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IMDbPro

Christine

  • 2016
  • R
  • 1h 59m
IMDb RATING
6.9/10
18K
YOUR RATING
Rebecca Hall in Christine (2016)
Trailer for Christine
Play trailer2:33
2 Videos
83 Photos
DocudramaTragedyBiographyDrama

The story of Christine Chubbuck, a 1970s TV reporter struggling with depression and professional frustrations as she tries to advance her career.The story of Christine Chubbuck, a 1970s TV reporter struggling with depression and professional frustrations as she tries to advance her career.The story of Christine Chubbuck, a 1970s TV reporter struggling with depression and professional frustrations as she tries to advance her career.

  • Director
    • Antonio Campos
  • Writer
    • Craig Shilowich
  • Stars
    • Rebecca Hall
    • Michael C. Hall
    • Tracy Letts
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    6.9/10
    18K
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Antonio Campos
    • Writer
      • Craig Shilowich
    • Stars
      • Rebecca Hall
      • Michael C. Hall
      • Tracy Letts
    • 109User reviews
    • 131Critic reviews
    • 72Metascore
  • See production info at IMDbPro
    • Awards
      • 6 wins & 23 nominations total

    Videos2

    Christine
    Trailer 2:33
    Christine
    CHRISTINE - Official Trailer (The Orchard)
    Trailer 2:32
    CHRISTINE - Official Trailer (The Orchard)
    CHRISTINE - Official Trailer (The Orchard)
    Trailer 2:32
    CHRISTINE - Official Trailer (The Orchard)

    Photos82

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    Top cast51

    Edit
    Rebecca Hall
    Rebecca Hall
    • Christine
    Michael C. Hall
    Michael C. Hall
    • George
    Tracy Letts
    Tracy Letts
    • Michael
    Maria Dizzia
    Maria Dizzia
    • Jean
    J. Smith-Cameron
    J. Smith-Cameron
    • Peg
    Timothy Simons
    Timothy Simons
    • Steve
    Kim Shaw
    Kim Shaw
    • Andrea
    John Cullum
    John Cullum
    • Bob Anderson
    Morgan Spector
    Morgan Spector
    • Doctor Parsons
    Jayson Warner Smith
    Jayson Warner Smith
    • Mitch
    Kimberley Drummond
    Kimberley Drummond
    • Gail
    Lindsay Ayliffe
    Lindsay Ayliffe
    • Capt. Frank Basil
    Susan Pourfar
    Susan Pourfar
    • Miranda
    Rachel Hendrix
    Rachel Hendrix
    • Crystal
    David Foster
    • Bandaged Man
    Ritchie Montgomery
    Ritchie Montgomery
    • Tug
    Alec Cabacungan
    • Stevie
    John Newberg
    John Newberg
    • Marvin
    • Director
      • Antonio Campos
    • Writer
      • Craig Shilowich
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews109

    6.917.5K
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    Featured reviews

    7Lewis_Heather787

    Wow this film gives you a huge emotional punch like no other!

    This film left me speechless and crying in parts, even though I mistakenly researched the film before watching it, is was still left with a number of mixed emotions. I can't remember a film having such a deep and traumatising effect on me, it is truly one of the saddest stories on film. Obviously don't research anything about this film before seeing it because it will probably shock you.

    Firstly the film as a whole, is good / OK, its fine but it can get a little slow here and there. It was a story that I'd never heard of which is unbelievable really, but probably due to the fact it was before my time and didn't happen in my country. As mentioned I researched the film a little before watching it due to its really good trailer and yep ruined to ending and all the overbearing issues in the film, but was still interesting in how it was going to be brought to screen. The directing is OK nothing groundbreaking but I think a very personal and thought provoking film like this doesn't need anything out of this world. The supporting cast are all fine and average characters that you can sort of connect with, some obviously more than others. There is a really good close, family like feeling in the news station that the characters have with each other, which is an interesting dynamic. So overall the film is good, I can now see why this isn't getting as much buzz as I thought it was because this film stands on one performance.

