: It avoids the "tragic star" trope, instead presenting her as a woman of immense agency and foresight.

: The grain and texture of late-80s music videos and news broadcasts are preserved with clarity, emphasizing the stark contrast between O'Connor's ethereal beauty and the harsh media landscape she inhabited.

Directed by Kathryn Ferguson, is a raw, evocative documentary that reclaims the narrative of Sinead O’Connor during her most meteoric and controversial years (1987–1993). Eschewing the typical "talking heads" format, the film relies on a haunting voiceover from O'Connor herself, recorded shortly before her passing, making the viewing experience feel deeply intimate and posthumously prophetic. The Narrative Focus

In , the film’s aesthetic is striking:

: Ferguson uses impressionistic reenactments to illustrate Sinead’s childhood trauma. In 1080p, these scenes have a cinematic, Lynchian quality that avoids the "cheap" feel of many documentary recreations.

: Because it stops in the mid-90s, viewers looking for a complete life history (including her later conversion to Islam or her final years) may feel the story is incomplete. Final Verdict

The film’s greatest strength is its . By framing O’Connor as a survivor and a pioneer of the "cancel culture" era before the term existed, it forces the audience to confront how cruelly she was treated by the industry and the public.