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JACKIE is monumental. like Under the Skin and Marie Antoinette swirled together in a kaleidoscope of American history. what a movie. #TIFF16
Larran has never told a true story in a predictable manner (he took a metafictional approach in his portrait of celebrated poet and politician Pablo Neruda in his last film, Neruda), and he doesn't here. Coupled with a bold narrative approach, that's bound to turn off some viewers, Larran drowns his film with a cacophonous score by Under the Skin composer Mica Levi that burrows uncomfortably deep. He also shoots in grainy 16mm, often in severe closeup, lending Jackie an uncommonly raw quality for a biopic of its nature.
Portman is altogether astonishing in the role. Apart from sharing a wide smile, she doesn't much resemble Kennedy. She is however gifted with an overpowering beauty - much like the real-life figure - that Larran makes great use of in key scenes to illustrate the galvanising effect Kennedy had on those around her. Most importantly, Portman thoroughly nails Kennedy's breathy and docile-sounding voice, without letting the affectations get the better of her. Her accent doesn't define her portrayal - it infuses it with a tenacious vitality.
As written by Oppenheim, Kennedy is a wonderfully complex character, bursting at the seams with contradictions. During her long interview with White, she's portrayed as both testy ("Are you giving me professional advice?," she challenges after he makes the mistake of suggesting she'd do well in broadcast journalism), and extremely vulnerable (describing her husband's murder shatters her guard). In flashbacks to happier days spent getting acquainted with her duties at the White House, Kennedy is timid and inquisitive.
What grounds Portman's take, however, is a key sequence immediately following the assassination that sees Kennedy shower her husband's blood off her hair, struggle to rip off her crimson-stained pantyhose, and then finally, lie in bed alone. The intimate access is wrenching in its matter-of-factness.
Despite Jackie's autumn festival placement (it world premiered at Venice, and is currently screening in Toronto), typically reserved for Oscar hopefuls, Larran's character study doesn't play into that narrative. It's a singular vision from an uncompromising director that happens to be about one of the most famous women in American history. Jackie is not Oscar bait - it's great cinema.
5 Stars
Capturing the former First Lady is a challenge, because she so carefully controlled her own image. Critic Sam Adams finds out how the Black Swan star fares in the role from the Toronto Film Festival.
With the prospect of a Hillary Clinton presidency on the horizon, there's been speculation about whether her First Spouse would wield undue influence in the prospective administration. But Pablo Larran's Jackie, which dwells on the days immediately following the Kennedy assassination, suggests that powerful presidential partners are hardly a new phenomenon, even if they found it more effective to work in secret in the past.
As played by Natalie Portman and conceived by screenwriter Noah Oppenheim, Jacqueline Kennedy isn't just JFK's grieving widow but the immediate guardian of his legacy. The story is framed through interviews with a fictional journalist played by Billy Crudup, who's come to her house at Hyannisport hoping to peel back her famously composed exterior and reach the raw nerve underneath. But he finds almost immediately that Jackie is the one who will control the encounter. Even when she seems to let the mask slip, when she recalls what it was like to hold the fragments of her husband's shattered skull as their open car whizzed away from Dealey Plaza, she has enough composure to remind the journalist that he won't be allowed to use any of what she's just said. The meeting is entirely on her terms, and so, it's implied, is the movie itself.
When the journalist tries to press Jackie into cooperating by suggesting that his written account will come to define how her late husband's legacy is perceived, she counters that the language of words is being replaced by the language of images. Writing may not be perfect, he argues, but "it's all we have." "It was," Jackie responds. "We have television now."
Jackie is centred around JFK's assassination, but far more screen time is devoted to the 1962 TV special in which Jackie spent an hour showing off the newly restored White House to some 80 million viewers. A Tour of the White House With Mrs John F Kennedy was, along with Robert Drew's documentaries Primary and Crisis, a turning point in the relationship between the presidency and the moving image - as, eventually, was Abraham Zapruder's endlessly studied footage of Kennedy's death. Jackie was known then mainly as the camera's subject, a vision in Chanel suits and pillbox hats, but Jackie makes a case for her as a star-auteur, consciously crafting not only her own image but the presidency's as well. When Lady Bird Johnson tries to help Jackie out of her blood-spattered suit on the Dallas tarmac, Jackie refuses: "I want them to see what they've done."
Portman's highly affected performance is deliberately off-putting at first: even with her cheekbones broadened by makeup, she looks too small for her bobbed wig and boxy clothes, like a child who's just raided a dress-up box. But the artifice becomes more engrossing the longer she sustains it, especially amid the more naturalistic portrayals of Bobby Kennedy (Peter Sarsgaard) and Lyndon Johnson (John Carroll Lynch). (Danish actor Caspar Phillipson appears as JFK, but he never speaks, although he's an uncanny ringer, especially in profile.) It's as if she's the only one who's never allowed to let down her guard, whose conscious presentation of self has eclipsed whatever might have preceded it. "I lost track somewhere what was real, and what was performance," she reflects. Jackie suggests that distinction may be moot.
