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Shiva Baby
Release poster
Directed byEmma Seligman
Screenplay byEmma Seligman
Based onShiva Baby
by Emma Seligman
Produced by
  • Kieran Altmann
  • Katie Schiller
  • Lizzie Shapiro
Starring
CinematographyMaria Rusche
Edited byHanna A. Park
Music byAriel Marx
Production
companies
  • Dimbo Pictures
  • It Doesn't Suck Productions
  • Bad Mensch Productions
  • Thick Media
  • Neon Heart Productions
  • 7 Sennotts
  • Irving Harvey
Distributed byUtopia
Release dates
  • March 15, 2020 (2020-03-15) (SXSW)
  • April 2, 2021 (2021-04-02) (United States)
Running time
78 minutes[1]
CountryUnited States[2]
LanguageEnglish
Budget$200,000
Box office$359,247[3][4]

Shiva Baby is a 2020 American comedy film written and directed by Emma Seligman, in her feature directorial debut. The film stars Rachel Sennott as Danielle, a directionless young bisexual Jewish woman who attends a shiva with her parents, Joel (Fred Melamed) and Debbie (Polly Draper). Other attendees include her successful ex-girlfriend Maya (Molly Gordon) and her sugar daddy Max (Danny Deferrari), his wife Kim (Dianna Agron), and their screaming baby. It also features Jackie Hoffman, Deborah Offner, Rita Gardner, and Sondra James in supporting roles.

Adapted from Seligman's own 2018 short film of the same name, Shiva Baby premiered online at the 2020 South by Southwest film festival, while its first public screenings were at the 2020 Toronto International Film Festival, due to the COVID-19 pandemic. It was released in theaters and on video on demand in the United States on April 2, 2021, by Utopia. The events of the film take place almost entirely in real time and at one location as Danielle explores her romantic and career prospects under the intense watch of her family, friends, and judgmental neighbors.

Shiva Baby received positive reviews from critics, who praised Seligman's screenplay and direction, cast performances, musical score, representation of bisexuality and Jewish culture, and for effectively conveying anxiety-inducing claustrophobia. The film would go on to win several awards.

Plot

[edit]

College senior Danielle and her sugar daddy Max have sex before she hurries to a shiva observance with her parents, Joel and Debbie. Before the shiva, at her aunt Sheila's house, Danielle is schooled by her mother on how to respond to questions about her disorganized life and reveals that Dani's ex-girlfriend Maya will be there. Within the house, members of the local extended Jewish community compare her to Maya, who is adored by the neighbors and heading to law school. She has trouble eating the food there and goes from piling it on her plate to scraping it off.

Max, who is a former colleague of Joel's, arrives, and Debbie insists on introducing him to Danielle in the hopes that one of Max's relatives will hire her. After the conversation, Debbie warns Dani that he's off limits because Max is married to a non-Jewish woman named Kim. Because of their baby-sitter's last minute cancellation, Kim arrives late to the party with their baby Rose.

Dani accidentally hurts her leg and retreats to the bathroom to clean it, where she takes a topless photo and sends it to Max. However downstairs, she is unable to look away from Max and his family, and offers to clean vomit from an adjacent room in order to escape. Maya comes to help and begins flirting with Dani, who rebukes her advances. Debbie pulls her away and reprimands her for flirting with Maya.

Debbie drags Dani to meet Kim and asks her for a job on Dani's behalf. During the conversation, it is revealed that Dani has been getting deposits once a month and telling her parents it is from baby-sitting. It is also revealed that Kim is the breadwinner of the family and therefore unknowingly funding Max's arrangement with Danielle. Kim grows suspicious when she notices Danielle wearing the same expensive bracelet that Max had given to her. Max suddenly receives all the photos that Dani sent, and ends up dropping his phone, then spilling coffee on Danielle. Her mom takes her to wash off and calm her nerves.

Maya later finds her at the food table, but Max interrupts the two; annoyed, Maya loudly reveals details of her and Danielle's past relationship, including when two went to prom together and were intimate together afterwards. Maya gets called away, and Max asks for reassurance that everything is "good" and Dani says yes. Later in the day, Max separates from his wife to go to the bathroom upstairs. Dani follows him into the bathroom and positions herself to fellate him, but he decides against it and leaves.

Upset, Danielle goes outside, finding Maya smoking by the side of the house. The two admit that they miss each other and passionately kiss. Dani finally can eat again, and goes to join Max and Kim, having a measured conversation in which she asks probing questions about Kim and Max's relationship and hints that Max uses the couple's vacant SoHo apartment as a bachelor pad. Elsewhere, Maya finds Danielle's phone in the bathroom and reads notifications from the sugar baby app. Dani realizes her phone is missing, and runs to Maya for help finding it, who is back downstairs by the food table. Angry, Maya taunts Danielle about her lifestyle and tells her that her phone is unlocked somewhere in the house, sending her into a panic so all she can focus on are people shoving food into their mouths.

The guests then gather to say Kaddish, with Rose screaming until Kim takes her away. Max follows Danielle into the kitchen afterwards, where she replies that ending the relationship is good so that Kim won't lose all her money. Kim then appears and tells Max they should go home.

Kim approaches Dani to return her phone, and forces her to hold Rose, insisting she must be able to as a baby-sitter. Max arrives and tries to take the baby from Dani against Kim's demands, which knocks her back and causes a vase and some sacred books to the floor. Danielle attempts to clean up the mess but has a breakdown on the floor in front of the guests and is comforted by her mother and Maya. Debbie suggests they use helping an elderly attendee to her car as an excuse to leave, and Maya and Danielle reconnect as they carry food outside. Kim, Max, Maya, and Maya's mom are persuaded to ride home in Joel's now overpacked van, with Rose shrieking as Joel struggles to find his keys. Maya and Danielle affectionately hold hands in the back and smile at each other.

