Lady Bird follows Christine “Lady Bird” McPherson (Saoirse Ronan) through her final year of high school in Sacramento, a city she resents but that quietly shapes her. She fights with her well-meaning but overworked mother (Laurie Metcalf), falls in and out of love, drifts from friendships, and dreams of an imagined future on the East Coast, far away from home. In other words, she’s a perfect, messy teenage hurricane.
What makes Lady Bird such an enduring film — and such a perfect Sunday rewatch — is how deeply Gerwig captures the micro-dramas of adolescence without judgment or melodrama. A passive-aggressive comment at the dinner table hurts more than a major breakup. A glance between mother and daughter in a department store carries the weight of a thousand unsaid words. Every moment feels lived-in, tender, and true.
Rewatching Lady Bird as an adult brings out new layers. You start to see Marion (Laurie Metcalf) not just as the overbearing mom, but as someone desperately trying to love her daughter the only way she knows how. You notice how Sacramento — dusty, suburban, quietly beautiful — is as much a character as any of the people Lady Bird can’t wait to leave behind.

Saoirse Ronan’s performance is a marvel of contradictions: confident and insecure, fierce and vulnerable. Watching her flail through bad haircuts, Catholic school dances, and college rejection letters feels less like observing a fictional character and more like leafing through your own emotional yearbook.
Ultimately, Lady Bird is a love letter — to mothers and daughters, to complicated hometowns, and to the person you were when you didn’t know what was next. It reminds us that even in our most cringeworthy, painful, and stubborn moments, there’s beauty worth remembering.
This Sunday, rewatch Lady Bird and let yourself feel nostalgic for all the imperfect versions of yourself you’ve left behind. You might even want to call your mom after.