Jackie

Roscoe 2022-04-20 09:01:44

I knew that this movie was in the daily recommended movie trailer of Scallop Words when I was reciting the sixth grade words last year. Look. I didn't know Jack Kennedy before watching it, and I only knew that he was the President of the United States, and I didn't know his wife Jackie, so my initial understanding of the characters relied on this movie.

The film is introduced from an interview with the first lady, and through this interview, the event and Jackie's mental journey are revealed. That day, Jackie stepped off the plane and faced the crowd with her husband in a gorgeous outfit that she would never have imagined would soon be covered in blood. After her husband was assassinated, Jackie stood in front of the mirror on the plane and looked at herself with blood on her face. While crying, she wiped her husband's blood on her face with a tissue. This is her true side. The sudden death of her husband is painful and desperate for most women, not to mention that she is the first lady, her husband is the president, and she will face not only personal emotional grief, but also a series of political grief. Influence. In her eyes, I saw despair and panic. Wiping away the blood on his face, he turned to face the oath of the vice president. Not long after the president was assassinated, the vice president couldn't wait to take the oath of office, right in front of the former first lady. Jackie was sitting alone in the cabin, and no one really came to comfort the woman who had just lost her husband. Those people only had their career in their eyes. At this moment, Jackie was so lonely, and every scene in the cabin made her feel chills. The wife of the vice president Immediately put on the posture of the first lady, Jackie has not yet recovered from the assassination case, and is still in deep pain and loss. But she didn't want herself to be forgotten. She kept making various demands, hoping to gain the sense of existence she should have, which seemed very sad. It was not until her uncle Robert arrived that she felt supported.

In the hospital, the scene of her rushing to the ward to take a look at her husband brought tears to my eyes. I felt this scene was very real. She wanted to take a last look at her husband, and she didn't want them to do unnecessary things on her husband's body. Hope the husband can restore the most perfect appearance. At this moment, she is still in the grief of losing her husband. She wants her husband to have a grand funeral, she wants him to be remembered like Lincoln, and of course she wants to be remembered as first lady.

Finally back at the White House, standing in the huge living room, I felt her loneliness again. Walking through the gorgeous living room alone, looking at everything in the room, her eyes were still filled with despair and panic. She took off her blood-stained clothes and washed her nails over and over again, the blood dripping from her body with the water. The next day, facing her two children, she tried her best to explain the fact that her father was no longer there. The children were still naive, perhaps not yet able to understand what this would mean, let alone her mother's inner sadness.

In front of the reporter, she involuntarily began to sob when she was telling the story of her husband's assassination. I believe this is her real side, although she soon switched to another face and told the reporter that this passage could not be written down. It is true that many women will experience losing their husbands, but she is not the majority. After all, no woman has ever seen her husband die by her side, and this scene has been broadcast live by the media around the world. Instead of crying, Jackie showed her composure and independence in public. She seemingly calmly arranged her husband's wedding, responded to reporters' questions, and finally moved out of the White House with her children. She left her strong side to the world and children, but who would understand and understand her fragile heart Who is comforted by?

From the assassination to the funeral in just four days, Jackie has experienced too much, and finally the dialogue between Jackie and the priest and the scene of Kennedy's assassination will undoubtedly bring the film to a climax. In front of the priest, she confided her heart, she confessed that she did not block the bullet for her husband at a critical moment, and she hoped that if she did not marry the president, she would not have to become a public figure. I don't know about Jackie's marriage with Kennedy, so I don't dare to comment easily.

After watching the movie, I saw the description of Jackie's legendary life in the film review, which changed her image in my heart, but from the short four days, what I saw was a man who had just witnessed her husband being raped. Despair in the heart of the wife who was assassinated. Some people say that she was not looking for the murderer in the first place, and she held a grand funeral, saying that she was vain, I don't think so. As someone who has experienced panic, it's hard to be rational, and I can understand that. Aside from her legendary experience, I have sympathy and admiration for Jackie. We always place excessive demands on public figures. They are just ordinary people who experience the emotions of ordinary people, but they have to face more social public opinion and political influence than ordinary people.


The last words of the priest are really healing:

"Why should we worry?"

"Because we just worry, and we will do it tomorrow morning. God uses his infinite wisdom to ensure that we worry about the right amount."

"I should be able to guess that it is extravagant to grow old together, and so is to witness our children grow up."

"Darkness may never dissipate, but it will never be so heavy"

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Extended Reading

Jackie quotes

  • Jackie Kennedy: He'll just be another oil portrait lining these hallways.

  • Jackie Kennedy: His favorite was Camelot.And that last song, that last side of Camelot, is all that keeps running through my mind. Don't let it be forgot, that for one brief, shining moment there was a Camelot