Times Colonist

Reiner and son chronicle drugs battle

- LINDSEY BAHR

WEST HOLLYWOOD, California — “I maybe didn’t handle it the best way,” Rob Reiner says of his son’s struggle with drugs.

The story stayed out of the tabloids while it was unfolding, but by the time Nick Reiner was 18, he had already cycled in and out of nine treatment facilities with bouts of homelessne­ss and relapses in between.

“I listened to a lot of people who had a desk and a diploma,” Rob Reiner said. “I didn’t really think about my kid and what he needed.”

Seated in a leather armchair in a cozy corner of his West Hollywood office, Rob Reiner spoke candidly about that difficult time. He’s had a few years now to process what he and his family went through.

Now, Rob and Nick Reiner explore the ordeal in the semiautobi­ographical film Being Charlie, out on limited release Friday.

The idea for a film had crossed Rob Reiner’s mind, but for many reasons it wasn’t something he could handle in the moment. Unknown to him, his son had been working on something about the absurditie­s of his experience with a friend, Matt Elisofon, who he met at a treatment centre.

With Rob Reiner’s eventual guidance, the two friends’ script evolved from a half-hour rehab comedy into Being Charlie, a more dramatic and truthful rendering of a teenage boy’s issues with drugs, rehab and a famous father that takes into account the parents’ side of things, too. Jurassic World’s Nick Robinson stars as the disaffecte­d, searching kid at the centre.

Being Charlie is not solely Nick and Rob Reiner’s story, but there are details scattered throughout. In the film, the father, a movie star with political ambitions played by Cary Elwes (working with Rob Reiner for the first time since The Princess Bride) says the thing about desks and diplomas, for instance. The ending, too, changed repeatedly during production as the Reiners’ relationsh­ip evolved.

“We didn’t go into it thinking this is going to be therapeuti­c or bring us closer, but it did come out that way,” Rob Reiner said. “It forced us to understand ourselves better than we had. I told Nick while we were making it: ‘You know, it doesn’t matter, whatever happens to this thing, we won already. This has already been good.’ We’ve worked through a lot of stuff.”

It’s a reflective time for Rob Reiner, who turned 69 in March but is already saying he’s “almost 70.” While he’s still Meathead from TV’s All In the Family to many baby boomers, younger generation­s see him more as the director of a handful of nowclassic movies.

The offices of his Castle Rock independen­t production company are inhabited by posters, photos and trinkets from his half century in the business, like a worn scrapbook of photos from The Princess Bride casually displayed on the coffee table.

“You live a life and you start to think, what are the things you’ve thought about over the course of your life? If you still have the energy and the ability to do it, then you find ways to do it as long as you can do it,” Rob Reiner said. “I mean, look at Clint Eastwood.”

And he’s staying active in the industry, even if the landscape of how films get made has changed drasticall­y.

“I made a lot of films at Castle Rock because we financed them. We didn’t have to go to anybody. In all the films I’ve made and all the films that Castle Rock has made — it’s probably 125 — not one of them would get made at a studio today. None of them,” Rob Reiner said. “Even the big hits like A Few Good Men and City Slickers, they just wouldn’t get made. I was lucky to have a situation where I could do the things I wanted.”

This has been going on for a while, though. He said he even struggled to get a studio interested in The Bucket List, with stars Morgan Freeman and Jack Nicholson attached.

Rob Reiner is still making things work, though. He has to scramble a little more with tiny budgets and look to the smaller independen­t distributo­rs that support adult dramas. He recently wrapped work on his Woody Harrelson-led Lyndon B. Johnson film LBJ, which he is shopping around to distributo­rs.

“It’s insane how good he is. It’s off the charts,” he said of Harrelson in the film. “This is a performanc­e that people will look at and go: ‘OK, all right, this is major.’ ”

Nick Reiner, meanwhile, is continuing to write and his dad is supportive, even if he can empathize with the inherent pressures of being now the third generation of Reiners to enter the business.

“Nick has it worse than I did because he’s got not only me but he’s got his grandfathe­r [writeracto­r-producer Carl Reiner]. So he’s got to deal with that stuff,” Rob Reiner said. “He’s brilliant, he’s funny, he’s so smart and he’s deep thinking. He’s so different from me.”

 ?? THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Rob Reiner has made many films but is perhaps best known among baby boomers for his role as Meathead in the television series All In the Family.
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Rob Reiner has made many films but is perhaps best known among baby boomers for his role as Meathead in the television series All In the Family.

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