From the Journals of Jean Seberg (Rappaport, 1995): ICA Cinema, 12.10pm
This 16mm screening is part of the ICA's Celluloid on Sunday festival. Details here.
Time Out review:
Mark Rappaport's remarkable documentary works through Seberg's life, from her
Midwest school days, through her much-publicised debut in Preminger's Saint Joan and her success in A Bout de Souffle,
to her nightmarish marriage to Romain Gary, her involvement with the
Black Panthers, and her eventual suicide in 1979. But it also uses the
actress's experiences as a starting point for the exploration of an
array of subjects. Hurt's Seberg is impressive as she reminisces
straight to camera from beyond the grave, but what makes the film so
extraordinary is the way Rappaport weaves illuminating connections
between the threads of his densely informative thesis. This is
intertextuality at its most accessible, provocative and surprising: a
scene in Saint Joan, for example, leads to observations on Jane Fonda that take in Klute,
Vadim, Vietnam, Josh Logan, workout tapes, Ted Turner, Lev Kuleshov and
the opportunities afforded ageing actresses - even as Fonda is rhymed
with Falconetti, Vanessa Redgrave and Seberg herself. Entertaining,
moving, intellectually sharp and imaginatively brilliant.
Geoff Andrew
Here (and above) is the trailer.
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