Cast

[edit]

Production

[edit]

Development and funding

[edit]

Shiva Baby is an expansion of writer-director Emma Seligman's 2018 short film of the same title, which she had made as her thesis project while studying film at New York University Tisch School of the Arts (NYU).[6][7] The title refers both to Danielle and to the baby brought to the shiva, Rose.[8] Seligman said that she felt there was room to expand on the short from early on,[9] but needed motivation from lead actress Rachel Sennott to start working on a feature;[10] the feature film entered production just before the short premiered at the 2018 South by Southwest (SXSW) film festival.[11] Despite the short being accepted to SXSW, giving Seligman confidence, nobody there was interested in making a low-budget feature. Seligman then approached Katie Schiller, who she said was "the best producer in [their graduating class]", at Sennott's encouragement.[12] While developing the feature, Seligman re-watched Gia Coppola's film Palo Alto, saying that she had "never seen a film so accurately portray the suffocating and debilitating nature of young female insecurities" like it.[13] Seligman was also inspired by Trey Edward Shults's Krisha and how its location was used for storytelling, which led to Seligman viewing Shiva Baby through a similar psychological thriller lens.[12][14] Other inspiration came from the Coen brothers, Joey Soloway's Transparent, John Cassavetes, and Mike Nichols.[9][10] The costume design of the film was based on outfits worn at shivas Seligman's family had attended.[15]

Seligman said that financing Shiva Baby was "probably the hardest thing" she and the producers would do;[16] she sought funding for the feature for a year[13] and received some offers from organizations that requested more creative control over the film in return, which she was unwilling to give.[17] The production also faced setback when Seligman had to return to Canada after finishing the short when her visa expired.[18] Filmmaker Amanda Kramer, a friend of Seligman, put her in contact with Rhianon Jones of Neon Heart Productions, who became an executive producer; more investors became interested with Jones attached.[13] Most of the financing came from outside funding and independent funding from people the production team knew. Seligman told Women and Hollywood that using primarily one location was also a financial decision.[13] Shiva Baby's budget was around $200,000.[12] Producer Kieran Altmann managed to secure some funding from his parents, Fiona and Martin Altmann, who are credited as executive producers. He said that the competitive filmmaking market in New York helped them work with a small budget, as they could negotiate large discounts on gear rental. The crew were also friends of the producers, and most took a cut in their usual rate,[11] while editor Hanna Park was Seligman's roommate.[12]

Themes

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I feel like it's pretty universal – a lot of young women, young people, not having self-worth beyond sexual validation. I think it's something that hindered my self-acceptance in college, since it's something I focused a lot of energy on.

– Emma Seligman[19]

The short film had been based on a fictional scenario combining Seligman's "uncomfortable and funny" experience of shivas, and the community of women she knew who were sugar babies at NYU. When it came to expanding the story to a feature, she chose to also draw on her own bisexuality;[20] the desire to showcase more of the character of Danielle and her sexuality is a reason Seligman chose to make the feature.[21] Seligman said that "if no one watches this movie except for some young bisexual women who feel seen, then I feel like I've done my job".[22] The character of Danielle is described as relatable; she is the film's "way in" and the other characters are all seen through her eyes.[23] Seligman was also interested in exploring Max and Kim's relationship,[9] and Debbie and Danielle's mother–daughter relationship further, and in expanding on the central theme of Danielle finding her self-worth through sexual autonomy but "realizing that's not as powerful as she thinks it is".[19] Variety noted that themes of empowered young women were present in several screenplays in the same season; features editor Malina Saval wrote that Shiva Baby shows through Danielle how a "pressure to be perfect manifests itself in women long before marriage and kids come into focus" and explores how the power of sex is only limited.[24]

Karina Solórzano for the Los Cabos International Film Festival wrote that Shiva Baby has "the same elements as some of Woody Allen's most popular films – including the Jewish family and multiple lovers – but Seligman has her own vision and offers something different", and that it "follows the contrarian path promoted by [...] Disobedience, [but] this is not the central point of the plot; Seligman does not treat the [queer] protagonists as exceptional or disobedient".[25] Solórzano also compared the themes of youth to those of Booksmart, and the tension to that of Uncut Gems, and discussed the relevance of other themes in Shiva Baby, including Danielle's insecurities; the cultural and religious conflicts surrounding Danielle's sexuality; complex female relationships; and the honesty that comes with family gatherings.[25]

Casting

[edit]

Writer-director Seligman became aware of lead actress Sennott at NYU when Sennott was acting in other students' thesis films and making comedy sketches. Thinking that she looked "like someone [Seligman] would run into at a family event", Seligman cast Sennott in their own thesis film, the Shiva Baby short.[26] Sennott was kept on as Danielle when Seligman began expanding Shiva Baby into a feature-length film; they had formed a collaborative bond and Seligman "never even thought about casting someone else",[11] though, unlike her character, Sennott is neither queer nor Jewish.[27][28] When media began criticizing Jewface, Sennott as Danielle was frequently mentioned.[29] She worked with Seligman to develop the character over the two years of production from the beginning of the short film to the feature, and read all of Seligman's screenplay drafts.[16] Some of the film's potential financiers asked the producers to consider replacing Sennott with a bigger name star.[11][30] Besides Sennott, the first actor to be cast was Molly Gordon,[31] who was cast as Danielle's love interest, Maya, without a chemistry read with Sennott; they only met the day before filming began.[32] Seligman says she experienced impostor syndrome working with the cast, especially after holding a rehearsal for a scene between Danielle and Maya but not being able to make it work.[31] After Gordon, Dianna Agron was cast as Kim.[31] Agron was in Israel when she was sent the script,[33] and met with Seligman in New York shortly after returning. Seligman said that, as a Jewish actress, Agron was excited to "finally" be in a Jewish film,[31] despite playing the only character who is not Jewish.[27][28] Through conversation with Agron, lines were added alluding to her character having Jewish heritage.[26] Producer Lizzie Shapiro told Ynet that Agron "brought to the role a different dynamic of what it means to be a Jew who looks like [she does]".[33] Commenters have said that Agron's casting is an example of intertextuality[34] and "a bit of an inside joke".[35] Danny Deferrari was the last actor to be cast, accepting the role of Max a few days before shooting began.[31]

Casting had been challenging; the film focuses on both queer and Jewish culture, so Seligman and the producers wanted to find actors who would "feel authentic to the material".[27] Seligman felt it was important to cast Jewish actors but was open to other people if they seemed perfect for the role.[27] They also discussed authentic queer representation with The Hindu, calling it a "trickier issue"; having spoken with actors who are not out, Seligman said that "for everyone on screen playing a queer character to be out and proud and talking about their sexuality [...] is a lot to ask of someone."[36] Casting director Kate Geller went to the Jewish theatre community in New York for most of the cast.[23] Due to the low budget, they looked to only cast actors based in New York City,[30] with the exception of Fred Melamed, whom the production flew out from Los Angeles. Melamed had accepted the role of Joel based on reading the script alone.[37] Unbeknownst to Seligman, several cast members already knew each other, such as Melamed and Polly Draper (who plays his wife Debbie), who were friends from the Yale School of Drama; they used this as an advantage on set,[30] though Draper had originally been sought to play a different role in the film.[37] The production had been looking for a Jewish actress to play Debbie, but Seligman said that Draper "put a spell on [them] and [they] had to say yes."[31][38] Seligman's own mother also wanted Draper to play the mother character in the film.[26] Draper improvised on-set for her character a lot, as well as adding a mother's perspective,[37] though the production did not have time for full improvisation.[19]

