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Benedict Andrews; Genre: Drama; ; star: Kristen Stewart, Yvan Attal; writers: Anna Waterhouse; 102 Minutes. Seberg film review. Seberg mill valley film festival. Errrm! Nope! NEXT. 🙄. Right when Oceans started playing I lost it... Seberg clip. Seberg trailer reaction.
Where am I what year is it is The Rock president. Sonic 2019-2020. Quick Links Explore More Show Less The " Outlander " star brings his character into the most dangerous situation yet: the world of online dating. Watch the video Do you have a demo reel? Add it to your IMDbPage Nominated for 1 Golden Globe. Another 1 nomination. See more awards » Show all | Edit Filmography Personal Details Publicity Listings: 6 Biographical Movies | 7 Print Biographies | 1 Interview | 4 Articles | 2 Pictorials | 4 Magazine Cover Photos | See more » Did You Know? Personal Quote: I never knew until I came here [Hollywood] that somebody could be really nice to you for years and really hate your guts. Happens all the time here. ».
If they listen to us, then we've gotta give them a chance, a big fat one. This reminds me of Knight In Shining Armor by Jude Deveraux. Sooooo cool ❤️❤️❤️. Seberg release date. What a beautiful woman she was. I'm in love with her. Kristen looking like Ellen and I love how her acting has evolved shes doing so much better.
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So happy about how long she talked about the runaways movie. Seberg csfd. YouTube. Seberg trailer 2020.
Seberg 2019 movie. Ruth finally decides to live a normal life after leaving Ozark and gets an assistants job... No one: Kristen: “I ran into my parents bedroom and said Im three but I went like this 👌” 😂. Seberg official trailer. Seberg movie trailer. Seberg movie kristen stewart.
Seberg interview. Seberg trailer in hindi. Seberg 2019 putlocker. Seberg movie clips. Actress Jean Seberg, late 1960s. H oover and fellow Bureau officials were convinced that existing laws were insufficient to control the activities of targeted dissident groups, and they were hamstrung by early 1960s-era Supreme Court decisions limiting the Justice Department’s ability to prosecute American Communists. Accordingly, Hoover directed COINTELPRO’s operations as a personal vendetta, using antagonistic and frequently patently illegal strategies to “contain and disrupt” radical activists he personally deemed threats to the American way of life. In essence, the Bureau simply took the law into its own hands, conducting a high-tech vigilante operation against who it perceived as “domestic enemies. ” These activist organizations included not just communists but the Socialist Workers Party from 1961–69, white hate groups from 1964–71, the Puerto Rican independence movement from 1967–71 and the New Left student movement starting in 1968. Black Nationalist groups — especially the Black Panthers — found themselves in Hoover’s crosshairs starting in 1967. And this is the program where (white) actress Jean Seberg two years later found herself and her unborn baby ensnared and literally hounded to death. The highly centralized FBI micromanaged COINTELPRO from its Washington headquarters through 59 field offices across the United States. Each field office’s “Special Agent in Charge” (SAC) was expected to compile a description of all existing targets and key activists in each COINTELPRO program, then submit recommendations for counterintelligence activity to Hoover, who either authorized or rejected them. Not one of Hoover’s “fawning parasite” SACs (as described by former agent Wesley Swearingen in his 1995 book “FBI Secrets”) dared make a move without prior Bureau approval. A native of Marshalltown, Iowa, Jean Seberg was a fervent activist before she became a movie star. At the age of 14, she joined the NAACP and spoke out passionately for numerous other causes. She, as well as other higher-profile actors as Elizabeth Taylor and Marlon Brando, donated generously to numerous activist organizations, including the Black Panthers. Seberg taking a break during filming “Saint Joan. ” The “schoolgirl from Marshalltown” gained everlasting Hollywood fame when she was chosen from among 18, 000 contestants for the lead role in Otto Preminger’s 1957 film Saint Joan. The film was poorly received, however, and of the experience, Seberg wrote “I have two memories of Saint Joan. The first was being burned at the stake in the picture. The second was being burned at the stake by the critics. The latter hurt more. I was scared like a rabbit and it showed on the screen. It was not a good experience at all. ” While her next film under Preminger, Bonjour Tristesse, was even more poorly received, her third film with Peter Sellers, The Mouse that Roared, followed by her role of Patricia Franchini in Jean-Luc Godard’s 1960 masterpiece Breathless