Jack Goes Home

2016

Action / Drama / Horror / Mystery / Thriller

15
Rotten Tomatoes Critics - Rotten25%
Rotten Tomatoes Audience - Spilled30%
IMDb Rating5.0102416

Plot summary


Uploaded by: FREEMAN

Top cast

Natasha Lyonne Photo
Natasha Lyonne as Nancy
Nikki Reed Photo
Nikki Reed as Crystal
Rory Culkin Photo
Rory Culkin as Jack
720p.WEB 1080p.WEB
886.05 MB
1280*538
English 2.0
R
23.976 fps
1 hr 40 min
P/S 2 / 1
1.67 GB
1904*800
English 2.0
R
23.976 fps
1 hr 40 min
P/S 1 / 4

Movie Reviews

Reviewed by SnoopyStyle5 / 10

uneven but interesting

Jack (Rory Culkin) seems cold to the news of his father being decapitated in a car crash. His pregnant girlfriend Cleo (Britt Robertson) is away visiting her parents. His lesbian friend Shanda (Daveigh Chase) finds him disturbingly sleepwalking. He goes home to care for his mother (Lin Shaye) and uncovers hidden family secrets. Shanda joins him.

Thomas Dekker is an actor trying to branch out into filmmaking. There is some good creepiness mostly due to Culkin's disturbing acting. This is a psychological horror which is outside the norm. Dekker's work is professional but lacks an excitement. There are moments of tension but it never maintains its intensity. It all adds up to an uneven attempt with some interesting aspects.

Reviewed by Woodyanders8 / 10

Very creepy and unnerving

Jack Thurlowe (a strong and convincing performance by Rory Culkin) travels back home to see his abrasive mother Theresa (an outstanding portrayal by Lin Shaye) after his father gets killed in an automobile accident that Theresa survived. Jack winds up uncovering a few long buried secrets about both himself and his family that threaten to push him over the edge into total madness and despair.

Writer/director Thomas Dekker relates the complex, yet still absorbing story at a deliberate pace, ably crafts an incredibly dark, brooding, and unsettling gloom-doom mood that's rife with dread and melancholy, tackles some extremely grim and upsetting subject matter head on (the complicated tough love relationship between Jack and Theresa results in several painfully poignant moments),shows with bracingly stark acuity the severe emotional and psychological damage wrought by childhood abuse, and concludes things on an uncompromisingly bleak note. Culkin and Shaye both do sterling work in their demanding roles; they receive sturdy support from Daveigh Chase as Jack's loyal and concerned friend Shandra, Luis Hunter as gay cokehead neighbor Duncan, Britt Robertson as pregnant fiancee Cleo, and Natasha Lyonne as sweet animal shelter receptionist Nancy. A supremely effective skin crawler.

Reviewed by peterp-450-2987167 / 10

Hey, isn't it Kevin ... but older ... and more confused !??

"There's nothing to do or say. Um... we live, we drive, we crash, we die. Had to happen sometime."

Coincidentally, I have just seen "Marrowbone". A film about someone who has difficulties in processing the loss of a loved one. And when I was about halfway with "Jack goes home", I realized that I was watching a similar story. And it might be that the ultimate outcome is identical. I wasn't far wrong. And to be honest, I thought this intriguing film slightly better than the previous one. And this only because of the brilliant acting of Rory Culkin. A portrait about how madness takes over someones personality.

I hadn't seen the name of the actor who's playing the leading role. So I was wondering for a long time where I had seen that face before. And when I finally found out his name was Culkin, it hit me. Damn, he looks a lot like his brother who made a couple of burglars their lifes a hell in "Home Alone". But I must confess that his acting performance surpassed everything that his famous brother Macaulay ever did. As Jack, Rory displays a whole range of feelings and moods. From pride to indifferent. From sadness to calmth. One moment he tries to unravel an old family secret. The next moment he flees into a daze of alcohol and drugs. He even experienced homosexual delusions. And all this after he was forced to return to his parental home because his father died in a car accident.

It's clear from the start that something isn't right. That indifference with which Jack tells his pregnant wife that his father died. Even though his father apparently was pretty important to him. The way in which he tells in detail about his beheaded father, is strange and frightening. On the other hand though it's strangely enough also funny in a certain way. The behavior of his mother Teresa (Lin Shaye) is also strange. Perhaps the traumatic effect after the accident? After her outburst during dinner about whether she should or should not mourn about the loss of her husband, you start to think she's relieved about that loss. Are those dark family secrets real? It results in a complex mother-son relationship which escalates as the film progresses.

"Jack goes home" is such a movie that makes you feel uncomfortable. Despite the total lack of bloody or frightening images (even with a creepy attic in the house),there's this constant feeling of tension. The psychological chaos is a constant in this film. "Jack goes home" balances between a ghost story and a psychological family drama. Jack is involved in a battle with his personal demons and seems to be gradually losing his grip on reality. And even though the characters are of such a nature that there is always the danger of relapsing in overacting, the main actors ensure that they do not fall into that trap. It feels like I'm repeating myself, but the acting of Rory Culkin is fascinating. For me this movie is worthy a watch. In other words, a must see. And if you get the chance to see it, let me know if I'm totally wrong!

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