Movies

Voicemails for Isabelle: a grieving woman’s messages reach the wrong man on Netflix

Molly Se-kyung

Jill talks to someone who cannot talk back. Her sister Isabelle is dead, and a voicemail box is the only place where the relationship still runs in real time, so she keeps calling. She leaves the small catastrophes of her day on the line that used to ring in another room — the dates that go wrong, the job she is fumbling, the confessions she would never make to a face. For a while it is the most private thing a person can do: speak the unedited version of yourself to someone who can no longer hear it. Then the premise of the film arrives, and it is also the wound. The line is no longer dead air.

YouTube video

The number has been recycled. A real-estate agent named Wes, working out of Austin, starts finding these messages on his phone, and he does the thing the movie is actually about. He listens to a woman being completely herself and decides he wants to know her. He has never met Jill. He has met the version of her that only exists when she is certain no one is on the other end — faster, funnier, more honest, unguarded in the specific way people are when they think the room is empty. That is a sharper idea than the trailer’s phone-tag flirtation lets on. Wes does not fall for a performance. He falls for honesty that was never meant to be overheard.

Leah McKendrick wrote and directed it, and the instinct that drove her first feature, Scrambled, carries straight over. There, she trusted a woman’s unfiltered monologue about her own body and choices to do the emotional work a plot usually has to manufacture. Here she does it again, and the structural decision that holds the whole film together is what she refuses to give us. We never hear Isabelle answer. The channel runs one way by design. Every laugh Jill earns inside a voicemail is shadowed by the silence where a reply used to be, and that silence is not an absence the film is trying to fill — it is the shape of the thing. The comedy and the grief share a single microphone, and McKendrick never lets one cheapen the other.

That architecture keeps the movie honest about what it is. Jill is not performing charm for a love interest. She is performing survival for a sister who is gone, narrating her life out loud because the alternative is silence, and the romance is an accident that grows in the gap. It is a grief film wearing a rom-com’s clothes, and the disguise is not a trick played on the audience so much as the way grief actually behaves — it hides inside ordinary days, inside jokes, inside the reflex of reaching for a phone. When Wes finally responds, and he has to respond, because a stranger reading your diary is either a threat or a gift and the film knows it, the question stops being whether they will meet. It becomes whether Jill can bear to be loved for the self she only shows to the dead.

Zoey Deutch is built for this. Her gift has always been speed — the sense of a woman thinking faster than she can edit, the comic timing of someone whose mouth is two steps ahead of her better judgment — and a film assembled out of voicemails is a machine designed to showcase exactly that. A monologue to a dead sister is the rare rom-com device that lets the lead be hilarious and devastated in the same breath, and Deutch has the range to keep both alive at once. Opposite her, Nick Robinson plays the harder, quieter assignment: a man whose main action is listening, whose attraction has to read as recognition rather than appetite. The movie lives or dies on whether his falling feels like a decent person responding to honesty, and not a stranger entitled to a woman’s secrets.

Around that center, McKendrick builds a comic ensemble that keeps the tone from curdling into a greeting card. Nick Offerman turns up as a chef named Bastien. Harry Shum Jr. and Lukas Gage circle Jill’s San Francisco life. Ciara Bravo plays Isabelle in precisely the register the film needs — present enough that the loss has a face and a voice in memory, absent enough that it stays a loss and not a flashback crutch. Spencer Lord, Gil Bellows and Tanis Dolman fill out the family and the orbit. The casting tells you the film knows its own danger: a premise this fragile needs people who can land a joke so the sentiment has something to push against.

There is a real anchor under the gimmick, which is why the gimmick holds. People keep the dead on their phones. They pay the bill so the number stays alive. They call to hear the outgoing message in a voice they will never hear new again. They leave words for someone who will never check the box, because saying them out loud is its own small ceremony. The film takes that private ritual and collides it with a piece of infrastructure nobody thinks about until it betrays them: carriers recycle phone numbers constantly, and the line that holds your most exposed self can become a stranger’s the moment you stop paying attention. A privacy footnote becomes a love story. Depending on how you have grieved, that is either reckless or exactly right.

It also lands the film in a particular cultural moment without ever lecturing about it. We have built an entire grief-tech economy on the refusal to let go of a voice — apps that text back in a dead parent’s cadence, chatbots trained on a sibling’s messages, the steady normalization of talking to the departed through a screen. Voicemails for Isabelle stays analog by comparison, and smarter for it. Jill’s line does not answer her. The film’s one concession to the fantasy of a reply is to route it, by accident, through a living man — and then to ask what that costs. The thing answering Jill’s grief is not a machine pretending to be her sister. It is a person, with his own loneliness, who was never supposed to be there.

Voicemails for Isabelle - Netflix
Voicemails for Isabelle, Zoey Deutch as Jill. Photo Credit: Allyson Riggs / Netflix © 2026

What the happy ending cannot close is the thing that makes the film worth watching past its logline. If Wes loves the woman in the voicemails, he loves a person who was only ever talking to Isabelle. Meeting him means Jill has to become that person on purpose, in a room, for someone who can answer back — and find out whether the honesty survives an audience. The unguarded self and the witnessed self are not obviously the same person, and the movie does not pretend the gap is small. It is the whole risk of being known: that the version of you worth loving is the one you only ever say out loud when you are sure no one is listening, and that letting someone listen might be the one thing that changes it.

Voicemails for Isabelle premieres on Netflix on June 19. Leah McKendrick directs from her own screenplay, with Zoey Deutch and Nick Robinson leading a cast that includes Nick Offerman, Harry Shum Jr., Lukas Gage, Ciara Bravo, Spencer Lord and Gil Bellows. It was shot in Vancouver and produced by the Escape Artists team behind a long run of studio dramas. It arrives as a romantic comedy, which it is, and as a film about talking to the dead, which it also is. The second thing is why it stays with you.

Cast

Tags: , , , , ,

Discussion

There are 0 comments.