Ben Is Back
One family. One day.
19-year-old Ben Burns unexpectedly returns home to his family's suburban home on Christmas Eve morning. Ben's mother, Holly, is relieved and welcoming but wary of her son staying clean. Over a turbulent 24 hours, new truths are revealed, and a mother's undying love for her son is tested as she does everything in her power to keep him safe.
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Trailers & Videos

Ben Is Back | Official Trailer | In Select Theaters December 7

Ben is Back Post-Screening Q&A | PFF27 Opening Night

BEN IS BACK OFFICIAL TEASER TRAILER | In select theaters December 7
Cast

Julia Roberts
Holly Burns

Lucas Hedges
Ben Burns

Courtney B. Vance
Mr. Beeby

Kathryn Newton
Ivy Burns

Rachel Bay Jones
Beth Conyers

David Zaldivar
Spencer 'Spider' Webbs

Alexandra Park
Cara K.

Michael Esper
Clayton

Tim Guinee
Phil

Myra Lucretia Taylor
Sally

Kristin Griffith
Mrs. Crane

Jack Davidson
Dr. Crane

Mia Fowler
Lacey Beeby

Jakari Fraser
Liam Burns-Beeby

Cameron Scott Roberts
James Lamson

Jeff Auer
Maggie's Dad

Henry Stram
Mr. Richman

Bill Buell
Dairy Farmer

Sandra Caldwell
Customer

Nathalie Carvalho
Lay Reader
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Reviews
CinemaSerf
"Ben" (Lucas Hedges) arrives at his mother's home on Christmas eve and she is delighted. "Holly" (Julia Roberts) and her daughter "Ivy" (Kathryn Newton) know that he has a problem, though. He's a drug addict and has only recently managed to go for seven days without using. A Christmas carol service and an happy Christmas beckon for all if only he can stay sober but his erstwhile dealer has other plans and using the boy's dog as bait, entices him into one last delivery that has everyone racing around before something tragic happens. It's all rather bleak, this, with neither Hedges nor Roberts really having much to work with aside from the rather depressingly presented subject matter. Perhaps this will resonate more with those who have experienced some of the traumas addiction can cause, and this story certainly has an authentic (television) look to it, but there are plenty of better put together stories of recovery (or not) out there that reach out to the uninformed and unfamiliar in a more constructive fashion - and this just rather slotted in mid-table. I like Hedges, he has something natural about him - but here they are both rather mediocre in a rather mediocre melodrama that doesn't really develop the characters or the underlying threads of the story anywhere near enough.
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