Portman's never been one to disappear into her roles, but here that's a strength. The fact that she always feels like she's acting lends the character a tragic dimension: even her most intimate feelings are the subject of public speculation, and rather than duck the press and let them invent their own story to fill the vacuum, she takes the reins herself. When she returns to the White House, she calls for books on the funerals of presidents who died in office, those who are remembered and those who aren't; eventually, she opts to emulate Lincoln's. The movie even contrives to have Jackie write part of the script herself: Larran digitally inserts Portman into footage of the TV tour of the White House, but the words, and even the voice, are Jackie Kennedy's own. Portman's imprecise lip-sync gives the recreations the deconstructive air of a Todd Haynes movie, like Superstar: The Karen Carpenter Story with Portman as the Barbie doll.
Unlike Haynes, Larran doesn't have the knack of mixing the meta with melodrama; Jackie goes dead in the moments when we're meant to simply feel its protagonist's pain rather than dissect it. It's an intellectual experience rather than an emotional one, but the ideas in play are so heady they're enough to sweep you away on their own.
4 Stars
Natalie Portman is wondrously good as Jackie Kennedy, says David Sexton
A yawn-inducing biopic of Jacqueline Kennedy, then? No. Jackie, the first English language film from the youngish Chilean director Pablo Lorrain (The Club, Neruda) is an astonishingly radically conceived portrait of Jackie focussed tightly on the immediate aftermath of the assassination of JFK, on November 21, 1963.
One week after his death, Jackie gave a famous interview, at the Kennedy Compound at Hyannis Port, to a journalist from Life, Theodore H. White (here played very cannily by Billy Crudup and called simply 'the journalist' in the credits), in which she first created the myth that Kennedy's presidency was like King Arthur's Camelot. Lorrain and his scriptwriter Noah Oppenheim do use this interview, which Jackie fiercely controls, as a framing device, but not to present a plain narrative of her life. Instead, we get close up, startlingly intimate, extended sequences, almost dreamlike in their intensity, not always in chronological order, of what she went through in such a short time after the shots were fired.
She is in the car speeding to the hospital trying to hold her husband's head together; in Airforce One, returning to Washington, while LBJ has himself immediately sworn in; breaking in to the room in which the autopsy is being performed; telling her two small children, the survivors of the four she had, that daddy has gone to heaven; taking charge of JFK's funeral and modelling it on that Lincoln, insisting on a march, not a motorcade; choosing where he should be buried in Arlington Cemetery; finally taking off that blood-soaked pink Chanel suit and finding more blood running out of her hair as she showers, her face contorted with grief; wandering completely alone through the rooms of the White House she had redecorated, as if in a trance, drinking, taking pills, trying on outfits; confessing her wish to die to an elderly Irish priest (John Hurt), their two faces together in extreme close-up, hers such an icon even in her grief, his so raddled; overseeing the immediate packing up of her family's belongings, as they leave their home; seeing a display of her own famous style in a shop window, as she passes by in the back seat of car.
Natalie Portman is wondrously good in this part: surely her best and an Oscar contender. That she does such a remarkably good impression of how Jackie Kennedy looked and spoke is just the start of her performance. She combines being completely dazed and numbed with extreme will-power and strong emotion, broken with grief but still at some level behind the eyes in command of herself. She is both unreadable and riveting, sometimes seeming almost doll-like but always with an absolute grip on the new truths of her life.
"Nothing is ever mine, not to keep anyway," she tells the journalist. She knows exactly what he wants from her and she gives it to him, a full sensory account of what it was like to be with her husband as he was killed - and then she says sharply, "Don't think for one second I'm going to let you publish that." To the priest, she admits simply that she and her husband hardly ever spent a night together. "I lost Jack somewhere, what was real, what was performance," she says.
If Portman's performance makes the film, the secondary casting is admirable too, notably Peter Sarsgaard as Robert Kennedy, with some of his brother's potency but himself somehow already foredoomed, and Greta Gerwig, so warm as her personal assistant. But an even greater contribution is made by the choice of the highly original young British composer Mica Levi, who created the brilliant soundtrack for Under the Skin, to score the film: from the start, when discordant chords sound momentarily like a train charging past, it's an extraordinary piece of work, hugely enhancing the emotional impact of the whole movie.
Jackie doesn't resolve into any tidy interpretation of Jackie Kennedy or how she survived such days - yet it does give you insight into what the shock of sudden and violent bereavement, and with it total loss of position, might be like for any one of us. An absolutely unexpected achievement, this film, unlike anything seen before.
5 Stars
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