Goodbye June (2025) centers on a fractured family forced to reunite when their estranged father falls gravely ill. Set over the course of one emotionally charged summer, the story follows four adult siblings who return to their childhood home, each carrying unresolved resentment, guilt, and unspoken truths. What begins as a reluctant gathering quickly becomes an intense confrontation with the past they have all tried to escape.

As the siblings settle back into the house, old dynamics resurface almost immediately. Long-standing rivalries flare, buried secrets are accidentally revealed, and moments of tenderness are interrupted by sharp arguments. Each sibling struggles with their own failures and regrets, and the looming presence of their father’s illness magnifies emotions that have been suppressed for years.
The family is further shaken when a long-hidden truth about their parents’ marriage comes to light. This revelation forces the siblings to reassess their understanding of love, sacrifice, and betrayal. The house itself becomes a character in the story, filled with memories that both comfort and wound, reminding them of who they were before life pulled them apart.

Amid the conflict, small moments of connection begin to emerge. Shared laughter, late-night conversations, and quiet acts of care slowly soften the hostility between them. The siblings begin to realize that while their childhood was imperfect, it shaped them in ways they can no longer deny. Forgiveness proves difficult, but the need for closure becomes impossible to ignore.

The film concludes with a bittersweet farewell that gives Goodbye June its emotional weight. As the siblings prepare to leave once more, they are changed by what they have faced together. Though not all wounds are healed, they depart with a deeper understanding of each other and a renewed sense of family. The story ends on a reflective note, emphasizing that sometimes reconciliation is not about fixing the past—but learning how to live with it.
