The Chronology of Water
The Chronology of Water is a 2025 biographical psychological drama film written for the screen, co-produced, and directed by Kristen Stewart in her feature film directorial debut, based on the 2011 book of the same name by Lidia Yuknavitch. It stars Imogen Poots as Yuknavitch, along with Thora Birch, Susannah Flood, Tom Sturridge, Kim Gordon, Michael Epp, Earl Cave, Esmé Creed-Miles, and Jim Belushi in supporting roles. Ridley Scott is an executive producer on the film.
The Chronology of Water premiered in the Un Certain Regard section of the 2025 Cannes Film Festival on May 16, 2025. The film received positive reviews from critics.
Premise
A young woman finds her voice through the written word and her salvation as a swimmer – ultimately becoming a triumphant teacher, mother and a singular modern writer.Cast
- Imogen Poots as Lidia Yuknavitch
- * Anna Wittowsky as Kid Lidia
- * Angelika Mihailova — Lidia
- Thora Birch as Claudia
- Susannah Flood as Dorothy
- Tom Sturridge as Devin
- Kim Gordon as Photographer
- Michael Epp as Mike
- Earl Cave as Phillip
- Esmé Creed-Miles as Claire
- Jim Belushi as Ken Kesey
- Julienne Restall as Junkie Woman
- Charlie Carrick as Andy Mingo
- Eleanor Hahn as Carol Houck Smith
- Esmé Allen as Hannah
Production
Principal photography took place in Latvia and Malta over six weeks in June and July 2024.
Release
The Chronology of Water had its world premiere at the 2025 Cannes Film Festival on May 16, 2025, and received a six and a half minute standing ovation. In August 2025, The Forge acquired the distribution rights to the film in the United States, releasing in limited theaters on December 5, 2025, before expanding to a wider release on January 9, 2026. British Film Institute will release the film in the United Kingdom and Ireland on February 6, 2026.Reception
M. Sellers Johnson of Offscreen lauded the film as a highlight of the 2025 Cannes Film Festival writing, "Stewart’s blistering debut will surely prompt divisive discourse on its aggressive art film aesthetics, challenging violent and sexual material, and close lens on the topic of trauma. But for all its experiments and deliberate provocations, the film finds itself grounded in deep, personal meaning."Umnia El-Neil of Obscurae praised the film’s refusal to portray Lidia Yuknavitch as a “Perfect Victim,” noting its seamless navigation through fragmented memories and powerful performances from Imogen Poots and Jim Belushi. Tim Grierson of Screen Daily highlighted the film’s intimate 16mm aesthetics and Poots’ raw portrayal, while noting that its persistent tone of pain can at times feel repetitive, despite Stewart’s strong directorial instincts and a resonant, hopeful conclusion. Pavel Snapkou of Showbiz by PS offered a more mixed assessment, acknowledging the film’s emotional intensity and stylistic ambition while pointing out its uneven pacing.