Jane Fonda in Five Acts (2018)

33K
Share
Copy the link

Jane Fonda in Five Acts: Directed by Susan Lacy. With Jane Fonda, Richard Nixon, Robert Redford, Nathalie Vadim. A look at the life, work, activism and controversies of actress and fitness tycoon, Jane Fonda.

“GRADE: B u003cbr/u003eu003cbr/u003eTHIS FILM IS RECOMMENDED.u003cbr/u003eu003cbr/u003eIN BRIEF: A meditative documentary on the life of Jane Fonda: actress, activist, health guru, and entrepreneur.u003cbr/u003eu003cbr/u003eJIMu0026#39;S REVIEW: Talented documentarian Susan Lacy (Spielberg) has once again set her sights on a show biz icon. With her most recent film, she captures Jane Fondau0026#39;s complex and mercurial life: Jane Fonda: In Five Acts. She structures her film into five stages in Ms. Fondau0026#39;s life. With title cards titled Henry, her childhood and early times with her father; Vadim (Roger), Tom (Hayden), and Ted (Turner), life with her ex-husbands, and the final chapter named Jane, her later years, the film explores her life as actress, activist, health guru and entrepreneur.u003cbr/u003eu003cbr/u003eThere is much to learn about Ms. Fondau0026#39;s career by hearing some surprising details about her backstory: her fractured relationship with her unloving father and troubled bonding with her mother, her early start on Broadway and film, her romances with the men in her life who molded her into various roles, her rise to activist causes, her interest in wellness, and her subsequent ventures into producing and mass-marketing herself. Interviews, archival photos and videos, and film clips fill out her story very well.u003cbr/u003eu003cbr/u003eThe film is well researched and the actress is open and honest with her facts and opinions. (u0026quot;I grew up in the shadows of a national monument…my dad!u0026quot;) But at times, some scenes seem manipulative and staged for empathic effect. Later portions of the film are a direct mea culpa to her neglected daughter, Vanessa, and a plea for forgiveness for some (not all) of her statements and behavior during the Vietnam War when many Americans considered her to be a traitor and nicknaming her u0026quot;Hanoi Janeu0026quot;. One also wishes more film clips of her earlier films were shown.u003cbr/u003eu003cbr/u003eWhat we see on the screen is a larger-than-life profile of a woman fulfilling her life journey…waiting for Act 6 to begin. An insightful film worthy of your time.”

Comments

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *