
On a birthday trip, Caroline visits her sister Jackie and her boyfriend. What starts out as an evening with close friends quickly goes askew. Caroline and the group attempt to support Jackie for an apparent illness - though it's unclear who really needs the most help.... (Full plot summary below)
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On a birthday trip, Caroline visits her sister Jackie and her boyfriend. What starts out as an evening with close friends quickly goes askew. Caroline and the group attempt to support Jackie for an apparent illness - though it's unclear who really needs the most help.
Leave your thoughts about Caroline and Jackie.
| VarietyJohn AndersonThe sum of the film is greater than its parts, and while it does make demands of its audience, the cumulative emotional impact is startling. |
| Movies.comPerri NemiroffOddly magnetizing thanks to Adam Christian Clark's styling choices and Marguerite Moreau and Bitsie Tulloch's tantalizing performances. |
| The Hollywood ReporterJohn DeForeViewers will suspect from early on that things aren't as straightforward as they appear, and Clark's screenplay addresses those suspicions only to the extent it must to justify its characters' behavior. |
| The New York TimesAnita GatesWith low-key, almost guileless performances, the film demonstrates that no matter how intelligent, well thought out and potentially enlightened a current sociological method (e.g., the “loving intervention”) may be, people will always find a way to turn it into something ludicrous, aggressive or both. |
| Village VoiceAraceli CruzClark lures you into the chaos through beautiful visuals like the sparkly evening lights of an L.A. dinner party, and the night's principal characters, two attractive brunette sisters...Both irritate. That's the gist and charm of this family's dynamic, which is so real that at times it's unbearable. |
| Time OutAndrew SchenkerBefore long, the film spills over into a far less intriguing, and somewhat questionable, portrait of one hysterical woman. |
| GreenCineSteve DollarMarguerite Moreau (Caroline) and Bitsy Tulloch (Jackie) play their yin/yang roles with a gleaming intensity as the story veers increasingly stranger and darker. |
| User ReviewMary Afucked up sibling love. implico um pouco com o tipo de final, conclusão que esse tipo de filme apresenta. |
| User ReviewDave JMonday, June 9, 2014 (2013) Caroline And Jackie DRAMA (Contains spoilers) Independent, plot less movie written and directed by Adam Christian Clark starring two very close sisters by the names of Caroline and Jackie played by Marguerite Moreau and Bitsie Tulloch. What was expected to be was a formal visit from Caroline celebrating her birthday with her sister Jackie and her boyfriend at her house who in turn became sidetracked to celebrate it with other people at a nearby restaurant. And upon everybody coming back to Jackie's house again, her sister Caroline started to humiliate her right on front of people with negative assumptions made about her, that Jackie is an alcoholic and a bulimic who's addicted to medication. But as the movie is progressing, and as it turns out, it's Caroline who's really the nut job. If viewers were to watch this, one is going to expect many improvised pointless babblings happening throughout about eating and drinking more, as well as lighting some fireworks. I was also incapable to understand how some of the worst things are said about Jackie the person, and then when viewers do see her, she is the total opposite of all the bad things said about her, that she's an alcoholic, and a bulimic as well as a person who is addicted to drugs. This is a perfect example of a movie that's contradicted itself. I mean, even Jackie's live-in boyfriend actually believes she is all of those bad things- how is this possible? Bitsie Tulloch as Caroline is great in this movie, but this movie doesn't do anything for her. 2 out of 4 stars |