finally established her as one of America’s premier new wave actresses. B ut it was Seberg’s personal activist life that attracted the attention of the FBI, especially when it was discovered by the Bureau in 1969 that the well-respected actress had donated about $10, 500 to the Black Panther (BP) Party to expand their popular inner-city children’s breakfast program into other cities. Since the Black Panthers were a prime target on the FBI’s most wanted list of extremist organizations, on June 5 of that year, permission was granted by Hoover to the Los Angeles field office to initiate an “active, discreet investigation” to determine the extent of involvement of Seberg’s associations with the Panthers. Thus the FBI initiated a concerted and secret campaign into her life by stalking her, tapping her phone and opening her mail. On February 23, 1970, a Black Panther informant dubbed “source 3” reported that a Panther member told Seberg that they “were broke and needed money. ” Seberg then responded with a check for $2, 500. The file on Seberg also showed that the FBI funneled intel on her to the CIA, the FBI “legal attaches” at American embassies in Rome and Paris, to military intelligence units and to the Secret Service under the auspices of securing potential presidential security threats in the wake of the 1963 assassination of President John F. Kennedy. Despite having her name removed as a potential threat to the president in 1969, on December 29, 1970, Seberg was reinstated to the list solely due to her monetary association with the Panthers. The real shit on Seberg hit the fan eight months earlier on April 21, 1970, when she was called on a tapped phone by Elaine Brown, a top leader in the Panthers, and Seberg admitted to her and to Masai Hewitt, another Panther leader, that she was four months pregnant. She never mentioned in that call, however, that it was by her second husband, French diplomat Romain Gary. FBI agent and virulent racist Richard Wallace Held, who was in charge of Black Panther Party surveillance for the Los Angeles field office, assumed from this monitored conversation that Seberg was made pregnant by Hewitt. Sensing a magnificent opportunity, Held realized that Seberg was now “ripe for neutralization. ” He sent a memo to Hoover back in Washington, suggesting that he publicize the Seberg pregnancy and drop strong hints that Masai Hewitt was the father. Hoover approved the planted rumor but suggested to protect the Bureau, Held hold off a few more months until her swelling stomach “was obvious to the public, ” thus not giving away the Bureau’s wiretaps on her and on the Panther party. The revelations about Seberg and the Panthers — even though made up — allegedly brought out the absolute worst among the notoriously racist L. A. field office staff. Wesley Swearingen reported in his book that another agent, Roth Tolz, said of Seberg and Hewitt “I wonder how she’d like to gobble my **** while I shove my. 38 up that black bastard’s ass? ” In a more even-tempered but still vicious memo, an official with the FBI’s extremist program, G. C. Moore, wrote to Assistant Director Brennan characterizing Seberg as the “alleged promiscuous and sex-perverted white actress. ” On April 27, 1970, Held thought it was time to act, and sent a memo to Hoover finally requesting permission to falsely publicize Seberg’s pregnancy by Raymond Masai Hewitt. “It is felt that the possible publication of Seberg’s plight could cause her embarrassment and serve to cheapen her image with the general public, ” he wrote in the request. Once Hoover approved, the LA field office sent anonymous letters to several Hollywood gossip columnists announcing the sleazy and untrue allegation. The only newspaper editor who took the bait was Los Angeles Times Metropolitan Editor Bill Thomas, who said in 2009 that he received the false tip from an unknown reporter before passing it along to syndicated celebrity gossip columnist Joyce Haber. The tip read “Informant sez [sic] actress Jean Seberg is four months pregnant by Ray Hewitt, known as ‘Masai, ’ and identified as present Black Panther minister of information. Informant adds that she has sed [sic] she plans to have the baby. ” Thomas added a note at the top that read “Joyce — I don’t know if you care, but this comes from a pretty good source. ” Thomas said in an April 2002 LA Times story titled “A Faulty Tip, a Ruined Life and Hindsight” that he remembered the reporter telling him on the phone that his source was the FBI. He then passed the note along, assuming that standard journalistic practice would prevail and that another set of eyes, perhaps Haber’s editor Jim Bellows, would verify the information before it was published. “It was such a tiny blip, ” Thomas recounted. “… all I was saying was what the reporter said … The way it was told to