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Being charlie
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Being Charlie | Streaming movies, English movies, Free movies online
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Goofs
Travis the counselor tells Charlie he spent two years in County Jail. By law the maximum time you can spend in County Jail is 364 days. Any sentence beyond that gets you sent to prison. See more »
Quotes
Charlie Mills:
[ sing-songy]
You're an asshole. Adam:
Why am I an asshole? Oh, 'cause I want to fuck your new girlfriend? Yeah, yeah, it might be that. See more »
Connections
References Baywatch (1989)
Soundtracks
Trickle Down Economics
Written and performed by Nick Reiner, Matt Elisofon See more »
Details
Release Date: 6 May 2016 (USA)
Also Known As: Being Charlie
Box Office
Opening Weekend USA: $11, 872,
8 May 2016
Cumulative Worldwide Gross: $32, 964
See more on IMDbPro »
Company Credits
Technical Specs
See full technical specs »
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The film stars Nick Robinson, Common, Cary Elwes, Devon Bostick, Morgan Saylor, Susan Misner and Ricardo Chavira. It was screened in the Special Presentations section of the 2015 Toronto International Film Festival on September 14, 2015. The film was released on May 6, 2016, by Paladin. Plot [ edit]
Charlie is a troublesome 18-year-old who breaks out of a youth drug treatment clinic. When he returns home to Los Angeles, his parents stage an intervention and force him to go to adult rehab. There, he meets a beautiful but troubled girl, Eva, and is forced to battle with drugs, elusive love and divided parents. Cast [ edit]
Nick Robinson as Charlie Mills [3]
Common as Travis [3]
Cary Elwes as David Mills [3]
Devon Bostick as Adam [3]
Morgan Saylor as Eva [3]
Susan Misner as Lisanne [3]
Ricardo Chavira as Drake [3]
Production [ edit]
On April 22, 2015, it was announced Nick Robinson, Morgan Saylor, Common, Devon Bostick, Susan Misner, Ricardo Chavira and Cary Elwes would star in the film.
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Charlie's Angels review: 'Bland, witless and ludicrous' Elizabeth Banks's reboot of this old franchise is "grimly unimaginative" and "tediously formulaic", writes Nicholas Barber. T The new Charlie's Angels is one of very few action movies to have been written and directed by a woman, in this case Elizabeth Banks. Its three heroines, played by Kristen Stewart, Naomi Scott and Ella Balinska, come from different ethnic backgrounds, and the theme repeated throughout is that women can do anything, but are endlessly underestimated by men. In Hollywood terms, then, the film is groundbreakingly progressive. It's something to be celebrated and supported. Or rather, it would have been if it weren't so terrible. More like this: - Last Christmas is a festive flop - Five stars for Queen & Slim - Two stars for the Frozen sequel In Banks's update of the 1970s television hit, the mysterious Charlie Townsend no longer funds a trio of Los Angeles-based private detectives he calls the Angels, but now has a global espionage organisation with a zillion-dollar annual budget and no visible source of income.
Like Kingsman: The Secret Service and Men In Black: International, Charlie's Angels has an eager outsider joining a covert crime-fighting crew. Elena (Scott) is the naive fledgling, while Sabina (Stewart) and Jane (Balinska) are the veterans who take her under their Angel wings. The most unimaginative element of a grimly unimaginative film is 'Callisto', a computerised Rubik's Cube that can generate clean sustainable energy, or something. But, wait, Callisto can also be used to zap everyone in its vicinity with a fatal electro-magnetic pulse! It is "a perfect assassination machine", which is why someone is planning to steal it and sell it on the black market. The annoying thing about this feeble premise is that Callisto would be worth far more as a pocket-sized power plant than as an assassination machine, perfect or otherwise, so the thief should really have rethought his business plan. Anyway, the boffin who developed Callisto is Elena. She knows that it can be weaponised, so she wants the CEO of her tech corporation, Alexander Brok (Sam Claflin), to let her iron out that glitch – easy enough, you might think.