Jackie--A Woman Who Lost Her Husband

Emanuel 2022-06-10 10:53:08

At 12:30 '30", as President Kennedy waved and smiled at the crowd, the first dull shot was fired in the square, and President Kennedy put his hand to his throat-he was shot in the neck. Then came the second shot, because the president who was shot by the first shot was tilting his head slightly forward at this time, and the fatal second shot hit the president in the back of the head, and Kennedy's head fell backwards. Scene from the case in greater detail The description goes like this: "The first shot hit Kennedy in the throat, and when Kennedy received the final fatal blow to the head, Jacqueline reflexively climbed to the rear edge of the limousine and shot back." brain tissue. She took it all the way to the hospital and handed it over to the doctor. "

"Many women in the world will lose their husbands, but not many of them will have their husbands killed by their side," said Natalie Portman, who played the role in the film "First Lady" (Jackie).

At the age of 34, Jacqueline, who became the youngest first lady in American history, was sitting in the back seat of a 1961 Lincoln Continental luxury convertible next to the president. She is the icon of fashion, maturity, and self-motivation; one of the most photographed women of the 20th century; and the woman who truly made President Kennedy so charismatic. But she is also the "least famous celebrity" of the contemporary era.

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Extended Reading
  • Dejon 2022-03-22 09:01:58

    Portman pushes too hard like always Debut is the best example of peak

  • Lupe 2022-03-28 09:01:04

    Deliberate jump cuts and cross-axis in audio-visual, close-up followed by panoramic or documentary images, structurally intertwined scene, interview, confession and monologue (close-up of the face), resulting in an obvious disconnection of tone, which is connected immediately before the end of the previous tone. The next tone presents a kind of chaotic image-reality—a sublation of the ambition to capture objective reality, no longer narcissistic dogmatism about the motives of historical figures, and a turn towards the inner feelings of contemporary figures in order to eliminate moral scrutiny. Sincerity (believing it to be true) manifests, i.e. preserves the character's "fake-sincere" human state. And this "deductive" state found a carrier in the "First Lady".

Jackie quotes

  • Jackie Kennedy: I believe the characters we read on the page become more real than the men who stand beside us.

  • The Priest: There comes a time in man's search for meaning when he realises that there are no answers. And when you come to the horrible and unavoidable realization, you accept it or you kill yourself. Or you simply stop searching.