[3][4] The film focuses primarily on scenes of the filmmaker, Sophy Romvari, discovering never-before-seen photographs of her deceased brothers, which were taken and hidden by her father after their deaths.
[1][5] The film does not explicitly state how her brothers died, but explores the filmmaker's and her family's feelings of greif in the aftermath.
Adam Nayman of Cinema Scope wrote that "Romvari’s instinct (and ability) to compose beautiful frames as containers around her ideas is of a piece with her previous work, but in Still Processing, the recessive, strategically mediated melancholy of the earlier shorts has been replaced with (or perhaps given way to) a more untrammelled emotional affect,"[7] while Alina Faulds of Flipscreen wrote that "Sophy Romvari shows brave filmmaking with her willingness to document her grief on screen.
She holds nothing back, telling the viewers about the love she has for her lost brothers and even going so far as to capture one of her panic attacks.
"[8] The film is also notable for going viral online on film-focused social media website Letterboxd.