The title, "Get Cozy," is not merely a throwaway euphemism; it is the film’s operational thesis. From the opening frame, director Gia Pagliarulo (known for the "Raw" spin-off’s grittier aesthetic) eschews the typical Los Angeles penthouse for a lived-in, dimly lit cabin-like set. There is a deliberate grain to the footage—soft, natural lighting that plays off Anderson’s porcelain skin rather than blinding it with hard studio LEDs. The goal is verisimilitude. It feels like a cold winter evening, and the promise is warmth.