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The new Seberg biopic from Amazon

May 14, 2020 Patricia Zohn
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Seberg, the biopic starring Kristen Stewart is finally being released tomorrow on Amazon after an almost year long slog through film festivals, award season and a theatrical release. This might instead be a film that benefits from a small screen treatment, an all-too-believable dark and twisted melodrama of J Edgar Hoover's overreach during a second wave of blacklisting and torment after McCarthyism.  Seberg begins with Otto Preminger's cropped Joan of Arc in flames but leaves out the seminal Godard/Paris years and jumps instead to her waning marriage with her second husband Romain Gary who was himself a notorious French hero and literary figure. Her abrupt awakening as a champion and patron of civil rights and (alleged) affair with black activist stretch credulity yet Seberg was naive. Her subsequent downfall into pills, depression and abject fear as the FBI spies on her during Cointelpro--their effort to discredit and bring down Communists and other dissidents-- is supported by documents that have come to light. Seberg became pregnant while filming in Mexico and the child-whose parentage became added fodder for FBI harassment-- died shortly after birth. Director Benedict Andrews adds a guilt-stricken FBI agent who eventually confesses as he hands over her purloined files. Seberg became increasingly unstable, far from the Breathless gamine, and though she worked in Europe, she eventually died of an overdose in a parked car in Paris-never definitively proved as a suicide. She is here inhabited, very skillfully and movingly, by Stewart and the hyperbolic invented parts fall away if you keep your eye on her, and the superior production design and costumes.  

Image courtesy Amazon Studios.

In Film Tags Jean Seberg, Kristen Stewart, Seberg

Bonjour Tristesse

April 3, 2020 Patricia Zohn
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Bonjour Tristesse was closely based on the 1954 number one best-selling coming-of-age novel by 18-year-old Francoise Sagan. Despite being dismissed by most critics, the book had been a sensation for its young author with her diary-like tale of a daughter desperate to keep her father for herself and her preternaturally louche way of looking at the world. When the film version appeared in 1958, its critical reception was similarly negative. “A bomb” said Bosley Crowther of the New York Times, but over time, it has garnered a cachet for its lush Technicolor scenes on the Riviera and its iconic performances by David Niven, Jean Seberg and Deborah Kerr. Today this image reminds me of an older woman reminding a younger one to "Social Distance"!

In Film Tags Bonjour Tristesse, Francoise Sagan, Jean Seberg

Seberg and Belmondo in Breathless, hiding away like the elephants

April 2, 2020 Patricia Zohn
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This image of Jean Seberg and Jean Paul Belmondo from Breathless is more than iconic: for me, when I first saw it in Paris,  it was the image of everything I wanted to be and do--she was an American girl and her name was Patricia! Michel (Belmondo) has sneaked into her hotel room/apartment to hide out from the flics, and though at first she's resentful, his charm and powers of persuasion win the day. She says she wants to "hide away like the elephants" do and they get under the covers....and I thought that is exactly how I feel now, the bed luring me back as the only real port in the Covid storm. If you haven't by some miracle seen Breathless, now is a great time to watch it, on Criterion.

In Film Tags Jean Paul Belmondo, Breathess, Jean Seberg