me by my sources was that the FBI actually believed she was pregnant by this Black Panther, so they believed that. I wasn’t in the business of killing off informative tips of any kind, and it was up to others to exercise judgment. I didn’t think about it for more than five minutes. ” Bellows recalled in the same 2002 story that Haber had already written the column on May 18 using Seberg’s name when he first saw the note, just prior to their 11:00 a. m. deadline. He claimed that an alarm went off as he read it. “I said to Joyce, ‘What the hell is that? ’ I thought it was pretty strong. Like, ‘wow, where did that come from? ’ Worried about a possible libel suit, Bellows told her to rewrite the piece without Seberg’s name. “I took it out because it made me nervous, ” he said. Haber then re-wrote the article “blind, ” meaning she used thinly-veiled aliases to shield herself and the newspaper from lawsuits, referring to Seberg as “Miss A. ” The article, appearing May 19, 1970 in over 100 newspapers and titled “Miss A Rates as Expectant Mother, ” ended with the sentence “… And now, according to all those really ‘in’ international sources, Topic A is the baby Miss A is expecting, and its father. Papa’s said to be a rather prominent Black Panther. ” It was an explosive allegation, and Seberg and her husband were shattered by it, sending Seberg into a downward spiral of depression. Compounding the problem was Newsweek magazine, who picked up the concocted story and republished it two months later using Seberg’s real name. As a result of the stress of the situation, Seberg went into premature labor and, on August 23, 1970, gave birth to a 4-lb baby girl, Nina Hart Gary, who died two days later. The funeral was held in her hometown of Marshalltown, and the casket was left open to prove to reporters that the little girl was white, disproving Haber’s and Newsweek’s stories. The FBI shrugged. Seberg visited her sister, Mary Ann Seberg, just after the baby’s funeral and Mary Ann reported that Jean was distraught, withdrawn and “in utter disbelief, too, that her life could be destroyed by something like this. ” While Seberg continued to act throughout the decade she never returned to Hollywood as her life began a long downward spiral. She had suspected for years that the FBI had been following her, tapping her phones and opening her mail and she feared it was still happening. In the Fall of 1970, she and her then-former husband Romain Gary filed a defamation suit for $200, 000 against Newsweek from their home in Paris. While the court ruled that the article in question was not a direct cause of the baby’s death, they still awarded a total of $20, 000 to Seberg and Gary, which included $10, 800 in civil damages and the order that Newsweek publish the court’s judgment in the magazine and in eight newspapers. On March 8, 1971, while most of America was at home watching the “fight of the century” between Joe Frazier and Muhammed Ali, an anonymous group calling themselves the “Citizen’s Commission to Investigate the FBI” raided the bureau field office in Media, Pennsylvania, and carried away over one thousand memorandums and detailed descriptions of COINTELPRO’s wiretapping and infiltration activities. Over the course of several months, the group mailed the materials to newspapers all over America. As a result, all COINTELPRO programs, including Black Extremism, New Left, White Hate groups and others, were abruptly shut down by Hoover April 28, 1971. Memo from Hoover ending COINTELPRO, 1971 Four years later, and after the 1975 publication of the Bureau’s inner workings by the Church Committee, U. S. Attorney General Edward Levi ordered the FBI to notify all victims of COINTELPRO and send those victims copies of the records collected against them. When Seberg received the huge box of the records of the campaign to ruin her life, she broke down even worse, and started seeking treatment at various psychiatric institutions and through pharmaceuticals. In June of 1979, around the time of her fourth marriage to Ahmed Hasni, her condition deteriorated to where she attempted suicide by trying to throw herself in front of a Paris subway train. Then, around August 30, the 40-year-old actress left her apartment on Avenue de Longchamp, carrying only a blanket and a bottle of prescription barbiturates and got into her white Renault. Ten days later her decomposing body was found on the bank of the Seine not far from their apartment. A note to her son Diego was found, stating in part “Forgive me. I can no longer live with my nerves. ” Speculation that other family members or friends were involved in her death remains unfounded. After her death, her second husband Romain Gary called a press conference and directly blamed her death on the FBI harassment and the false story of her pregnancy that led to