'The First Lady': Another Flash for Natalie Portman

Ed 2022-03-25 09:01:10

Jacqueline Kennedy has a photo of her swan neck accentuated by a white turtleneck, and her short dark brown hair flying in the wind.
Offenbach's short chapter "Jacqueline's Tears" is a heartbreaking piece for solo cello. There was a fake version of British cellist Jacqueline Dupree that was going viral on the Internet, which inspired me to put three Jacquelines in the same article and sigh. So, I am familiar with Jacqueline Kennedy, the protagonist of the just-released movie "First Lady", just from the appearance.
When Natalie Portman's Jacqueline Kennedy first appeared in "The First Lady," President Kennedy had been killed by a sinful bullet, and the terrified former first lady felt alone Unable to resist the media and public clamor about President Kennedy's untimely death, he plans to ask a reporter to write a report of her interview.
She stood by the window of a mansion far inferior to the White House on the outskirts of Boston, waiting for the reporter who had just gotten out of the car to enter. Her eyes aren't as wide as Jacqueline Kennedy's, and her hair is a little darker, which makes me wonder why the filmmakers couldn't put Natalie on the ground if the actor's eye spacing was unchanged. • Portman's hair color changed?
Or, why should Jacqueline Kennedy be interpreted by Natalie Portman, who is not Jacqueline Kennedy? There is a saying that "The First Lady" is a tailor-made movie for Natalie Portman, and it is also that Natalie has participated in the famous movie "The Killer Is Not Too Cold" since childhood. • Portman became a Hollywood actress with a unique style. How to dismantle the phrase "unique style"? To use a popular cliché, Natalie Portman "obviously can rely on beauty to eat, but she has to work on acting skills", and her understanding of acting skills can be borrowed from an ancient poem of ours, called "Kung Fu is beyond poetry". It's been a while in Hollywood, but Natalie Portman can't turn around and go to Harvard University to study and earn a bachelor's degree in psychology for herself.
Sure enough, "Kung Fu is beyond poetry", for the film "Black Swan" that won the Academy Award, Natalie Portman played the heroine Nina. Although Nina has been selected as the first candidate for the lead role in the new season of the ballet "Swan Lake", her strong rival Lily has always made her feel an imminent crisis. Therefore, it is not a problem for Natalie Portman to show the role of Nina in a graceful dance. For this actress who has practiced dancing since she was a child, the most difficult thing is how to make Nina afraid of failure. And the process of overcoming the demon of fear is presented on the screen piece by piece. However, Natalie Portman, with her solid psychological literacy, perfectly sent the Black Swan Nina to the throne of the best actress Oscar.
The stunning "Black Swan" brought Natalie Portman to a very cold height. Just when many people thought Nina was Natalie Portman's insurmountable performance height, the actress born in Jerusalem, Israel, took advantage of the postgraduate study at Hebrew University to complete a gorgeous turn. It will also adapt the Israeli writer Amos Oz's famous book "A Story of Love and Darkness" into a movie.
To say that Natalie Portman has completed a gorgeous turn with "A Story of Love and Darkness" has at least two meanings. First, after co-finishing the screenplay with the original author, the film is still Natalie Portman's directorial debut; second, the heroine of the film is Amos Oz's mother, not an easy role to grasp. But Natalie Portman, who played the role, played it with mixed emotions.
After World War II, the displaced Israelis finally had a home, and Amos Oz's parents took him to move back to their homeland. At the beginning of life in Israel, her mother Fania was happy, but the gloomy days day after day made Fania sluggish and sleepless night after night. Fania, who couldn't fall asleep, had a stubborn glimmer in her eyes like candlelight. This shimmering light made Fania increasingly haggard-there was a scene: Fanny, who had finally slept, planned to invite the two most important men in her life to a restaurant for a meal, "I'll treat you, what's your order? What?” When she said this to her husband and son while sitting at the exquisite table in the luxury restaurant, Fania was still sober as a wife and a mother, and in a blink of an eye she told us that she only needed a bowl of white rice, and Fania once again told us. Taken away by the disease. In this scene, Natalie Portman played a sharp contrast between her bright appearance and her skinny inner world, which made Fania choose suicide soon, which seemed so natural.
Such a role is not easy to create. Fans may sway when judging the success of the film adaptation, but they praised Natalie Portman's Fania. And I, from the writer, director, and actor, gave Natalie Portman a thumbs up because I saw that she was able to immerse herself in the original Amos Oz and to pull out of it. , perfectly transforms the text into a satisfying image without changing the temperament of the original.
So when I learned that The First Lady, starring Natalie Portman as Jacqueline Kennedy, was going to be released here, I wanted to go to the cinema as soon as possible to enjoy it. Portman chose the latter between his acting skills and his wallet. What's interesting is that the "First Lady" I finally found, even the early weekend show, was almost full. And Natalie Portman once again lived up to her fans.
In the face of reporters, Natalie Portman's Jacqueline Kennedy, now firm, then wandering; now strong, now helpless; now proud, now distraught... Such ups and downs of mood swings, Natalie • Portman performed the tenon and mortise structure of ancient Chinese architecture, which strengthened the pavilion and pavilion without taking away the overall beauty of the building. What I'm trying to say is that Natalie Portman, who doesn't look like Jacqueline Kennedy, quickly convinced me that Natalie Portman on the screen wouldn't take off her blood-stained pink dress Man, was watching Jacqueline Kennedy who died in his arms instantly, and the blood was sprayed from President Kennedy's head.
On November 22, 1963, at 12:30 pm, President John F. Kennedy was shot and killed in Dealey Plaza in Dallas, Texas. In the 4 days after that, Jacqueline Kennedy was just like "The First Lady", whether walking or driving to attend her husband's funeral in a hurry, made the former first lady very crazy. She was nervously upside down until she appeared at the front door of the White House with a pair of children. At that moment, the president's wife was a thing of the past, and Jacqueline Kennedy was just the mother of a son and a daughter. Recreated by Natalie Portman, the most famous scene in American history, the prototype and the actor are highly integrated. It's just that Natalie Portman, who became Jacqueline Kennedy during the filming of "The First Lady", can also be praised for her firmness with an ancient poem, "besides of poetry and literature."

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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