I somehow missed “Being Charlie” when it came out in 2016. That was a year of transition for me, the kind where survival takes precedence over curiosity. Looking back, I’m not surprised this movie slipped past me. I don’t think I was ready for it then. Meaning I wasn’t in a place where I could fully appreciate it.
I watched it now because of the recent news surrounding Rob Reiner and his wife, Michele. Out of curiosity, yes, but also out of that familiar, heavy pull that comes when addiction resurfaces in public view. Headlines blasting across every web browser and social media platform. The questions arrive quietly but relentlessly: What happened after the credits rolled? How long did things hold together? And when did the slide begin again?
“Being Charlie” is not a subtle film. It shows addiction the way we’ve seen it many times before: rehabs, AA meetings, sober houses, and interventions delivered with clenched jaws and forced calm. These moments are often cliché, almost instructional in their familiarity. Addiction here is mainly framed through the lens of white privilege, where consequences exist but cushions always seem to be nearby. Money doesn’t save Charlie, but it does soften the fall.
The acting isn’t award-winning, and the film never quite rises above the surface of its own story. Still, there are moments that land. Cary Elwes, forever recognizable as the guy from “The Princess Bride”, plays Charlie’s father not with quiet restraint but with pomp, ego, and an unmistakable narcissism. His love feels conditional, filtered through image, reputation, and political ambition. Control masquerades as concern. Power substitutes for intimacy. It’s an uncomfortable portrayal, and perhaps one of the film’s more honest ones.
What the movie does get right is the reminder that addiction is a family disease. Everyone is affected. Everyone is orbiting the chaos, trying to manage it, deny it, or survive it. Love is present, but it’s distorted by fear, status, and the desperate need to appear functional.
The film is also deeply triggering. There were moments where my body remembered things my mind didn’t invite back in. The phantom sensation of drugs sliding down the back of my throat. The old ache of chasing something I once believed I needed to live. That alone makes this a cautious recommendation. If you don’t trigger easily, it’s worth watching as a reminder of how dark addiction truly is. If you do, proceed gently.
By the end of the film, Charlie appears sober. There’s a suggestion of hope, or at least a pause. But knowing what we know now, nine years later, that ending lands differently. Addiction doesn’t stop progressing just because the screen fades to black. The disease waits. It advances quietly. And if recovery doesn’t keep moving forward, the illness will.
That truth stayed with me long after the movie ended.
Watching this at 50, sober for many years, I wasn’t left inspired so much as grounded. Life is fragile. One day you’re here, and the next day you’re not. The film doesn’t answer the question of what it’s all for, and neither can I. But it did reaffirm something essential and non-negotiable for me: my recovery has to be progressive too.
So I’ll give “Being Charlie” a 3.5 Sobees score. Not because it’s exceptional cinema, but because it serves as a sobering checkpoint. A reminder of where this disease leads when left unchecked. And a quiet reaffirmation that there is only one way forward for me.
Sober.
One day at a time.
Being Charlie Official Trailer (2016)
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