the premature death of their baby daughter. He also revealed that Seberg had attempted suicide almost every year on August 25 — the anniversary of the child’s death. Jean Seberg is buried in the Montparnasse Cemetery in Paris. The FBI never officially apologized to Seberg, her family or to any of the victims of their COINTELPRO program persecution. After Seberg’s death, all documents related to the program were declassified and made public, prompting then-Director William Webster to simply declare that such intimidation and harassment tactics were a thing of the past. “We are out of that business forever, ” he told the Washington Post in 1980. Gossip columnist Joyce Haber died of liver and kidney failure in 1993 also refusing to apologize or even discuss the Seberg story, only saying that while she would never reveal the true source, it was not the FBI. David Halberstam, author of a 1979 book about the Los Angeles Times, media and politics titled “The Powers that Be, ” claimed that the Seberg/Haber/FBI story was not at all about gossip, but about questionable political reporting. “The Times did not set out to destroy [Seberg], ” he said in 2001. “One powerful institution manipulated another. The result was the destruction of a fragile human being. ” See more at. ### Sources: Bennet, Lorraine. “Actress Jean Seberg found dead in her Auto in Paris. ” 9 Sept. 1979. Web Brumfield, Dale. (2015) Independent Press in DC and Virginia: an Underground History. Charlotte: History Press. Federal Bureau of Investigation. Counterintelligence Program: Internal Security, Disruption of Black Extremist Groups. Washington, D. U. Government declassified memorandums. : FBI, 1969–1975. Haber, Joyce. “Miss A Rates as Expectant Mother. ” Los Angeles Times, 19 May 1970. N. p. Jalon, Allan M. “A Faulty Tip, a Ruined Life and Hindsight. ” Los Angeles Times, 14 Apr. 2002,. Ostrow, Ronald J. “FBI Probe of Actress Jean Seberg Found More Extensive than Reported. ” Washington Post, 8 Jan. 1980, pp. 3–3. Sweringen, W. (1995). FBI Secrets. Boston: South End Press. Wire services. “FBI Admits Spreading Lies about Jean Seberg. ” Los Angeles Times, 14 Sept. 1979, p. 1.
Sénergues. I'm going to see this. Golmaal, Welcome and Grand Masti mixed. Seberg trailer ita. Seberg 2019 123movies. Seberg soundtrack. Seberg parents guide. After reading the reviews I wasn't expecting much from this film but holy she did good. Her best performance indeed. I'm horrified by how inhuman the interviewer is. It's like she doesn't stop to think she's talking to a real human being but she is interviewing someone with no feelings or heart. This is uncomfortable for me to watch and points to how inhumane the press was becoming. From here we can look forward to the press hacking the phones of murdered children. RIP Jean Seberg. You where so much more than the people who presumed to judge you.
Did Anyone Else Noticed? she's Still Wearing That Lock Necklace
Seberg real story. Seberg review. Seberg release. Seberg kiss. Seberg (2019. Watching the visual link between Nico and Seberg in this sequence of shots is akin to seeing a Garrelian genealogy taking shape before our eyes — as if Seberg were the matriarch of all the fragile beings that would populate the French filmmaker’s world, or perhaps as if every fragile being in that universe was a reflection or a variation of the American actress. While this would be the only film that Garrel and Seberg would make together, one cannot help but think that this silent, black-and-white, impossible-to-categorize 1974 feature holds the key to the director’s cinema, and, more specifically, to the motif of suicide that haunts it. In Les hautes solitudes, one finds the primal Garrelian scene: Seberg taking a combination of pills and what we can only infer to be alcohol, her determined gestures making it appear as if she is trying to end her life before the camera’s gaze. She is stopped by the film’s other beautiful and mysterious being, the American actress Tina Aumont, and the story has it that Garrel stopped shooting momentarily, so convinced was he that Seberg was actually trying to commit suicide. The director’s intuition was not totally off. If Seberg’s gestures seemed so authentic, it was because they had become almost ritualized for the actress, who by that time had tried to end her life multiple times. Five years after the release of Les hautes solitudes, she would be found dead in a car in Paris, an apparent suicide. One is not born a Garrelian being, however — something must have happened to Seberg to generate the pain and sadness we see etched on her face in Les hautes solitudes. In many respects, the trajectory of Seberg’s tragic life is not so different from those of Marilyn Monroe, Judy Garland, or a number of others who found fame early; how many tales have we heard of young actors