Regretting You (2025): Family Secrets, Betrayal, and Healing After Tragedy

Regretting You (2025), based on Colleen Hoover’s bestselling novel, stars Allison Williams and Mckenna Grace in a moving drama about betrayal, grief, and rediscovery.

Paramount Pictures’ Regretting You, arriving in theatres on October 24, 2025, adapts Colleen Hoover’s bestselling novel into a drama that balances heartbreak, family tension, and the slow, painful journey of reconciliation. At its heart are Morgan Grant, played by Allison Williams, and her teenage daughter Clara, portrayed by Mckenna Grace. The film begins with a devastating accident that not only reshapes their lives but also uncovers a shocking betrayal, one that fractures the trust between mother and daughter and forces both to face truths they had long avoided.

Morgan and Clara’s story is one of two women moving through different stages of grief but colliding in their need to understand each other. For Morgan, the betrayal cuts deep, challenging her role as a mother and her ability to forgive. 

Clara, meanwhile, is forced to grow up quickly, grappling with the discovery of hidden family secrets that shatter the foundation of her world. Their relationship, already complicated by the tensions of adolescence, becomes the emotional core of the narrative, a portrayal of love tested, resilience discovered, and bonds rebuilt.

The supporting cast adds further texture, with Dave Franco and Mason Thames bringing pivotal roles that intertwine with the Grants’ unraveling story, and Scott Eastwood and Willa Fitzgerald deepening the layers of conflict and connection. 

Directed by Josh Boone, known for blending raw emotion with cinematic intimacy, Regretting You aims to stay faithful to Hoover’s heartfelt storytelling while giving audiences a deeply visual and visceral experience.

With producers Brunson Green, Anna Todd, and Flavia Viotti at the helm, alongside executive producers including Colleen Hoover herself, the film carries the weight of a story cherished by millions of readers. 

It’s not simply about tragedy, but about what comes after: the resilience to keep moving forward, the rediscovery of love in its many forms, and the possibility of forgiveness in even the most broken relationships.

Regretting You is more than an adaptation, it’s a reminder that grief may divide us, but it can also guide us back to the people we need most. This October, audiences will see a story of betrayal and redemption that mirrors the fragility, and the strength, of family itself.

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