A young girl comes of age in a dysfunctional family of nonconformist nomads with a mother who's an eccentric artist and an alcoholic father who would stir the children's imagination with hope as a distraction to their poverty.
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7.1 /10
40608 people rated
The Glass Castle
2017
R
2 h 7 m
United States
Biography
Drama
A young girl comes of age in a dysfunctional family of nonconformist nomads with a mother who's an eccentric artist and an alcoholic father who would stir the children's imagination with hope as a distraction to their poverty.
More
7.1 /10
40608 people rated
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Top Cast
User Review
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Top Cast(18)
Brie Larson
Jeannette
Woody Harrelson
Rex
Naomi Watts
Rose Mary
Ella Anderson
Young Jeannette
Chandler Head
Youngest Jeannette
Max Greenfield
David
Josh Caras
Brian
Charlie Shotwell
Young Brian
Iain Armitage
Youngest Brian
Sarah Snook
Lori
Sadie Sink
Young Lori
Olivia Kate Rice
Youngest Lori
Brigette Lundy-Paine
Maureen
Shree Crooks
Young Maureen
Eden Grace Redfield
Youngest Maureen
Robin Bartlett
Erma
Joe Pingue
Uncle Stanley
A.J. Henderson
Grandpa Walls
User Review
The Glass Castle-720P
11/04/2026 08:24
The Glass Castle-720P
The Glass Castle-360P
11/04/2026 08:24
The Glass Castle-360P
The Glass Castle-480P
11/04/2026 08:24
The Glass Castle-480P
The Glass Castle-720P
11/04/2026 08:24
The Glass Castle-720P
The Glass Castle-360P
11/04/2026 08:24
The Glass Castle-360P
The Glass Castle-480P
11/04/2026 08:24
The Glass Castle-480P
wil.francis_
21/03/2026 03:01
The Glass Castle
users PinkyPriscy 👸
16/03/2026 04:01
The Glass Castle_360P
KING CARLOS OFFICIAL
05/09/2023 16:00
First, this film is apparently based on a true story, so it makes no sense to criticize the message. Life is messy. Please do not take my review as an appeal to make all films tidy and redemptive.
That said, not all true stories are worth committing to film and being held up as examples of family commitment and unconditional love. I found the "heart" of this film to be twisted and dark, and the message to be potentially harmful to people with truly abusive and heartbreaking family circumstances.
Woody Harrelson plays an abusive drunk who terrorizes and mercilessly deprives his own children. He also meticulously manipulates his co-dependent wife to enable his dysfunctions and remain cooperative with every sick development, including the sexual molestation of their son by his own grandmother. This is supposed to be "balanced" by the fact that he is a dreamer who is occasionally nice. Heck, he even coughed up some tuition money. Once. After stealing money from the same kid earlier. What a great dad.
As the kids mature and literally escape into independence as adults, the mentally deranged parents follow them all the way to New York City and continue to sabotage their happiness. When a family member attempts to draw boundaries in order to establish some sanity and peace, they all conspire to leverage one another back into the nightmare with guilt trips.
The central character, one of the daughters, actually manages to put together a relatively sane life (one in which she copes with her background by lying to others about it), but is repeatedly told by the father that she is not really happy and craves his brand of freedom and "adventure". "Down is up, left is right," says the sociopath.
The nice, happy part of the movie is when the dad finally dies, making it easier for the remaining family to gloss over and romanticize the brutal treatment they received as the children and wife of a lazy, booze-addled abuser.
I gave it an 8 out of 10 because it is well acted, convincing, and impeccably made. I just find it to be utterly aimless and warped as a work of storytelling, and it eludes me what people find charming or heartwarming about it.
Muje Kariko
05/09/2023 16:00
I don't expect movies to follow the book exactly, because I get that a movie is a totally different medium of storytelling. But it IS a problem when the movie fails to capture the essence of the book at all. If you were to just watch the movie and not read the book, you would be robbed of the extremes that exist in this story. Jeannette's life of poverty and imagination is more awful than the movie portrays and more magical than it portrays. Strangely, the movie walked this middle ground, showing glimpse from her life but not really getting to the heart of why we care. Skip the movie, and read the book!
User Review
The Glass Castle-720P
11/04/2026 08:24
The Glass Castle-720P
The Glass Castle-360P
11/04/2026 08:24
The Glass Castle-360P
The Glass Castle-480P
11/04/2026 08:24
The Glass Castle-480P
The Glass Castle-720P
11/04/2026 08:24
The Glass Castle-720P
The Glass Castle-360P
11/04/2026 08:24
The Glass Castle-360P
The Glass Castle-480P
11/04/2026 08:24
The Glass Castle-480P
wil.francis_
21/03/2026 03:01
The Glass Castle
users PinkyPriscy 👸
16/03/2026 04:01
The Glass Castle_360P
KING CARLOS OFFICIAL
05/09/2023 16:00
First, this film is apparently based on a true story, so it makes no sense to criticize the message. Life is messy. Please do not take my review as an appeal to make all films tidy and redemptive.
That said, not all true stories are worth committing to film and being held up as examples of family commitment and unconditional love. I found the "heart" of this film to be twisted and dark, and the message to be potentially harmful to people with truly abusive and heartbreaking family circumstances.
Woody Harrelson plays an abusive drunk who terrorizes and mercilessly deprives his own children. He also meticulously manipulates his co-dependent wife to enable his dysfunctions and remain cooperative with every sick development, including the sexual molestation of their son by his own grandmother. This is supposed to be "balanced" by the fact that he is a dreamer who is occasionally nice. Heck, he even coughed up some tuition money. Once. After stealing money from the same kid earlier. What a great dad.
As the kids mature and literally escape into independence as adults, the mentally deranged parents follow them all the way to New York City and continue to sabotage their happiness. When a family member attempts to draw boundaries in order to establish some sanity and peace, they all conspire to leverage one another back into the nightmare with guilt trips.
The central character, one of the daughters, actually manages to put together a relatively sane life (one in which she copes with her background by lying to others about it), but is repeatedly told by the father that she is not really happy and craves his brand of freedom and "adventure". "Down is up, left is right," says the sociopath.
The nice, happy part of the movie is when the dad finally dies, making it easier for the remaining family to gloss over and romanticize the brutal treatment they received as the children and wife of a lazy, booze-addled abuser.
I gave it an 8 out of 10 because it is well acted, convincing, and impeccably made. I just find it to be utterly aimless and warped as a work of storytelling, and it eludes me what people find charming or heartwarming about it.
Muje Kariko
05/09/2023 16:00
I don't expect movies to follow the book exactly, because I get that a movie is a totally different medium of storytelling. But it IS a problem when the movie fails to capture the essence of the book at all. If you were to just watch the movie and not read the book, you would be robbed of the extremes that exist in this story. Jeannette's life of poverty and imagination is more awful than the movie portrays and more magical than it portrays. Strangely, the movie walked this middle ground, showing glimpse from her life but not really getting to the heart of why we care. Skip the movie, and read the book!
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