âJackieâ is a film about what Jacqueline âJackieâ Kennedy had to endure directly after the assassination of not just the President of the United States of America, the country she loved so much and the man she most admired, but the assassination of her husband, Jack Kennedy, who was that President. Itâs an accurate portrayal of a woman in agony. She loses the husband she always had to share with the world and has to share the pain of this, as well. Nothing can be personal; nothing private. The delicate nature of the story itself is handled beautifully. To your joy, what is evident from the first moment she speaks is that Portman will not only get a Best Actress nomination but quite possibly win the Oscar this year. She is Jackie.Â
To begin the film the theatre goes dark and sounds of gun shots fill the house. Itâs November 22, 1963.  Dallas. We also spend time in 1961 when the First Lady is giving a tour of the White House. This is broadcast on television and is, some would consider, the defining moment for the American people, who fell in love with Jackie when Kennedy first took office, that she was their queen. Why weâre flashing back to her life becomes clear when we are suddenly in a room on her estate in Hyannis Port, Massachusetts with âthe journalistâ (Crudup) from Life Magazine who is there to talk to her for his publication about the assassination and her life since.Â
Many have told the Kennedy stories in books and on film but not so have they delved quite so deeply into the woman behind the man especially when it comes to touching the sensitive subject of her life directly after the his death.Â
Quite addled, she clings to what she has left of the soon to be past position she held of First Lady with more than high acclaim in the world. There are key moments in the film where we see her pain and if youâve done any Kennedy reading youâll recognize the truth telling of this piece, especially about why she wore her blood-stained dress, âLet them see what theyâve doneâ, and how difficult it became for, not only her, but for the Johnsonsâ to get her to leave, which is why I appreciated this movie even more.