suffering from mental illness, alcoholism, drug addiction and the like? Less common, however, are those actors who are tormented for their political convictions or affiliations. Just as Garrel’s intensely personal, dreamlike cinema had its roots in the cultural and political upheavals of May ’68, so too did the private torment that precipitated Seberg’s end derive from a political source: today’s internet “outrage culture” and its armies of trolls are nothing compared to J. Edgar Hoover’s FBI. There are times in Les hautes solitudes when Seberg’s beautifully sad mask is graced by a smile, which serves as a kind of time machine, taking us back to her heyday. Her beauty mark has faded, the iconic garçonne haircut is no more, but that smile is what remains after everything is ruined. It was a Midwestern smile, a smile that neutralizes and reassures, or one that could be deployed as a defense against interviewers, particularly when they were cold, voyeuristic and insensitive. Born in 1938 in Marshalltown, Iowa, Jean Seberg always considered acting to be her calling. Though she was first and foremost a theatre geek, her breakthrough would come in front of the camera. In 1956, director Otto Preminger conducted an expansive search to find a young actress to play Joan of Arc in his adaptation of George Bernard Shaw’s Saint Joan. From the thousands of girls who auditioned, he picked Seberg, who was then an 17-year-old unknown with only one season of summer stock theatre behind her, but with a face seemed made for the screen. However, the Cinderella story took a darker turn when the film became both a critical and commercial failure; Seberg later recalled how negative reviews were sent from New York to her residence in Nice, as if she were the principal factor of the film’s failure. Watching Saint Joan today, one can understand why Seberg’s performance was judged so harshly at the time. Compared to Falconetti’s otherworldly torment in Dreyer’s The Passion of Joan of Arc or the pristine nobility of Ingrid Bergman in Joan of Arc, Seberg is playful, overzealous, and — crucially — immature. In her performance, Seberg shows she understands something that no other screen Joan had before: that, no matter the greatness of her accomplishments, Joan was a teenager in armour. Seberg captures all that is both touching and grotesque about Joan, and there is something very modern about the way she moves onscreen. Clearly, Preminger had seen something in this untried young actress that others at the time could not, and despite the fiasco of Saint Joan, he continued his collaboration with Seberg by casting her as the world-weary teenage schemer in his adaptation of Françoise Sagan’s Bonjour Tristesse a year later. The young French critics and soon-to-be filmmakers who would shortly be known as the nouvelle vague worshipped Preminger, and they were ecstatic about both Bonjour Tristesse and its young star. In his review of the film, François Truffant put into words that ineffable quality that made Seberg so singular: “her boyish malice. ” Truffaut’s then friend and colleague Godard was attuned to that malice as well, so it is little surprise that he sought out Seberg to take the role of the duplicitous Patricia Franchini, the love interest of Jean-Paul Belmondo’s charmingly amoral hoodlum Michel, in his debut feature. The actress’ presence in Breathless embodies the New Wave’s relationship with American cinema: to have Seberg in one’s film was, in a way, to have a bit of Preminger in there as well. (As Godard declared, Seberg’s Patricia was just a continuation of her Cécile in Bonjour Tristesse. ) But crucially, Godard looks at Seberg differently than did Preminger, and the actress is therefore able to express herself differently: where Preminger made her into different but equally distant objects of desire, in Breathless, she can finally be sexy. It was both Seberg’s good luck and bad fortune that she parted ways with Preminger, as she escaped that potentially co-dependent artistic relationship and set out to work with different directors in different genres. She made her first foray into comedy with The Mouse That Roared in 1959, playing opposite Peter Sellers; a few years after Breathless, she played the title role of a schizophrenic patient in Lilith, in which she co-starred with Warren Beatty and Peter Fonda. While her Breathless stardom kept Seberg in the public eye and in high-profile films throughout the 1960s, there was no pattern or coherence to the roles she played. What made Seberg’s Patricia so captivating was that it was a fusion of Godard’s misogynistic conception of the character and Seberg’s strong-willed refusal to adhere to that vision: famously, Seberg refused Godard’s direction that Patricia should rifle the dead Michel’s pockets after she betrays him to the police in the