Jackie 1

Update: Read our full review here.

When’s the last time a director had three great films in the same year? With the highly recommended The Club arriving in the early months and his drama Neruda being one of Cannes’ bestPablo Larraín is back with the Natalie Portman-led Jackie Kennedy biopic Jackie. It recently premiered at Venice to great acclaim — our review will be coming shortly — and we now have the first clips.

Set in the first four days of her life after the assassination of her husband, and featuring a score by Under the Skin‘s Mica Levi, the first clip finds her getting ready for funeral arrangements, and, sporting an accent, Portman looks to command the screen. Check out the footage, TIFF synopsis, and new images featuring the cast — including Peter Sarsgaard, Greta Gerwig, Billy Crudup, and John Hurt — below.

TIFF Synopsis:

The assassination of John F. Kennedy in 1963 was one of those moments that defined a generation. That this handsome, charismatic leader with a beautiful wife and two young children could have his life ended so brutally defied comprehension.

With Jackie, Pablo Larraín makes a brave choice by retelling this story solely through the eyes of Jacqueline Kennedy, casting Natalie Portman in a lead performance that is deeply intelligent and carefully measured. Jackie was as romantic a public figure as her husband, an outwardly poised partner who was placed under great scrutiny yet played her role with consummate grace. Structuring his film around Theodore H. White’s LIFE magazine interview with the First Lady at Hyannis Port a mere week after the assassination, Larraín plunges us into the devastation using a series of finely crafted flashbacks that cover the fateful day in Dallas, Jackie’s return to the White House, arrangements for the President’s funeral, and her time spent accompanying her husband’s coffin to Arlington Cemetery.

These sequences complete a moving portrait of a grieving woman — a widow and mother struggling with overwhelming tragedy and attention. Yet the core of the film is formed by quiet, profoundly intimate moments: Jackie’s conversations with her children, her brother-in-law Robert Kennedy (Peter Sarsgaard, also at the Festival in The Magnificent Seven), one of her aides (Greta Gerwig), journalist White (Billy Crudup), and a Catholic priest (John Hurt).

With the utmost care and restraint, Larraín depicts one half of the couple who inhabited America’s short-lived but still mythic time of “Camelot” — the woman who, in fact, coined that very expression. The director has moved beyond his native Chile to deliver a magnificent recreation of a defining moment in US politics and lore, and the woman we all knew as Jackie.

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Jackie premiered at Venice and screens at TIFF.

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