A Cada Dia Drama, Fantasia, Romance 2018 1h 37m... May 2026
From a philosophical standpoint, Every Day is a meditation on empathy. Because A has lived hundreds of lives, they possess a radical level of understanding for the human experience. A has been the bully, the victim, the popular kid, and the outcast. This "forced empathy" suggests that our identities are often more fragile and circumstantial than we care to admit.
This creates a unique romantic dynamic. Unlike traditional romances where chemistry is often tied to physical attraction or a specific "type," Rhiannon is forced to fall in love with a soul. The film challenges the audience to consider if love can truly be "blind." As Rhiannon grapples with A appearing as a different person every 24 hours—ranging from a star athlete to a depressed girl to a person with a different ethnic background—the film argues that the essence of a person lies in their consciousness, memories, and kindness rather than their exterior shell. Identity and the "Other" A Cada Dia Drama, Fantasia, Romance 2018 1h 37m...
The 2018 film Every Day (released in Brazil as A Cada Dia ), directed by Michael Sucsy and based on David Levithan’s celebrated novel, serves as a poignant exploration of identity, the fluidity of love, and the human condition. At its core, the story follows "A," a sentient being who wakes up every morning in a different body, regardless of gender, race, or background. While the premise is rooted in fantasy, the film utilizes this supernatural conceit to dissect very real, grounded questions about what it means to love someone beyond their physical form. The Transcendence of Love From a philosophical standpoint, Every Day is a
A Cada Dia is more than a teen romance; it is a cinematic essay on the "Self." It strips away the labels we use to define ourselves—gender, beauty, social status—and asks what remains. By the end, the viewer is left with the hauntingly beautiful idea that while the body is a temporary vessel, the connections we make and the empathy we share are the only things that truly endure. It is a celebration of the soul, wrapped in the melancholy of a love that can never stay in one place. This "forced empathy" suggests that our identities are
The narrative engine is ignited when A inhabits the body of Justin, a neglectful teenager, and falls in love with his girlfriend, Rhiannon. For the first time, A breaks their lifelong rule of "never get attached" and "never interfere," sparking a pursuit of Rhiannon through a kaleidoscope of different hosts.