Four Good Days Quiz – Which Character Are You?

<span class="author-by">by</span> Samantha <span class="author-surname">Stratton</span>

by Samantha Stratton

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Respond to these rapid questions in our Four Good Days quiz and we will tell you which Four Good Days character you are. Play it now.

Tragic circumstances force us to reevaluate the meaning of words we have come to take for granted. Typically, we think of a “good” day as one that is filled with friends, family, good food, and enjoyment. A “good” day, on the other hand, may be determined not by what it contains, but by what it does not contain for families who have been battered by the broken promises and crushing disappointments of substance abuse and addiction. In the film “Four Good Days,” which is based on a true story, a young addict is required to abstain from drug use for four days in order to receive a promising treatment. She and her mother both consider abstinence from drugs to be “good.”

Addiction does not require the word “love” to be re-calibrated, but it does require it to be modified. We refer to this as “tough love.” Thus, when Molly (Mila Kunis), a strung-out addict who has been through rehab and relapsed more than a dozen times, shows up at her mother’s house, she is met with a cold reception instead of a warm welcome. Leaving the house, Molly’s mother Deb (Glenn Close) leans out the door, her calmness in stark contrast to Molly’s hopped-up shifts in tonality. She has been lied to and stolen from so many times that she believes it is in Molly’s best interests if those around her can set firm boundaries. Deb, on the other hand, desperately wants to believe her. “Whenever I’ve made the decision to engage with her, I’ve done so with my eyes wide open,” she explains. However, hope always pushes us to try again, even when we know it will only break our hearts if we do.

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Debra refuses to allow her to enter the house. “We changed the locks after you and Eric stole the guitars,” says the security guard. Molly, on the other hand, will not leave. And the following day, after the effects of the drugs have worn off, she agrees to allow Deb to transport her to a detox facility. “The only thing that can compare to heroin in terms of f-ing relentlessness is you. That’s the only ray of hope I have in the midst of all of this.” At the hospital, it is obvious that they have been through it so many times that they are familiar with the procedure. However, only Deb is aware of the exact number of times Molly has gone through detoxification: 14. So far, so good.
But you shouldn’t waste any more time and start this Four Good Days quiz.

A doctor approaches Molly three days after the drugs have been flushed from her system and offers her an option: a monthly shot that blocks the effects of opioids. However, in order to receive the shot, she must remain clean for another four days. Deb agrees to allow Molly to visit her at home in order to assist her and to keep an eye on Molly. When each minute is filled with suspense, the movie takes on some of the characteristics of a thriller, and when a character who was once endearing becomes someone who inspires dread and terror, the movie takes on some of the characteristics of a horror film.

Four Good Days Quiz

There are some emotionally moving scenes, such as when Deb, an esthetician at a local casino, gives Molly a facial, her tender touch conveying the unconditional love she is unable to express verbally. Our protagonist Molly’s ex-husband pays her and their children a visit, giving us a glimpse of the life she could have had. As in the superior but underappreciated “Ben is Back,” we learn that the addiction began with an opioid painkiller that was carelessly prescribed for an injury when Ben was a teenager.
Also, you will find out which character are you in this Four Good Days quiz.

Although there are some formulaic elements to the script, the performances, particularly those of Stephen Root, who plays Deb’s second husband, and Joshua Leonard, who plays Molly’s ex-husband, far outweigh it. Getting close, for the second time in a year, portraying a mother of an addict is fine as always, especially when expressing the deep conflicts of a mother who cannot bear the thought of continuing to love her daughter or finding a way to help her stop using. And Kunis portrays Molly’s layers and conflicts with great sensitivity, from her near-feral ability to manipulate, always sensing when it is time to lie or accuse, to the searing pain of the addiction/self-loathing hamster wheel, where “life is a trigger” and it appears that the only way to bear the pain and loss and shame of addiction is to keep getting high.

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Whenever the film resorts to heavy-handed metaphors, like the puzzle that remains unfinished or the colloquial use of the word “addiction,” it falls short of its potential to place binge-watching television news in the same category as substance abuse. Even a brief scene in the film “Less Than Zero,” in which Robert Downey, Jr. pleads with his father for another chance, possesses more insight, heartbreak, authenticity, and dramatic weight than the entire feature-length film. However, audiences require more than scripts that are primarily acting exercises, with little insight beyond everyone blaming everyone else and reminders that bad choices by addicts as well as those around them result in bad outcomes.
Also, you must try to play this Four Good Days quiz.

The film is currently showing in theaters.

For more personality quizzes check this: Witnesses Quiz.

four good days quiz
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