One night in his near-empty tower block in London, Adam has a chance encounter with a mysterious neighbour Harry, which punctures the rhythm of his everyday life. As a relationship develops between them, Adam is preoccupied with memories of the past and finds himself drawn back to the suburban town where he grew up, and the childhood home where his parents appear to be living, just as they were on the day they died, 30 years before.
»Grief is a funny animal; it tangles itself in our organs and sinews, permanently altering how we love, how we see ourselves, and how we make sense of our identity. That's what Haigh is unraveling here, with a bittersweet emphasis on the power of love and its ability to transcend even death itself. All of Us Strangers will break your heart – but it just might mend it too.«
– Maureen Lee Lenker, Entertainment Weekly
»Timelessly soul-stirring ode to the power of love. This bittersweet film’s most soul-flattening moments find something transcendent in the simple fact that none of us is ever truly alone so long as we still have our ghosts for company.«
– IndieWire