    Rebecca Hall in my opinion is a very talented and often underrated actor, who deserves bigger roles, this film only backs up my claim. This is personally the best performance I think she has done in her career so far, due to the complexities of the character she is portraying, Christine. Whether you are a man or woman, or have dealt with some of what she is going through or all of what he is going through, this film will hit you very hard. I can say from personal experience some of her social situations or mannerisms are perfectly portrayed on screen because I can see myself in that situation doing the same thing. If you have never suffered from depression or any mental health issue this film might make it easier for you to understand it a bit more. There is so much to this character that can't be put into words the sorrow and surprising anger that I personally had towards her. I never ever had a film made me shout out loud in anger because I want the character to do something so badly or just speak to someone about her problems, but I also know how difficult that is. This character is easy to connect with as the audience because she genuinely wants to be happy and you want her to be happy as well, she is in now way a horrible person who had done something wrong, she has done nothing to deserve the situation she finds herself in. It actually made me sick to my stomach the ending to the film and how easy to it could have been to change and find help, it is truly a social injustice. Your mind will be overwhelmed with emotions, like mine is now, that you want to express and can't. 100% this film will make you cry or make you just feel horrible and if you don't then you aren't human.

    All in all this film banks on the performance of Rebecca Hall which is fantastic and should be championed more than it is, however the rest of the film can be a little lack lustre. I think this film needed a couple of more characters to be a bit more interesting or relatable or for the story at the news station to be a bit more, meat to the bone. Saying that, if that is what happened in the true story then it should be changed for entertainment purposes. Finally I think the ending of the film could have been tackled a little better instead of just grinding to a halt, like the film makers run out of time. 70% out of 100 the performance of Rebecca Hall, the story and the emotional reaction I had to film make it a good watch, I will never forget the first time I watched this film. You should definitely watch this film for the social injustice it is and the risks and dangers surrounding metal health issues.
    7secondtake

    Enter a world of ordinary mediocrity and disappointment--hard to pull off

    Christine (2016)

    A small market local television station in Western Florida in the 1970s might be the epitome of tawdry, pathetic America. Or so it appears here, where a rag-tag crew of struggling journalists and talking heads patch together a low budget news show every day. And ratings are going down.

    Christine (played by Rebecca Hall) is a second string reporter in this wishful situation. Her life is full of compromises, and her efforts to excel at her work are awkward and sometimes sad. But she has determination, and works hard. When two of her colleagues are chosen over her for promotion, it's just another reminder that life sucks.

    First point to make here: don't read anything about the big point of this movie ahead of time. I was lucky to not have a clue what this was all leading up to, and it was a final terrific punch to a slow, empathetic lead up.

    By empathetic I mean that the movie makers (writer Craig Shilowich and director Antonia Campos) have shown the situation for what it was. It took a lot of restraint to keep this from turning to parody, or to become critical, or even to be highly dramatic in a kind of glitzy way. There is a steady, almost disappointing feeling to it all. Not a single character seems admirable, and yet every one is perfectly ordinary and nice. Even the incompetence throughout is a normal kind of mediocrity, mixed with sprinkles of hope and humor.

    And people are generally good to each other even as they strive to move up (and out of Sarasota). It's a realistic construction of a mise-en-scene that will not sparkle or create intrigue or move you in particular. Until the end.

    And that's pretty amazing. The dullness and the acting might strike you as just bad— as if this movie just plain sucks. But it's not the movie, but the subject, that is so uninspiring. Stick it out, if you like it at all. Admire Hall's acting, which is remarkably nuanced.
    8mls4182

    Important story, hard to watch

    The tragic story of a young, promising reporter struggling with depression.

    For anyone reading this and suffering, you are not alone. Many people go through hard times in life and in their own heads. You MUST remember that circumstances and states of mind can change for the better and even quickly. Please don't make a permanent solution to a temporary problem.
    10lralbright1

    Excellent

    Most people who have ever heard of Christine Chubbuck already know how her story ends; She's been attributed to glimpsing into the future of television journalism with her final statement, the story turning into a morbid urban legend in the over forty years since the incident occurred. I admit, the first time I heard the story almost ten years ago, it sounded so bizarre, I almost couldn't believe it.

    Christine sets out to humanize Christine Chubbuck, and elicit empathy from an audience that might already see her as someone who is monstrous. Yet, somehow, the movie accomplishes it's goal, giving her humanity that was lost in the headlines. Much of that credit is due to Rebecca Hall who transformed herself completely, throwing herself into the role so thoroughly that it's almost frightening.

    The first time we see Christine she is filming herself doing a mock interview, and then later on, we see Christine examining every little gesture, picking herself apart in order to remake herself into something better to gain that elusive feeling of perfection, yet no matter how many times she's assured by Jean Reed (Maria Dizzia), the only person at WZRB that could probably be considered a friend, there's still that look of dissatisfaction with herself etched on her face.

