Carol

Some people change your life forever.

7.5
20151h 58m

In 1950s New York, a department-store clerk who dreams of a better life falls for an older, married woman.

Production

Logo for Killer Films
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Available For Free On

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Trailers & Videos

Thumbnail for video: Official Final Trailer

Official Final Trailer

Thumbnail for video: Official Movie Trailer

Official Movie Trailer

Thumbnail for video: Official International Trailer

Official International Trailer

Thumbnail for video: Film4 Trailer

Film4 Trailer

Thumbnail for video: "I love Christmas."

"I love Christmas."

Thumbnail for video: "What am I thinking?"

"What am I thinking?"

Thumbnail for video: "All you can do is keep working."

"All you can do is keep working."

Thumbnail for video: Script to Scene

Script to Scene

Thumbnail for video: "I'm not alone this year."

"I'm not alone this year."

Thumbnail for video: #CateBlanchett on her role in director Todd Haynes’s Film4-backed Carol #Shorts #Film

#CateBlanchett on her role in director Todd Haynes’s Film4-backed Carol #Shorts #Film

Cast

Photo of Cate Blanchett

Cate Blanchett

Carol Aird

Photo of Rooney Mara

Rooney Mara

Therese Belivet

Photo of Kyle Chandler

Kyle Chandler

Harge Aird

Photo of Jake Lacy

Jake Lacy

Richard Semco

Photo of Sarah Paulson

Sarah Paulson

Abby Gerhard

Photo of John Magaro

John Magaro

Dannie McElroy

Photo of Cory Michael Smith

Cory Michael Smith

Tommy Tucker

Photo of Kevin Crowley

Kevin Crowley

Fred Haymes

Photo of Nik Pajic

Nik Pajic

Phil McElroy

Photo of Carrie Brownstein

Carrie Brownstein

Genevieve Cantrell

Photo of Trent Rowland

Trent Rowland

Jack Taft

Photo of Sadie Heim

Sadie Heim

Rindy Aird

Photo of Kk Heim

Kk Heim

Rindy Aird

Photo of Amy Warner

Amy Warner

Jennifer Aird

Photo of Michael Haney

Michael Haney

John Aird

Photo of Pamela Evans Haynes

Pamela Evans Haynes

Roberta Walls

Photo of Greg Violand

Greg Violand

Jerry Rix

Photo of Kay Geiger

Kay Geiger

McKinley Motel Manager

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Reviews

R

Reno

7/10

> Just when it can't get any better...

The first thing I noticed was after seeing the movie is there's some kind of mistake in the Oscars nominee. Rooney Mara should have been on the lead role list, while Cate Blanchett in the supporting character's. Maybe the Academy people misunderstood that the title role must be the lead character. Theirs switched place actually does not make any sense. Anyway the Oscars never made sense at all.

This story was okay, but adapted screenplay and direction, especially the music was excellent. For the ending scene alone, you will be tempted to raise your rating than what you initially thought it deserves. I was not expecting the movie to be awesome, so I'm not upset for the overall movie.

Believe me, the last thing I want in this movie is to see Cate Blanchett in naked. Maybe out of respect or her age or she's not attracted to me, there are plenty of reasons that I can't figure it out which one, but after knowing what this theme is, I was only praying for that not to happen. And obviously that is unavoidable, otherwise the movie will lose its soul and strength.

Well, it was better than I thought, both the actresses were good, but Rooney Mara dominated. Whatever category she's in for the Oscars, I'll be happy if she wins. It is not a must watch, but a decent movie and betters in some parts.

7/10

M

mattwilde123

8/10

'Carol' is beautifully shot and very maturely made. The acting was very class all around the film. The whole thing seemed like it was taken from the 40s. I loved how fine it all looked and felt and it deserved a lot more awards than it got.

★★★★

G

CinemaSerf

7/10

"Therese" (Rooney Mara) is pretty unfulfilled, clerking in a department store that's frequented by the far more interesting "Carol" (Cate Blanchett). Their first meeting ignites a spark, and that spark quite quickly takes over both of their lives as the story unfolds and there develops an inter-dependency between the women. The latter is married to the wealthy "Harge" (Kyle Chandler) but it's an hollow arrangement that is coming to an end in the divorce court - their daughter together proving to be quite an important pawn in those proceedings. "Therese" has a long-term boyfriend "Richard" (Jake Lacy) who wants to settle down and get married - so both have much to lose as their relationship becomes more important and intimate. "Harge" has shrewdly inserted a morality clause into their proposed shared custody arrangement and is none too shy of resorting to some fairly underhand methods of tracking his wife's activities to prove that she isn't fit to have any access at all to their child. We also have to consider the closeness of the friendship between "Carol" and her best friend "Abby" (Sarah Paulson) and by mid way through the internecine complexities of their lives they risk leaving everyone with nothing. It's a romance, this, but largely devoid of sentimentality. A love story that is more visceral in nature, where one love is essentially climbing on top of another for supremacy over the heart and the head! It's Mara who does most of the heavy lifting, her character seems the more plausibly conflicted; but Blanchett delivers well as the desperate mother increasingly hemmed in by circumstance little of her making. The film looks great, the production design and Carter Burwell's period score adding a richness to a theme that offers us some intricate characters and scenarios that are anything but straightforward. It's maybe just a little too dialogue heavy - there's a lot of verbiage - but that's incidental. It's still a classy piece of cinema.

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