Filming

[edit]

Shiva Baby was filmed over 16 days in August 2019[11][39] at an Airbnb in Flatbush, Brooklyn.[40] Seligman chose the house on Argyle Road [commons] because of its dark wood interior and stained-glass windows providing a Yentl-like glow.[31] The shoot was initially planned for summer 2018, which was postponed to 2019; Seligman then wanted to push it again, to 2020, to have more time to raise money, but Sennott "set a timebomb".[12] The film mostly takes place in one location during one day.[10] After scouting the house, Seligman built a model of the first floor out of Lego and used this to plan shots.[16] They said that some of the main struggles related to continuity, particularly working with actors who were not always available at the same time.[32][13] The production had only "two days when [they] had the entire [principal] six-person cast together at the same time".[19] Another struggle was the baby playing Rose, who would not stop crying; Seligman said this was a "learning experience" that caused them to rework some scenes to fit in a crying baby.[32] The opening scene, set before the shiva at Max's apartment, was filmed on the last day. Seligman, with a largely female cast and crew, felt prepared for this and other scenes involving intimacy, but discovered during filming that the scenes were more vulnerable and required more sensitivity.[39]

An example of character Danielle's (center) anxiety shown visually through Maria Rusche's cinematography. Four characters are visible, with the three who are not Danielle distorted as she becomes more anxious.

Director of photography Maria Rusche used an Arri Alexa XT camera to shoot in fullscreen 2K resolution and Apple ProRes 4444 format, with Kowa anamorphic lenses as well as a 10:1 Cooke Cinetal zoom lens. About half of the film was shot handheld.[41] Seligman and Rusche initially considered shooting Shiva Baby like a romantic comedy, but "the anxiety hook was what [they] found to set the tone for most of the process".[9] Rusche discussed her equipment choices with IndieWire's Chris O'Falt, explaining that to capture the claustrophobia and anxiety in the film in the way they wanted, they needed to have Danielle surrounded by people but still allow the principal cast to play off each other. To achieve this, Rusche decided to use an anamorphic lens so that multiple characters can remain in shot together, through the wider field of view, while still being distinguished from background characters thanks to the lens's depth. They also wanted to utilize natural image distortion to emphasize Danielle's anxiety; Rusche said the effect of the Kowa lenses "helped make it feel like the walls could literally cave in on her" and had "a good balance of edge distortion without falling apart or losing too much sharpness at the edges".[41]

Music

[edit]

Seligman was uncertain if they wanted to use a score for the film when going into production,[42] as they were aiming for realism, but chose to do so to divert focus from background chatter and represent Danielle's emotions.[28] Seligman wanted it to have strings to reflect Klezmer music, without being overpowering, a "sweet spot" that they said composer Ariel Marx achieved. Marx also suggested adding the score to some scenes it had not originally been intended, making them more stressful.[42] As well as composing, Marx performed strings, while Sam Mazur contributed percussion.[43]

The score received positive reviews. Stephen Saito for Moveable Fest described the score as Marx's version of the Jaws theme.[44] IndieWire's Jude Dry wrote that the "tense string score ratchets up the tension, though this technique loses its bite after a few too many uses",[45] while Katie Rife of The A.V. Club praised it, likening it to the work of Harry Manfredini.[46] Andrew Parker for The GATE also touched on the score's horror-like qualities, saying it worked well for its contribution to the claustrophobic storytelling.[47] The Film Stage listed it as one of the best scores or soundtracks of 2021.[48]

Release and marketing

[edit]
A video interview with director Emma Seligman for the Boston Jewish Film Festival

Shiva Baby was slated to premiere at the 2020 South by Southwest (SXSW); following the festival's cancellation in light of the COVID-19 pandemic, it was instead screened digitally in April 2020.[49] The producers submitted the film to the Sundance Film Festival, and though they were given an extension on submission to work on post-production, it was not accepted.[11] Altmann said that while it was disappointing to be rejected from a festival like Sundance, the team had been aiming for SXSW, as it was where the short premiered.[11] It was also screened digitally at a variety of festivals in August and September 2020,[50][51] and had its first physical screening at the TIFF Bell Lightbox for the 2020 Toronto International Film Festival (TIFF).[52][10] In place of live events, it received cast and director Q&A sessions via video links.[18]

In September 2020, just before its TIFF run, Utopia acquired distribution rights to Shiva Baby.[53] It was released in select theaters and on video on demand in Canada on March 26, 2021, by Pacific Northwest Pictures,[54] and in the United States on April 2, 2021, after movie theaters re-opened.[55][56] The soundtrack was released on the same day.[57] Utopia shopped the film to various streaming platforms: it was made available in Spain on Filmin,[58] and in several countries on Mubi from June 11, 2021, for Pride Month.[59][36] Shiva Baby also had a limited theatrical release for one night only in the United Kingdom on June 9, 2021, before it began streaming on Mubi on June 11.[60] The film was given a wide release in Australian theaters on July 29, 2021.[4][61] It has been picked up for theatrical distribution in Israel by TLVFest.[62] It began streaming on HBO Max in July 2021,[63] with HBO and Seligman developing a television pilot based on the premise of the film.[64]

The first theatrical poster and trailer were released on February 18, 2021.[65] The poster was designed by High Council,[66] with Nylon noting that it captures the film's style; "Sennott dressed to the nines in Jewish deli couture is nothing short of pure camp."[67] A second, red band, trailer was released on March 29, 2021,[68] and a UK trailer followed on May 27.[60] According to Seligman, Utopia targeted their marketing at the young queer female audience by producing content like the red band trailer. Additionally, pandemic lockdowns gave Seligman the time to engage with audiences at many film festivals, creating "if not a grassroots campaign, than a ground-up campaign", in their words. They added: "This is how we were able to find the right audience for the film, we responded to their excitement and included them in our outreach."[18]

Reception

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Audience

[edit]

Shiva Baby was the most-watched film on Mubi in 2021 by the start of August,[69] and ended the year still in the top spot.[70] It had a record-breaking sixteen-week continuous run (April 2–July 22, 2021) at the Quad Cinema in New York.[71][72][73]

