

Two cheaters, one marriage, zero communication—who's the real villain here?
Charlotte (Lexi Luna) and Max (Seth Gamble), married high school sweethearts, have settled into a family life that outwardly seems fulfilling. But inside, Charlotte grapples with her sexual identity and her true desires, while Max feels increasingly unseen and disconnected from his wife. Charlotte's doubts intensify during a 'Girls' weekend' with a group of other mothers. She meets Lucy (Siri Dahl), an outgoing lesbian, and they quickly bond. Charlotte finds herself drawn into an affair, experiencing emotions and a connection she hadn't anticipated.Simultaneously, Max, feeling neglected, starts engaging in online chats. He begins breadcrumbing multiple women on social media--initiating conversations and making vague promises without intending to follow through.When Charlotte and Max reunite, their simultaneous emotional entanglements force a raw confrontation.
Acting
Lexi Luna's restrained unraveling says everything she doesn't
Direction
Bree Mills builds dread through silence, not spectacle
Writing
The 'breadcrumbing' metaphor cuts deeper than you'd expect

Director
Bree Mills
Trivia, insights & behind the scenes
Bree Mills, known primarily for adult cinema, uses the three-hour runtime to deliberately mirror the slow suffocation of suburban marriage—mainstream dramas rarely dare this patience.
The film's title weaponizes dating slang 'breadcrumbing'—typically used for flaky romantic prospects—applying it to a husband's calculated emotional withholding within marriage.