EVERYTHING iS RIGHT
A quiet girl enters college for the first time, but unlike her peers, she carries a heavy silence. Years of living between two constantly battling parents have left her emotionally numb, unable to express herself or seek comfort from others. On the surface, she seems merely introverted—but beneath that stillness lies a growing storm.
When her mother discovers fresh self-inflicted cuts on her daughter’s arm, she immediately suspects bullying. She believes someone at school is hurting her. But the truth is far more unsettling. The girl is not a victim of others—she is a victim of the emotional chaos she grew up in. The real damage was never done by classmates or strangers, but by years of invisible tension, unspoken words, and a home that never felt safe.
This intimate psychological portrait explores the often-overlooked wounds of emotional neglect and the quiet despair that can drive someone to harm themselves. Through restrained storytelling and minimal dialogue, the film gives voice to those whose pain is unseen, tracing one girl's journey through isolation, miscommunication, and a desperate search for self-worth.