Critical response

[edit]

On the review aggregator website Rotten Tomatoes, 97% of 147 critics' reviews are positive, with an average rating of 7.9/10. The website's critics consensus reads: "A ruefully funny calling card for debuting director Emma Seligman, Shiva Baby transcends its sitcom setup with strong performances and satisfying insights."[74] Metacritic assigned the film a weighted average score of 79 out of 100, based on 24 critics, indicating "generally favorable reviews".[75]

Brian Bromberger of The Bay Area Reporter said it "may be one of the best bisexual films ever made",[76] and Alex de Vore of the Santa Fe Reporter said that the ending is "one of the most meaningful moments of hope ever captured on film".[77] Madeline Ducharme of Slate's Outward called Shiva Baby and character Danielle "a step forward for bi representation on screen",[22] and diversity-focused Incluvie's Aspen Nelson said that it "will be remembered as a crucial film of youthful Jewish representation in cinema."[78] Sennott's performance was noted as one of the best breakouts of 2020.[79][80][81]

Shiva Baby was praised both as and despite being a feature debut.[46][82][83] Jon Frosch of The Hollywood Reporter said the film is worthy of comparison to films made by others later in their career, specifically saying it may be a "softer" version of the Coen brothers' A Serious Man.[84] Other critics noted Seligman's youth in these terms; in Script magazine, Tom Stempel compared them to Orson Welles "when he made you know what",[85] and, in Vanity Fair, Jordan Hoffman compared them to Steven Spielberg making Duel.[40]

It also received positive reviews for its handling of modern topics.[86] Nelson wrote that it "takes a fresh perspective on the [messy millennial] trope that mirrors experience and compels emotion".[78] Several critics were impressed that Shiva Baby does not present Danielle's sex work negatively,[78][87][88] and Allyson Johnson of The Young Folks felt that while the film is ostensibly coming-of-age, "what makes [it] so instantly transcendent of some of its contemporaries is how much it acknowledges that, despite Danielle's initial presentation, she's still just a brat sometimes".[89] Others noted that while Shiva Baby is rooted in its Jewish identity, it is relatable and its awkward comedy universal.[90][91] Frosch felt that the film could have explored some of its themes more deeply,[84] and there were different views on the film's runtime: Kate Taylor of The Globe and Mail felt that it gets stretched long,[92] while Jason Gorber of /Film wrote that the "brisk 77 minute running time means the film never overstays its welcome".[93]

Various critics praise the characters and ensemble cast at the film's center.[45][85][94] Juan Antonio Barquin of the Miami New Times wrote that the cast embody the specificity and complex relationships of their characters.[95] For The Film Stage, Zhuo-Ning Su compared the ensemble to that of Ma Rainey's Black Bottom, calling them a "group of comedic genius".[96] Frosch commented that Seligman's script may lean too much into stereotypes, but this is mitigated by the talented cast.[84] In the lead role, Sennott was highlighted in several reviews,[97][98][77] with Parker saying that she gave "a wonderful, star making performance".[47] Other critics looked at the chemistry of Sennott and Gordon's characters,[46][84][99] and highlighted other actors.[45][94][100][101]

Accolades

[edit]

Shiva Baby has received many awards and nominations, particularly for Seligman's writing and directing as their feature film debut, and lead actress Sennott.[a] Seligman was nominated for a Directors Guild Award;[102] casting director Kate Geller won a Casting Society of America award;[103] and the film won the Independent Spirit John Cassavetes Award, in 2022.[104] It also won a National Board of Review Award for 2021,[105] and production designer Cheyenne Ford was selected to the 2021 BAFTA Breakthrough US cohort thanks to her work on the film.[106] Between 2020 and 2022 it won a variety of critics', festival, and media titles; for 2020 and, especially, 2021, it was included on many best-of lists.[a]

See also

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Notes

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References

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[edit]
Revisions and contributorsEdit on WikipediaRead on Wikipedia
from Grokipedia
is a 2020 American black comedy film written and directed by Emma Seligman in her feature-length debut, with Rachel Sennott co-writing the screenplay and starring as the protagonist Danielle. The story centers on Danielle, a bisexual college student, who attends a shiva—a traditional Jewish mourning ritual—with her overbearing parents and unexpectedly encounters her married sugar daddy and ex-girlfriend, leading to escalating tension amid familial scrutiny and personal secrets. Premiering at the Toronto International Film Festival in 2020, the film was acquired for worldwide distribution by Utopia and released theatrically and on video-on-demand the following year, earning widespread critical acclaim for its taut pacing, sharp dialogue, and exploration of themes including sexual identity, intergenerational expectations, and the claustrophobia of social performance. It holds a 96% approval rating on Rotten Tomatoes based on 174 reviews, with praise centered on Sennott's breakout performance and Seligman's command of comedic unease derived from real interpersonal dynamics rather than contrived plot devices. The film propelled Seligman and Sennott into further prominence, with Sennott receiving subsequent recognition for roles in higher-profile projects, underscoring Shiva Baby's role as a launching point for emerging indie talent focused on unvarnished portrayals of young adulthood.

Synopsis

Plot

Danielle, a bisexual Jewish college student, finishes a paid sexual encounter with her older sugar daddy, Max, who transfers her $500 via Venmo before leaving. She rushes to join her parents, real estate agent Debbie and her father Joel, for a shiva—a traditional Jewish week-long mourning period—at the home of family acquaintances following the death of an elderly community member. Upon arrival, Danielle fields probing questions from aunts and uncles about her sociology major, lack of internship, abandoned violin career, and dating life, while concealing her secret income source and relationships. Tensions mount as Danielle encounters her ex-girlfriend Maya, a high-achieving activist, along with Maya's supportive parents, prompting awkward and underlying over their past romance. The situation spirals when Max unexpectedly attends with his unaware wife Kim, a , and their daughter, forcing Danielle to evade recognition amid the . Relatives gossip about Danielle's promiscuity based on community rumors, and her phone buzzes with notifications from Max's explicit photos, heightening her paranoia as Kim notices resemblances and probes Max's distractions. Overwhelmed by the interrogations and deceptions, Danielle suffers a breakdown, knocking over food trays and fleeing to the before confronting her parents. Joel offers financial help for her post-graduation stability, but she rejects it, asserting her independence despite her reliance on . As the winds down, Danielle shares a tentative, affectionate glance with Maya outside, then drives away alone with her mother, reflecting on her entangled secrets.