    It's been written that Christine Chubbuck used to give puppet shows to mentally challenged children so the screenwriter incorporated that into the film, but it's utilized as little glimpses of what she's thinking: 'Be Bold, Be Brave' she tells them, a fairly innocuous phrase, but for the viewer who knows what's to come later on, it has chilling connotations.

    The moment that made Christine Chubbuck famous is shown in all of it's brutal and devastating impact. The film even shows her mother watching as it all unfolds. I don't know if Christine Chubbuck's mother, Peg, was actually watching the day Christine did what she did, but the possibility of that actually occurring, is heartbreaking.

    It's a testament to the filmmakers that, though Christine can often come across as incredibly difficult and unlikable, the audience still has a great deal of empathy for her. Yes, she has fights with her boss about 'blood and guts' television, and her mother about the state of her life, but it's carefully contrasted with moments of quiet desperation, like the sequence when the head news anchor, George (Michael C. Hall), takes her to a transactional analysis meeting where they play a game of 'Yes, but…" and Christine slowly reveals the things that she feels make her life impossible to live.

    Overall, Christine is a portrait of a woman desperately trying to make something of herself but because of a chemical imbalance, she can't seem to sync with the people and world around her. Anchored by Rebecca Hall who gives an Oscar-worthy turn, Christine is also supported by an excellent supporting cast (Maria Dizzia and J. Smith Cameron in particular), strong direction and an incisive script. Highly recommended.
    7Red-125

    Grim film about a serious problem--based on a real event

    Christine (2016/I) was directed by Antonio Campos. Rebecca Hall plays Christine Chubbuck, a TV reporter in Sarasota, Florida. This is a fictionalized biography of Ms. Chubbuck. If you check Wikipedia, you'll know that much of what we see actually happened.

    Christine Chubbuck was a person with depression, or possibly bipolar illness. She was well educated and financially comfortable, but her interpersonal life was in shambles. In the film, her behavior was strange and sometimes bizarre. People keep asking her, "Are you OK?" She always assures them that she's OK, and they believe her. Even if they don't fully believe her, they have their own problems, and they move on to other matters.

    Rebecca Hall is an excellent actor. She resembles Christine Chubbuck physically. (That's probably one of the reasons she got the part.) She makes us believe in Christine and her problems, which is no easy task. (People who don't have mental illness find it hard to fake.)

    This is a difficult movie to watch, but I felt that the acting was strong, and the message was important. I wish the producers had rolled a statement before the credits saying, "If you, or someone you know, feels and acts like Christine, call this hotline."

    We saw the movie at the excellent Little Theatre in Rochester NY. It will work very well on the small screen.

    Storyline

    Edit

    Did you know

    Edit
    • Trivia
      The owner of the company that cut the film's trailer, Robert "Smitty" Smith at In Sync Advertising, was an actual intern at WXLT-TV who knew and was friends with Christine Chubbuck. He sought out the job when he found out about the film and saw it at Sundance; incidentally, the creators had tried to seek him out for interviews during the research phases, but were unable to locate him due to the ubiquity of his name.
    • Goofs
      Though the movie suggests that Christine was avoiding the ovary surgery, the real-life Christine had her one bad ovary removed a year prior to her suicide.
    • Quotes

      Steve: Hey, Chris, do you want to go to lunch?

      Christine: Maybe tomorrow.

      Steve: Okay. Rain check.

      [Christine watches him leave, and resumes typing her suicide note]

    • Crazy credits
      End credits end in a white screen with a beep tone.
    • Connections
      Featured in Film '72: Episode #46.2 (2017)
    • Soundtracks
      Annie's Song
      Written by John Denver

      Performed by John Denver

      Published by Kobalt Music Publishing America

      Courtesy of RCA Records

      By arrangement with Sony Music Licensing

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    FAQ19

    • How long is Christine?Powered by Alexa

    Details

    Edit
    • Release date
      • October 14, 2016 (United States)
    • Countries of origin
      • United Kingdom
      • United States
    • Official sites
      • Official Facebook
      • Official site (United Kingdom)
    • Language
      • English
    • Also known as
      • Кристин
    • Filming locations
      • Garden City, Georgia, USA
    • Production companies
      • BorderLine Films
      • Fresh Jade
      • The Wonder Club
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Box office

    Edit
    • Gross US & Canada
      • $298,525
    • Opening weekend US & Canada
      • $13,384
      • Oct 16, 2016
    • Gross worldwide
      • $313,465
    See detailed box office info on IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      1 hour 59 minutes
    • Color
      • Color
    • Aspect ratio
      • 1.85 : 1

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