Look, Spinster wants to be an empowering indie comedy about rejecting society's timeline for women, and the critics appreciated the effort. But a 5.9 on IMDb and that audience score gap? That tells you it's probably a bit preachy and not particularly entertaining.
The premise is fine—woman turns 39, gets dumped, questions everything—but this exact story has been told a hundred times, and based on these numbers, this version doesn't bring much new to the table. It's watchable if you're in the mood for a low-stakes indie about adulting anxiety, but it's not going to blow anyone away.
For families? This is strictly adult viewing. Teens 16+ might get something out of the themes about self-definition and societal pressure, but younger kids will be bored to tears. And honestly, even for adults, there are probably better uses of 90 minutes unless you're really craving this specific flavor of millennial existential comedy.