Cast

Rachel Sennott portrays Danielle, the college senior and protagonist whose conflicting personal relationships and secrets create tension during a family shiva observance. Polly Draper plays Debbie, Danielle's insistent mother who prioritizes social appearances and familial expectations. Fred Melamed appears as Joel, Danielle's affable but detached father who avoids confronting family conflicts. Danny Deferrari stars as Max, an older entrepreneur and Danielle's ongoing sexual and financial benefactor whose presence at the shiva complicates her situation. depicts Kim, Max's unsuspecting wife who interacts obliviously with Danielle amid the gathering. embodies Maya, Danielle's former romantic interest from high school whose reappearance stirs unresolved emotions. Supporting roles include as Bubbie, Danielle's elderly grandmother who dispenses blunt commentary on .

Production

Development and writing

The Shiva Baby originated as an expansion of Emma Seligman's 2018 short film of the same name, which she wrote and directed as her thesis project at New York University's Tisch School of the Arts. The short, which premiered at on March 8, 2018, centers on a encountering personal complications during a Jewish ritual known as a , starring in the lead role. Seligman developed the feature script by extending the short's premise of interpersonal awkwardness and concealed secrets within the confined setting of a shiva house, drawing from her own experiences attending such gatherings in Jewish communities. She incorporated elements of generational expectations on young women, including pressures around career paths, relationships, and , which mirrored her observations of familial interrogations at these events. The narrative evolved to heighten and escalating tension through real-time progression over approximately 80 minutes, emphasizing the protagonist's internal conflicts with , transactional "sugaring" arrangements, and parental oversight—details partially inspired by Seligman's brief personal foray into sugaring during college. Collaboration with Sennott, who reprised and expanded the lead role of , influenced script refinements during development, fostering a natural iterative process informed by their prior work on the short and shared comedic sensibilities. Seligman's directorial vision prioritized through minimalistic structure, avoiding expansive subplots to maintain focus on identity and social scrutiny, while integrating influences from films exploring , anxiety, and dynamics studied during her NYU independent projects. This approach transformed the short's concise setup into a feature-length examination of colliding personal and cultural expectations.

Funding and pre-production

Shiva Baby was financed through a combination of private investments, with much of the budget raised from individuals new to funding after unsuccessful attempts to secure grants and other traditional sources. Director noted that financing proved the most challenging aspect, requiring approximately one year of effort to assemble the roughly $200,000 micro-budget. This approach aligned with the 's independent production model, emphasizing cost control by confining the narrative to a single day in one location. Pre-production focused on logistical efficiencies to accommodate the limited resources, including a suitable house in to serve as the primary setting. Seligman prioritized a single-location to minimize expenses and shooting complexity, constructing a physical model of the space to plan camera movements and scene blocking in advance. These preparations addressed potential challenges in maintaining visual dynamism within confined quarters, ensuring the production could proceed over 16 days without exceeding the tight financial constraints.

Casting

Rachel Sennott was cast as the lead Danielle after appearing in student films observed by director Emma Seligman during their time at New York University, leading to her role in the 2018 short film Shiva Baby that inspired the feature. Sennott co-wrote the feature script with Seligman over two years, building the character through 30 drafts and a week of pre-shoot preparation to refine emotional nuances and power dynamics, which facilitated seamless on-set chemistry rooted in their prior collaboration. Casting director Kate Geller prioritized New York-based Jewish actors enthusiastic about the script to ensure authentic cultural portrayals, selecting veterans like Fred Melamed and Polly Draper as Danielle's parents for their familiarity with Jewish familial dynamics. Melamed, known for roles emphasizing neurotic Jewish archetypes, brought lived experience to the ensemble, enhancing intergenerational tensions. The cast included performers with improvisational experience to achieve overlapping, naturalistic ; Polly Draper extensively ad-libbed lines, extending scenes alongside supporting actors like Debbie Offner to heighten chaotic family interactions. Limited rehearsals, such as a single day between Sennott and for their pivotal encounter, focused on blocking and subtext rather than rigid scripting, allowing improvisational freedom to contribute to the film's tense ensemble energy.

Filming

Principal photography for Shiva Baby took place over 16 days in August 2019 in a single rental house at 481 Argyle Road in , , New York, which served as the primary location. The production's confined setting amplified the film's real-time narrative of escalating tension, with director selecting the house for its authentic domestic layout after scouting options a week in advance. Cinematographer Maria Rusche employed Kowa anamorphic lenses to distort frames subtly, enhancing the claustrophobic atmosphere without resorting to fisheye effects, while incorporating handheld camerawork and 3–4 extended long takes to fluidly transition between rooms and maintain narrative momentum amid tight scheduling. These techniques captured the protagonist's mounting anxiety through dynamic framing that crowded peripheral with characters and props, simulating psychological pressure in the limited environment. On-set challenges included a New York heatwave pushing temperatures into the 90s , necessitating constant adjustments to units between takes to avoid interference. The cramped house restricted crew movement, prompting Seligman to use a LEGO-scale model of the space for pre-shoot blocking and limit rehearsals to one day with leads and , directing performers to build tension via overlapping dialogue and physical proximity. Prop management added logistical strain, as perishable food items like required frequent replacement and refrigeration to sustain authenticity across repeated setups.

Post-production and music

The of Shiva Baby emphasized a compressed timeline to preserve the film's improvisational energy from its single-location shoot, with editing by Hanna Park focusing on rhythmic cuts that amplify the protagonist's spiraling discomfort through overlapping action and minimal relief in shot lengths. , led by a team including Hunter Berk and Leslie Bloome, layered ambient whispers, multilingual family chatter, and muffled cries to evoke claustrophobic immersion, mimicking thriller aesthetics without conventional jump scares or amplified effects. This approach drew from influences like Robert Altman's dialogue-heavy mixing, piling voices to simulate real-time social overload and internal panic. The original score was composed by Ariel Marx, utilizing multi-tracked strings—often ten or more violin and cello passes—to generate a dense, atonal "sludge" of dissonance that underscores mounting dread. Marx incorporated klezmer-inspired violin elements alongside suspenseful, horror-adjacent shrieks reminiscent of Bernard Herrmann's Psycho, blending cultural specificity with generic tension to heighten unease in the shiva setting. The 22-minute soundtrack, released digitally in April 2021 by Lakeshore Records, features tracks like "Anxiety Attack" that integrate improvised string chaos to mirror the film's comedic-thriller hybrid without resolving into melody.

