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The drug-addicted son (Nick Robinson) of a California politician (Cary Elwes) finds romance with a beautiful but troubled girl, Eva, and is forced to battle with drugs, elusive love and divided parents in an adult rehab.
There's something admirable about the fact that "Being Charlie" exists at all. It's a testament to Nick Reiner's survival. That doesn't mean it's a great movie.
The result is a film so personal you watch transfixed, caught up in a life that is constantly enthralling, with a universal appeal that extends beyond the exclusive Hills of Beverly.
A well-crafted work that features a powerful performance by former child actor Nick Robinson (Jurassic World), Being Charlie is far too predictable, relying too often on all-too-familiar drug-story tropes.