The Swearing Jar

2022

Action / Drama / Musical / Romance

2
Rotten Tomatoes Critics - Certified Fresh 94% · 16 reviews
Rotten Tomatoes Audience - Upright 72% · 50 ratings
IMDb Rating 6.2/10 10 724 724

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Plot summary

Carey and Simon, an otherwise perfect couple, are trying to kick their swearing habit before their baby arrives. Tumultuous times ensue as Carey meets another man and begins a flirtation.


Uploaded by: FREEMAN
September 23, 2022 at 09:56 AM

720p.WEB 1080p.WEB
1015.05 MB
1280*690
English 2.0
NR
23.976 fps
1 hr 50 min
Seeds 2
2.04 GB
1912*1032
English 5.1
NR
23.976 fps
1 hr 50 min
Seeds 4

Movie Reviews

Reviewed by movieman6-413-929510 5 / 10

Film that stays true to the play and contains good singing, but otherwise remains standard.

The Swearing Jar is a new musical romantic drama directed by Lindsay MacKay. After Wet Bum, this is only the second film she has directed.

Carey (Adelaide Clemens) is a young musician and is in a relationship with Simon (Patrick J. Adams). Their relationship isn't perfect, because sometimes they love each other very much, other times they also hate each other incredibly. Yet they are expecting a child together.

When they can't see each other for a while, Carey bumps into another man with whom she also seems to have good chemistry. This leaves Carey with a difficult choice.

The story of this film was written by Kate Hewlett, who further based it on her own play. Together with the director, she ensures that the film remains faithful to this play. The story only remains on a predictable side and for a romantic drama the film offers little else.

What the film manages to carry is more the beautiful singing work of the cast members, who have a good chemistry with each other, but otherwise it remains a standard romantic drama. For example, after the singing and their good mutual chemistry, the cast members also seem a bit standard when the romance and songs retreat a bit.

Reviewed by jimcheva 6 / 10

Good once it finds its stride - which takes a tad too long

This actually develops into a touching and complex story. But it takes a while to clarify the lines, so that if feels like nothing is quite happening for a little too long (despite some very original pieces right at the start). I'm not sure how much the unresolved confusion is meant to put the viewer off the track and how much is failure to think through the exposition, but I almost bowed out early a number of times. The story as it shapes up touches on some important themes of grief and recovery, but then it becomes a little predictable as well. It's also true that the moment Katherine Turner comes in she is so much stronger a presence than anyone else that it puts the otherwise engaging indie actors at a disadvantage. There is some good music, well-placed, but it only comes in and out. It never quite defines the tone.

Reviewed by ijdavidson 7 / 10

A sweet, soulful movie almost ruined by a undamentally flawed plot

"The Swearing Jar" is about honesty, secrets and lies, and losing and finding love. The swearing jar itself is what's known in cinema as a GIMMICK, namely, a device used to attract attention that isn't really crucial to the plot. Carey (Adelaide Clemens) starts a swearing jar to encourage herself and author husband Simon (Patrick J. Adams) not to swear as part of their effort to clean up their acts in order to be good role models for the child who is on the way.

I find that very few films are worth more than one viewing, but I must admit that "The Swearing Jar" may be worth more than one viewing because the second time through you notice a lot of clues and foreshadowing that didn't register the first time. It also sheds light on the structure of the film, which is not immediately apparent on first viewing. The film is adapted by Kate Hewlett from her musical play of the same name. The film shifts back and forth between an evening of songs - which chronologically is at the end of the film - and the story framed by the songs. Music teacher and songwriter Carey performs her own songs to an audience of family and friends who have gathered for a posthumous birthday celebration for Simon. The songs, which are actually pretty good (the film's soundtrack has been released), illustrate important events in her relationship with Simon.

The usual story of someone who loses a spouse to death at a young age is that eventually they meet someone else and remarry. "The Swearing Jar" is different because Carey actually meets her new love, Owen, while she is still happily married to Simon. Despite her commitment to her marriage and her (completely wrong) promise to Simon that she will never love anyone else, she and Owen feel a powerful attraction to each other, which Carey destroys - temporarily, at any rate - by confessing to Owen that she is married and pregnant.

Carey is a lucky woman, in a way: How many people can lose one love but have the next one already waiting in the wings and ready to go? The story is more complicated than that, but those are the basics.

So what is the plot's fundamental flaw? The flaw is that Simon's death - which is the crucial plot element - is contrived. In real life, it would almost certainly not have happened. Simon is diagnosed with a "berry aneurysm," a colloquial term for a saccular cerebral aneurysm. He is just about to tell Carey, but upon learning that Carey is pregnant, he decides to keep it to himself. The aneurysm is treated as an incurable condition that inevitably causes death. This is not true. The vast majority of berry aneurysms are small and cause no symptoms at all. People usually die WITH, not FROM, berry aneurysms. And of those aneurysms that do cause symptoms or are life-threatening, 80% are curable with "clipping" or "coiling." The plot might have been salvaged if somewhere along the line, someone said that the aneurysm was "inoperable" or "unresectable." Even that would be stretching it, because these days, an aneurysm that can't be cured is extremely rare. So if you can suspend disbelief enough to buy the story that Simon's death is inevitable, you can enjoy this film.

Despite the problems of plot discussed above, the film's dialogue is refreshingly intelligent and truly funny. Adelaide Clemens has a gift of being natural and convincing. She says her lines with an effortless quality that makes them sounds natural. Patrick J. Adams as Simon is supposed to be a sympathetic character, but there is a "bad boy" vibe that gets in the way. Douglas Smith as Owen has terrific chemistry with Clemens. He is in serious need of a good haircut, but maybe the bad hair is intended to be part of his character's persona.

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