Themes and analysis

Jewish family dynamics and cultural expectations

In Shiva Baby, the shiva gathering serves as a microcosm of Jewish communal , where members engage in that reinforces norms around , career stability, and physical appearance for young adults like the Danielle. Attendees comment on her perceived thinness, speculating about eating disorders in a setting ostensibly dedicated to , which underscores the film's portrayal of shiva houses as hubs for social policing rather than solemn reflection. This depiction draws from observed Jewish practices, where gatherings often blend ritual with informal community interactions, though the film amplifies interpersonal judgments for comedic tension. Intergenerational dynamics highlight maternal figures as enforcers of cultural expectations, with Danielle's mother pressuring her toward conventional milestones such as prompt and professional achievement, reflecting a pattern of parental involvement rooted in historical Jewish emphases on familial continuity and . In contrast, the father's more passive role—focused on dealings amid the event—exemplifies detached paternal , potentially contributing to the protagonist's internal against these norms as a response to unbalanced familial . Such portrayals critique how overbearing maternal expectations, combined with paternal emotional absence, can foster generational friction, prioritizing tradition over individual in modern contexts. These elements contrast with empirical trends in American Jewish families, where assimilation has eroded strict traditional pressures: intermarriage rates reached 58% by 2013, up from 17% in 1970, indicating weakened enforcement of endogamy and cultural insularity. Family cohesion persists through high educational attainment and economic success—25% of Jewish households exceed $150,000 annually—but manifests in diversified structures like rising divorce and single-parent homes, diverging from the film's intensified nuclear-family conformity. The movie exaggerates these dynamics for dramatic effect, heightening tradition-modernity clashes beyond typical intergenerational aspirations for moral responsibility and self-reliance documented in recent surveys.

Sexuality, identity, and personal deception

In Shiva Baby, protagonist Danielle's drives her internal and external deceptions, as she juggles a sexual relationship with her female ex-girlfriend Maya and a transactional arrangement with older man Max, all hidden from her parents who envision a conventional heterosexual path involving college achievement and marriage. This duality fosters a compartmentalized existence, where Danielle fabricates lies about her studies and activities to align with familial norms, evident in her feigned disinterest in Maya's presence and evasion of questions about her during the gathering. The film's narrative underscores how such secrecy stems from anticipated disapproval, with Danielle's identity fragmented between private authenticity and public performance. The consequences of this personal escalate psychologically, culminating in panic attacks and emotional breakdowns as concealed elements—such as Max's arrival with his wife and child—threaten exposure, forcing into improvised lies that heighten her isolation. Director , drawing from her own experiences as a bisexual Jewish , portrays these episodes as direct outcomes of sustained duplicity, where the between Danielle's fluid attractions and rigid expectations manifests in physical distress like and collapse. Relational fallout follows causally: interactions with Maya turn strained under the weight of unspoken betrayals, while familial bonds fray from Danielle's evasive responses, illustrating how erodes trust without external economic incentives. The film highlights tensions between modern and traditional Jewish communal pressures, with repressing progressive ideals to navigate conservative scrutiny, subverting the archetype of the compliant "nice Jewish girl" who prioritizes family stability over personal exploration. Some observers critique this depiction as reflecting broader erosions in stable commitments, where identity experimentation fosters relational instability and habitual deceit, contrasting with cultural emphases on enduring heteronormative unions. This clash amplifies 's identity crisis, positioning her deceptions not as mere survival tactics but as symptoms of incompatible self-concepts colliding in a high-stakes social ritual.

Economic pressures and transactional relationships

In Shiva Baby, the Danielle, a senior, sustains herself through arrangements with older men, including regular payments from her primary client Max to cover living expenses and tuition amid her undecided post-graduation trajectory. This dependency underscores her financial precarity, as she lacks a defined path and relies on these transactional encounters—such as departing from Max's post-sex for immediate cash—while navigating familial expectations of independence. Economic stagnation has correlated with increased among and , who face escalating burdens that delay traditional markers of adulthood like homeownership and financial autonomy. borrowers, for instance, carry average monthly payments of $526, outpacing other cohorts, with total outstanding for those aged 24 and under concentrated in the $20,000–$40,000 range across 1.43 million individuals. Such pressures have fueled a resurgence in sugar arrangements as a perceived shortcut to alleviate and fund , with anecdotal reports linking platforms like sugar daddy apps to debt payoff stories amid broader cynicism toward conventional wealth-building paths. While these relationships provide short-term economic gains—such as direct cash transfers for immediate needs—they carry verifiable long-term risks, including elevated health and relational hazards. Sugar babies experience approximately twice the rate of sexual infections compared to non-participating peers in their age group, alongside rarer but documented instances of , , and sexually transmitted diseases from unbalanced power dynamics. Reputational exposure, as dramatized by Danielle's near-collision of personal and professional spheres, can compound these, potentially hindering future relational stability or career prospects due to stigma and attachment complications from monetized intimacy.

Release

Premiere and distribution

Shiva Baby had its world premiere at the South by Southwest (SXSW) Film Festival on March 15, 2020, with the event held virtually amid the COVID-19 pandemic. The film later screened in the Discovery program at the Toronto International Film Festival (TIFF) on September 10, 2020, also conducted online due to ongoing restrictions. Ahead of its TIFF debut, distributor acquired worldwide rights to the film on September 9, 2020. subsequently managed a limited theatrical rollout in the United States starting April 2, 2021, paired with simultaneous video-on-demand availability. For broader reach, secured sub-distribution deals including for U.S. streaming rights, Pictures for , for , and Watcha for . Additional territories covered by Mubi encompassed the , , , , , and . These arrangements facilitated international expansion as pandemic lockdowns eased, enabling access via theaters, digital platforms, and streaming services.

Marketing and home media

Utopia, the film's distributor, released the official trailer on YouTube on February 18, 2021, which previewed the central premise of college student Danielle navigating awkward encounters with her sugar daddy and ex-girlfriend amid family pressures at a shiva, underscoring the film's blend of cringe-comedy and escalating tension. Media coverage of the trailer emphasized its portrayal of absurd Jewish family dynamics and personal deception as key draws for audiences interested in indie comedies exploring identity and sexuality. A subsequent trailer from Movieclips Indie on March 22, 2021, promoted availability on video-on-demand platforms like FandangoNOW, further amplifying reach through digital previews. Promotional materials, including the trailer, targeted niche audiences by highlighting the film's roots in director Emma Seligman's SXSW-short origins and its expansion into a feature, with online discussions tying into broader indie conversations post-premiere. The campaign leveraged the film's thematic resonance with and Jewish viewers, as noted in coverage of its cultural specificity, though quantifiable metrics from these communities remain undocumented in primary promotional records. For home media, issued a Blu-ray edition on July 6, 2021, featuring high-definition video and audio quality, with special features including director commentary and Q&A sessions. A limited slipcover edition, exclusive to and capped at 2,000 units, launched on June 29, 2021, including additional extras like cast interviews to appeal to collectors. Digital rentals and purchases expanded via platforms such as FandangoNOW, while streaming availability on services like MUBI began in select international markets on May 27, 2021, and later included , enhancing post-theatrical access beyond initial VOD windows. These formats broadened the film's distribution, making it accessible for repeated viewings and home audiences after its limited April 2021 theatrical run.

