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    Movie Review

    Natalie Portman’s portrayal in Jackie is hard to shake

    Alex Bentley
    Dec 15, 2016 | 4:28 pm
    Natalie Portman’s portrayal in Jackie is hard to shake
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    The assassination of John F. Kennedy has been one of the most debated and covered events of the past 53 years. It ranks at the top of the list for conspiracy theorists, and movies and television shows have regularly featured it as part of their projects. And yet, for all that is known of the event, it is the rare film that looks into how it affected the people involved personally rather than looking at it from a bigger historical perspective.

    Jackie restores that personal nature by looking at how Jackie Kennedy (Natalie Portman) handled the immediate aftermath of the assassination. Framed around an interview given to a journalist (Billy Crudup), the film attempts to illuminate the feelings of a woman who was known for keeping things close to the vest.

    Director Pablo Larrain and writer Noah Oppenheim jump in and out of moments both public and personal. While we’re witness to things like Jackie in the motorcade, on Air Force One witnessing LBJ getting sworn in, and walking in JFK’s funeral procession, we also see her alone after arriving back in Washington, D.C., and telling her kids about their father’s death.

    The effect is palpable. Through the interview, it’s plain to see that Jackie can be a hard woman, even with those she knows best. But her edge is calculated, designed to ensure that she gets what she wants when she wants it. The assassination sets her adrift to a certain expected degree, but she maintains her wits enough to force others, including members of the incoming administration, to do things her way.

    Those closest to Jackie following the assassination, including assistant Nancy Tuckerman (Greta Gerwig) and Robert F. Kennedy (Peter Sarsgaard), are featured prominently. While they each offer something to the progression of her emotions and decisions, the film remains strictly focused on Jackie, leaving their reactions almost entirely absent from the story.

    It takes a while to get used to Portman’s imitation of Jackie Kennedy’s distinct voice, but once it takes hold, her performance is impossible to shake. She may not look exactly like her, but she embodies the former first lady in every other way imaginable. Other performances, including Sarsgaard’s very shaky Kennedy accent, don’t go over quite as well, but since it’s Portman’s show through-and-through, their impact is minimal.

    Whether or not what’s shown in Jackie is the absolute truth is almost beside the point. The film is both a showcase for the woman who was the closest this country has come to royalty, and for the actress portraying her. And it reduces a tragic moment in time to its bare essentials, a welcome respite from most other JFK stories.

    Natalie Portman in Jackie.

    Natalie Portman as Jackie Kennedy in Jackie
      
    Photo courtesy of Fox Searchlight Pictures
    Natalie Portman in Jackie.
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    Movie Review

    Steve Coogan takes off with flightless bird in The Penguin Lessons

    Alex Bentley
    Mar 31, 2025 | 3:20 pm
    Steve Coogan in The Penguin Lessons
    Photo by Andrea Resmini / courtesy of Sony Pictures Classics
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    The beauty of movies is that they can often expose a mass audience to stories that would otherwise be forgotten. The tale told in The Penguin Lessons is not that remarkable on the surface, but it holds a deeper meaning to it that the film demonstrates through its relaxed but insightful storytelling.

    Set in Argentina just as President Isabel Martínez de Perón is being overthrown in 1976, it centers on Tom Michell (Steve Coogan), who arrives as the new English teacher at St. George’s, a school in Buenos Aires. His initial teaching style is, shall we say, lacking, as he shows little interest in making the boys in his class behave or learning the proper way to coach them in rugby.

    When unrest related to the military coup forces the school to go on break, Tom travels to Uruguay for an unplanned vacation. An attempt at picking up a woman there instead leads to a discovery of an oil-covered penguin on a beach, which immediately bonds with him. Essentially forced to bring it back with him, the presence of the penguin at the school changes his teaching and much more.

    Directed by Peter Cattaneo and adapted by Jeff Pope from the book by the real-life Michell, the film is a crowd-pleaser with political undertones. The character of Tom is a misanthrope, so it’s easy to predict early on that the penguin will not only thaw his somewhat frozen heart, but also open up his eyes to how he could be living his life in more meaningful ways.

    But the inherent politics of the story changes the dynamics of the film. Tom strikes up a friendship with Maria (Vivian El Jaber) and Sofia (Alfonsina Carrocio), a grandmother and granddaughter who are housekeepers at the school, and when Sofia is kidnapped off the street for protesting against the new government, it alters the tone of the film considerably. The lighthearted nature that comes with the presence of the penguin is juxtaposed with much more serious situations, providing an interesting balance to the movie.

    Of course, most of the charm of the film comes from how they use the penguin, and that aspect never gets old. There’s just something about seeing the (well-trained) penguin following Tom around, gobbling up fish fed to it by the students and others, or just standing benignly as multiple people pour out their feelings to it that brings a smile to your face. The filmmakers succeed in avoiding sappiness, proving genuinely heartfelt sentimentality instead.

    Coogan’s career has featured a number of zany characters, but he plays this role with a good amount of subtlety. Even when Tom softens over time, Coogan keeps him stoic, which works well for both the character and the film. Jonathan Pryce gets a few good scenes as the school’s headmaster, but El Jaber winds up as the heart of the film as the bond between Maria and Tom evolves.

    The Penguin Lessons is an easy watch with lots of superficial pleasurable elements. It’s not designed to be an ultra-dramatic story, but when it chooses to go down that road, it’s equally effective in those moments as it is when it just wants to show viewers a cute penguin.

    ---

    The Penguin Lessons is now playing in theaters.

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