Clark's first feature film Caroline and Jackie premiered at the 2012 Tribeca Film Festival, and was met with positive reviews. John Anderson of Variety said, "Displaying nerves of steel and a generous heart, helmer Adam Christian Clark takes a lot of chances with Caroline and Jackie, a tale of troubled sisters that keeps the viewer off balance throughout before delivering a payoff that serves as both catharsis and absolution. While it does make demands of its audience, the cumulative emotional impact is startling". Steve Dollar of The Wall Street Journal called it "a delicious dinner party meltdown, visually polished and emotionally raw". He praised Moreau and Tulloch for "playing their yin/yang roles with gleaming intensity". Miranda Siegel of New York Magazine named it a must-see film, praising its "top-notch performances" and its "unique combination of naturalistic acting and stylized technique". The film was theatrically released by Phase 4 Films in 2013.
''Newly Single''
Clark's second feature film Newly Single, premiered in the main competition of the 2017 edition of PÖFF, and marks Clark's first time acting in a feature film. The New York Times described the film as a dark comedy “probing the sexual and professional misadventures of a struggling filmmaker.” The film was released in 2018 by Gravitas Ventures, and currently holds an 88% "Fresh" rating from the review aggregator website Rotten Tomatoes.
Influences and style
Influences
While an undergraduate film student at USC, Clark became close friends with his professor, Academy Award-nominated cinematographer William A. Fraker, A.S.C., B.S.C. Clark accredits Fraker as an influence for hard lighting and formalistic production design. Clark has attributed strong influence to the American New Wave film movement, and directors John Cassavetes, and Robert Altman.
Themes and style
Clark's films are very character driven, and often explore themes centered around family, isolation, and unrequited love. When asked to describe his style in a 2012 interview with IndieWire, Clark stated,
Stylistically my number one goal at all stages of production is for the narrative to always maintain the highest level of reality possible. My hope would be that the camera, the lighting, the sound, the performances, and my own ego will go as unnoticed as possible, and that you may feel, if just for a moment, that you are watching your own family interact. That view may come as a surprise, as the films' characters are highly vapid and their worlds’ greatly stylized. My answer would be that in being truly honest, we have to admit that we are all vapid, and our own little world is forever increasing in style and conformity.