Reception

Critical response

Shiva Baby garnered widespread critical acclaim upon its release, earning a 97% approval rating on Rotten Tomatoes based on 174 reviews, with critics frequently highlighting its masterful orchestration of tension within a single-location setting. Reviewers praised director Emma Seligman's debut feature for transforming a Jewish mourning ritual into a pressure cooker of interpersonal awkwardness, where overlapping dialogues and subtle visual cues amplify the protagonist Danielle's spiraling panic. Rachel Sennott's performance as Danielle drew particular commendation for conveying layers of deception, vulnerability, and youthful defiance through nonverbal expressions amid escalating confrontations with family, ex-lovers, and clients. The film's score and were also lauded for sustaining a relentless rhythm of discomfort, evoking comparisons to horror tropes repurposed for comedic , as audiences vicariously experience Danielle's fear of exposure. Supporting cast members, including and as Danielle's parents, were noted for embodying the intrusive dynamics of cultural expectations with authenticity drawn from the filmmakers' own experiences. Divergent opinions emerged regarding the narrative's depth, with some critics arguing the unrelenting focus on anxiety borders on one-note, prioritizing visceral unease over substantive resolution or psychological insight into Danielle's choices. Others interpreted the film's exposure of transactional relationships and personal deceptions as a subtle of contemporary lifestyles, potentially at odds with feminist ideals by illustrating the tangible fallout of unbound by relational commitments, rather than romanticizing . Conservative-leaning outlets emphasized the realism in depicting familial as a to , underscoring how traditional structures reveal the limits of progressive experimentation without descending into judgmentalism.

Audience reception

Shiva Baby garnered a dedicated following among enthusiasts, evidenced by its 3.8 out of 5 average rating on from approximately 597,000 user reviews as of recent data. This score reflects broad appeal within niche online communities, where viewers frequently highlighted the film's acute portrayal of millennial anxiety and relational tensions as highly relatable for those navigating post-college uncertainties. Young adult audiences, in particular, connected with protagonist Danielle's internal conflicts over sexuality, career ambiguity, and familial scrutiny, often describing the narrative as a visceral mirror to their own experiences of identity flux and social performance. Online forums like Reddit featured discussions praising the film's capacity to evoke genuine discomfort from everyday awkwardness, positioning it as an effective cringe comedy that captures the chaos of concealed personal choices amid cultural expectations. However, viewer reactions included debates over the intensity of its cringe elements, with some arguing the relentless escalation of mishaps rang true to real-life social blunders, while others perceived certain scenarios—such as the sugar daddy encounter and layered deceptions—as heightened for effect, potentially straining plausibility. Traditional or conservative-leaning viewers expressed reservations about the film's unapologetic depiction of youthful moral compromises, including and bisexual fluidity, viewing these as endorsements of rather than cautionary tales, which diminished resonance for audiences prioritizing conventional ethical frameworks.

Accolades

Shiva Baby received the Award at the 2022 Film Independent Spirit Awards, recognizing the film's achievement as a feature made for under $500,000 and awarded to its writer, director, and producer. The film earned ' Golden Tomato Award for Best Reviewed Comedy of 2021, based on aggregated critic scores placing it atop that category's list. Casting director Kate Geller won the Artios Award from the Casting Society of America in 2022 for Outstanding Achievement in Casting for a Micro Budget Feature in the comedy or drama category. received a nomination for Most Promising Performer from the in 2021 for her lead role.

Controversies

Portrayals of Jewish identity

The film Shiva Baby centers its narrative on a secular Ashkenazi Jewish family's shiva observance, incorporating customs such as communal gatherings with food spreads, condolence-sharing, gossip, and intrusive inquiries about personal life, which director drew from her own experiences attending a seven-day shiva in her Jewish community. These elements are empirically grounded in traditional practices—shivas typically involve mourning, storytelling, and social bonding—but are amplified through rapid dialogue, escalating tension, and neurotic family dynamics to create satirical absurdity, transforming a ritual of into a pressure cooker of millennial anxiety. Critics have debated whether these portrayals veer into , with some accusing the film of leaning on tropes like the , overbearing Jewish and gossipy relatives, potentially offensive to Jewish viewers sensitive to historical . For instance, reviewer Gary Goldstein highlighted the reliance on such motifs, suggesting they risk alienating audiences despite the film's humorous intent. Counterarguments emphasize the authenticity of an insider perspective: Seligman, raised in a Reform Jewish household, infuses the work with unapologetic cultural specifics—like Yiddish slang bursts (e.g., "schmutz, putz, schlong")—framing it as affectionate self-critique rather than external mockery, akin to Jewish comedic traditions in films by the . Jewish outlets such as have defended the exaggeration as enhancing the film's horror-comedy tone, arguing it captures genuine communal pressures without malice. Additional scrutiny arose over casting non-Jewish actress as protagonist Danielle, a bisexual Jewish navigating identity clashes, with critics questioning the representational authenticity of a Catholic performer embodying core Jewish angst. Seligman responded that while prioritizing Jewish actors where possible (e.g., for family roles), she valued performers who could authentically convey the universal family dynamics and cultural unease, prioritizing narrative fidelity over strict ethnic matching amid indie film's practical constraints. This choice underscores broader tensions in contemporary Jewish cinema between insider storytelling and inclusive production realities, without evidence of intent to dilute cultural specificity.

