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An Insightful Review of "Omaha" and Its Exploration of Family Dynamics

Author

John Castro

Published May 16, 2026

By  Published Apr 30, 2026, 8:16 AM EDT Alex is the Senior Editor of Reviews & Prestige Content, overseeing ScreenRant's film reviews as one of its Rotten Tomatoes-approved critics. After graduating from Brown University with a B.A. in English, he spent a locked-down year in Scotland completing a Master's in Film Studies from the University of Edinburgh, which he hears is a nice, lively city. He now lives in and works from Milan, Italy, conveniently a short train ride from the Venice Film Festival, which he first covered for SR in 2026. follow Follow followed Followed Like Like Log in Here is a fact-based summary of the story contents: Try something different: Show me the facts Explain it like I’m 5 Give me a lighthearted recap

In the opening scene of , a father wakes his young daughter in the early hours of the morning. His tone is gentle but firm: He needs her to get up and grab a few treasured possessions. Her little brother is already in the car. She doesn't understand what's happening, and neither does the audience, so we both grasp at telling details. Are they in danger? A sheriff appears outside, to the man's dismay. Is he in some kind of trouble? Is he the danger? No, the sheriff doesn't seem concerned, nor does she stop him loading up the car. They speak calmly, mostly out of earshot, She pins a notice to their door as they drive away.

This is how the entire movie works, by design. We're along for the ride with this family, but like the children, we don't know where they're going or why. Things are withheld from us until they happen, unless we can piece them together beforehand, which is where we diverge from the kids – they've likely never heard the term "foreclosure," but the daughter at least seems to recognize that they're leaving home for good. This structure is essential to what director Cole Webley and writer Robert Machoian are trying to do with their film. It also means that we don't learn what Omaha is really about until it's over.

I will not reveal what this premise is, except to say that the movie is determined to solidify how we feel about these characters before we find out. In the moment, I thought it was very successful, and quite moving. In retrospect, however, the lens that we're forced to view the film through cheapens what we actually spent most of our time watching. Omaha can't really be seen the same way twice, but it's well worth it for that first viewing experience – and for 's performance, which will surely be some of the most quietly powerful work of the year.

Omaha Has The Most To Say About The Child-Parent Relationship In Times Of Crisis

We don't learn much about the specifics of their situation, but Magaro's Dad is in dire straits. His wife has passed, and though it's unclear exactly how long ago, the wound doesn't seem fresh. He has just lost his house. Everything he has to his name fits in his car, along with his daughter Ella (Molly Belle Wright), son Charlie (Wyatt Solis), and the family dog, Max. That car even has trouble starting. But one thing he does have, even if he declines to share it, is a destination. He embarks on this long, cross-country road trip with a clear sense of purpose. All he'll share is that they're headed for Nebraska.

Magaro performs this man with extraordinary texture. As with the acting cliché that you'll better move an audience by trying to hold back tears than by letting them flow, Dad's constant effort to keep his pain hidden from his children makes us feel for him all the more deeply. In his moments alone, when he lets the full weight of it show on his body, the camera often shoots him from the side at an angle, obstructing our view. Most of what we're allowed to see head-on is his brave face, and the cracks that form in it each time he's unable to keep the severity of what's happening from his kids.

The way Wright performs this growing awareness is heartbreaking, and it prompts what I think are Magaro's most interesting choices.

I expect most will experience Omaha as a film about poverty, and it certainly is that – it has at least one too many scenes of Dad having to compromise at a register as his cash dwindles throughout the journey – but it's more astute as a film about having to grow up too quickly. Charlie, young enough to still be fully immersed in childhood innocence, is a useful contrast to his nine-year-old sister, who is starting to see through the veil. Adults leave a lot unspoken, their Dad maybe more than most. Sometimes, Ella understands anyway.

John Magaro in close-up shot from the side of his head in Omaha John Magaro in close-up shot from the side of his head in Omaha

The way Wright performs this growing awareness is heartbreaking, and it prompts what I think are Magaro's most interesting choices. Dad is quite profoundly torn about this development from his daughter. On the one hand, as a struggling single parent, he needs her to step into more responsibility. He leans on her, and is grateful for her emotional intelligence, which helps her recognize when continuing to press could become too difficult for him. In some of the things he says, he is clearly fostering Ella's accelerated maturity, if not outright encouraging it.

But he's also terrified of it. In Magaro's face, we get the flashes of guilt you might expect; anyone in this situation would wish they could preserve their kid's childhood, and Dad has a lot to feel culpable for failing to prevent. But he recognizes that Ella is starting to see the difficulties of the world for what they are, and sometimes, there is fear in his eyes. As much as her ability to read him can be a mercy, it means that she is seeing him, through the shining armor that makes every parent seem more than human. He is afraid she'll discover what he's trying so desperately to hide.

The emotion in these performances does have its crescendo, and in the context of everything that came before, it's a tough scene to watch. Magaro and Wright more than earn our reaction; Omaha perhaps less so. The discussion around this film will undoubtedly be shaped by its ending, but I'll hold onto what it was before that: a delicate portrait of childhood cracking under the pressure of economic hardship, and of the complex discomfort that can come from the gap between child and parent starting to close before either is ready for it.

s1snvytwwmvpwk439borrf9xyws.jpg ScreenRant logo 7/10 10 stars 9 stars 8 stars 7 stars 6 stars 5 stars 4 stars 3 stars 2 stars 1 star Like Follow Followed PG-13 Release Date April 24, 2026 Runtime 83 minutes Director Stephen Cole Webley Writers Robert Machoian Producers Preston Lee

Cast

  • Headshot Of John Magaro iN The 2024 Film Independent Spirit Awards Dad
  • Cast Placeholder Image Molly Belle Wright Ella

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