performance - quietly powerful, effortlessly vulnerable, and deeply human. The screenplay leans into genre conventions, but it does so with sincerity, making the emotional beats hit all the harder.
The third act is where everything clicks into place. It's raw, unflinching, and devastating in the most beautiful way - a culmination of internal battles finally reaching catharsis. Director Kyle Hausmann-Stokes doesn't try to overplay his hand, letting the characters carry the weight, allowing moments of silence and memory to speak volumes. Yes, it doesn't reinvent the wheel, but it rolls with such truth and heart that you won't soon forget it. A compelling tale about healing, memory, and the ones we carry with us.
Rating: B
The third act is where everything clicks into place. It's raw, unflinching, and devastating in the most beautiful way - a culmination of internal battles finally reaching catharsis. Director Kyle Hausmann-Stokes doesn't try to overplay his hand, letting the characters carry the weight, allowing moments of silence and memory to speak volumes. Yes, it doesn't reinvent the wheel, but it rolls with such truth and heart that you won't soon forget it. A compelling tale about healing, memory, and the ones we carry with us.
Rating: B
































