Depiction of sex work and moral implications

In Shiva Baby, the Danielle's engagement in —transactional arrangements involving intimacy with older men for financial support—is portrayed as a pragmatic response to economic pressures for , yet it is consistently undercut by acute emotional turmoil and to social exposure. The narrative unfolds during a , a Jewish , where Danielle's primary client unexpectedly arrives with his wife and child, amplifying the risks of her double life intersecting with her family's expectations and community scrutiny. This setup generates comedic discomfort rather than endorsement, highlighting the precarious thrill of quick cash juxtaposed against paralyzing shame and the constant threat of reputational damage. The film's depiction avoids overt moral condemnation but implicitly underscores causal consequences, such as the psychological strain of and the potential for relational fallout, as Danielle's activities strain her interactions with parents who prioritize and cultural over unconventional income sources. Reviewers have noted that while the sugar baby role provides narrative tension, it remains surface-level, offering little exploration of exploitative power imbalances inherent in such dynamics—where younger participants trade for dependency on wealthier patrons—or the long-term incentives against developing self-reliant skills through conventional . This superficiality leaves unexamined alternatives like part-time labor or familial support, which could foster without the attendant hazards of and emotional . From a causal realist standpoint informed by broader debates on transactional relationships, the portrayal aligns with empirical patterns where correlates with heightened risks of attachment issues, financial instability upon arrangement dissolution, and barriers to traditional career paths, rather than portraying it as empowering or sustainable. Conservative-leaning critiques of similar media representations argue that such narratives inadvertently incentivize short-term dependency over , potentially normalizing arrangements that erode personal agency and familial stability in pursuit of immediate gratification. In the film's context, Danielle's choices reflect not liberation but a deferred reckoning with moral trade-offs, where the allure of easy money yields isolation and unresolved amid communal judgment.

Queer representation and bisexual experiences

In Shiva Baby, the protagonist Danielle, portrayed by , is depicted as a bisexual whose manifests through encounters with both her ex-girlfriend Maya () and her older sugar daddy Max (Danny Deferrari) during a family gathering. This setup highlights the film's exploration of within a constrained Jewish family environment, where Danielle's relationships remain largely off-screen and unspoken, emphasizing the invisibility of experiences amid parental scrutiny and cultural expectations. The dynamic with Maya is subtle and fraught with unspoken tension—marked by awkward glances, jealousy over Danielle's sugar arrangement, and a brief, charged confrontation—contrasting with the more transactional, heterosexual elements of her involvement with Max, which involve financial dependence and implied but not shown explicitly. Critics have noted this disparity as contributing to minimal on-screen queerness, with queer-focused outlets observing that while the film gestures toward bisexual fluidity, it prioritizes the chaos of heterosexual entanglements over visible same-sex interactions, potentially underscoring rather than challenging the erasure of lesbian or bisexual female desire in narrative focus. Director Emma Seligman, who identifies as bisexual, has described the film as drawing from personal experiences of navigating multiple attractions without overt conflict, portraying bisexuality as a harmonious aspect of identity rather than a source of indecision or instability. However, some analyses question whether this representation fully interrogates stereotypes, as Danielle's mother explicitly links her daughter's bisexuality to perceived recklessness and poor choices during a family conversation, reinforcing familial associations of queerness with disorder without deeper resolution on the stability of fluid attractions. While praised in bisexual advocacy spaces for depicting real-world —such as hiding relationships from immigrant or religious family networks—the film's restraint in exploring bisexual depth has drawn critique for not sufficiently disrupting bi-erasure tropes, instead embedding them within the shiva's pressure-cooker anonymity. This approach reflects a deliberate for authenticity over spectacle, as Seligman intended to capture the "nuance" of sexuality in everyday concealment, though outlets like , which prioritize explicit , argue it falls short of transformative representation.

Legacy and impact

Cultural discussions and influence

Shiva Baby has prompted discussions on the pervasive anxieties afflicting millennial and individuals within assimilated Jewish communities, particularly around familial scrutiny and performance of identity. Critics observed that the film's depiction of Danielle's at a ritual encapsulates the feverish tension of navigating parental expectations for academic and professional success alongside hidden personal indiscretions, reflecting broader intergenerational clashes in American Jewish families. This portrayal resonates with viewers experiencing similar pressures, where amplifies the fear of communal judgment over deviations from traditional paths like or stable careers. The film's single-location structure, confined to a single house during the , has been lauded for innovating indie horror-comedy by leveraging spatial to build escalating social dread, akin to a slasher film's inexorable pursuit but rooted in interpersonal revelations rather than violence. Reviewers highlighted how this technique sustains unbearable tension through overlapping conversations and averted gazes, influencing subsequent analyses of how confined settings can hybridize comedy with horror to mirror real-life awkwardness in communal gatherings. Director drew from influences like to craft this pressure-cooker dynamic, which commentators credit with elevating mundane familial rituals into a genre-bending exercise in sustained unease. In examining hookup and transactional dynamics, Shiva Baby has fueled dialogues on the emotional toll and inherent instability of such arrangements, especially for young women balancing secrecy with intimacy. Seligman described college as dehumanizing and transactional, a view echoed in the film's unraveling of Danielle's sugar daddy relationship, which exposes the fragility of commodified connections amid unexpected confrontations. This critique underscores the unsustainability of these practices, as Danielle's genuine attachments clash with their mercenary foundations, prompting reflections on how they exacerbate isolation rather than fulfillment in contemporary .

Career advancements for key creators

Emma Seligman's directorial debut with Shiva Baby in 2020 garnered critical acclaim, paving the way for her sophomore feature Bottoms in 2023, a studio-backed comedy co-written with that premiered at SXSW and received widespread praise for its satirical edge. The film's success, building on Shiva Baby's festival buzz, elevated Seligman to a position for larger-scale productions, including an pilot adaptation of Shiva Baby elements co-executive produced by the original film's team. Rachel Sennott, who co-wrote and starred in Shiva Baby as protagonist Danielle, leveraged the film's breakout to secure leading roles in subsequent comedies, including Alice in the 2022 horror-comedy and co-lead PJ in Bottoms (2023), where her performance drew comparisons to early indie breakthroughs. By 2025, Sennott headlined the HBO series , portraying a talent management staffer entangled in Hollywood schemes, marking her transition to television lead status amid ongoing film work. Composer Ariel Marx's tense, percussion-driven score for Shiva Baby earned recognition for amplifying the film's anxiety, leading to high-profile assignments such as the miniseries (2022), National Geographic's (2023)—which netted an Emmy nomination for Outstanding Original Music and Lyrics—and films including (2022) and (2023). These projects expanded Marx's portfolio into prestige television and genre films, with her string-heavy approach cited for enhancing narrative discomfort in true-crime and historical dramas. Producers Lizzie Shapiro, Kieran Altman, and Katie Schiller, who shepherded Shiva Baby's micro-budget production, gained industry notice for fostering emerging voices, culminating in their co-executive production roles on Seligman's pilot by 2022, signaling sustained opportunities in independent television development.

References

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