film’s finale. Following Breathless, Seberg jumped from genre to genre with ease, and while her own history of mental illness might have drawn her to specific roles (including Cécile and Lilith), there is little sense of her self in most of these performances. Though most of her films and her life — including her marriages with French lawyer François Moreuil and novelist Romain Gary — were made in Europe, Seberg never really left America. More specifically, she became actively involved in the Civil Rights movement, providing financial aid to such groups as the NAACP and the Black Panther Party. Her activism brought her to the attention of Hoover’s FBI, whose covert COINTELPRO program was at that time targeting prominent civil rights supporters with acts of intimidation, harassment, and disinformation designed to “neutralize” them. In Seberg’s case, the FBI tapped into old racial fantasies and fears by fabricating a story claiming that the actress was expecting a child from a leader of the Black Panthers (the child, who died two days after its birth, was actually fathered by a Mexican student revolutionary), and spent years surveilling and harassing her. This malicious persecution had long-term effects on Seberg’s mental health and well-being, and one can only conclude that it played a major role in her tragic end. (The FBI finally publicly admitted its harassment of the actress the week after her death in 1979. ) In an interview with the French magazine Les Inrockuptibles, Garrel described Les hautes solitudes as an assemblage of rushes from a film that didn’t exist; that film, simply put, is the later years of Seberg’s life, the life that she would never be able to lead. Barely out of her adolescence when she was suddenly presented to the world as a movie star, Seberg here seems to want to put all that behind her; exhausted, unmade, she is looking somewhere beyond the camera, looking for peace.
Seberg movie 2019. Seberg movie reviews. Lily Tomlin would be extremely proud of her. Seberg official trailer (2020. They all look like they are dressed for very different events.
Is no one else talking about how the rock is president on sonics world. Not seeing Beastiality, and Kristen Stewart is really Gross, didn't like her before, totally hate her now. Im here to officially apologize publicly to Kristen Stewart. I wrote this girl off as some entitled non actress who won the crowd with her awkwardness and will never get away from being the Bane of the twilight series. Ive watched a few films after and didnt think much else. However, as her previous A list actress of the past, I think shes gonna get up there with Meg Ryan, Drew Barrymore, Cameron Diaz. It looks like shes really taking her acting seriously. Best of luck girl. Im Here for it.
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Watching top gun cuz of the song. looking at him back then vs now, I SHOOK. damn time
I never knew she was so well spoken! A very cool interview. Seberg dvd. Aww, sad Jean. It's awful what happened to her. Did they fix your design? Yes. What did it cost? Gangsta's Paradise. Seberg wiki.
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This looks so cute. I hope on the shower scene they make a joke where he takes off his shoes and gloves and the guy is like okay I see why you wear them. Now on this day a new tool that sends you more than-6524-without any problem what you need through this link. Irgendwie macht diese Schauspielerin keinen Eindruck auf mich. Wirkt irgendwie unglaubwürdig. Oder die Filme werden mittlerweile so eintönig, dass die schon Langweilig wirken. Seberg the movie. Seberg movie review. Have you guys watched Safe Spaces (2019) this trailer looks exactly like that movie. hmm. sarcastically speaking. Seberg amazon. When I compared the 2, I literally almost passed out when I realized how terrifying the old Sonic was. Seberg jean.
2:05 Would have been great if he smiled and had the Freddie teeth in.
Jean. Film-making. Not only was she a force to be reckoned with in front of the camera- but by 1974, she'd begun in earnest, to explore the possibilities behind it as well. Forever keenly observant and curious, 'tis no surprise, (especially after her experience with 'Breathless'), that she'd want to explore a different vantage point... In 1974, she was the director, co-writer, producer and yes, star, of the short (19 mins. ) film, 'Ballad for the Kid'.... Per the New York Times article of 6-17-74 by Bart Mills, 'The film Jean is on the verge of directing will be a two‐reeler called “Ballad for the Kid. ” Billy the Kid, that is. Jean also co‐wrote the screenplay and will co‐star with her co‐writer, JeanFrançois Ferriol. “It won't be that much different from a home movie, ” she says. “Everyone else is doing it—why not me too? I want to find out if it's the kind of thing I want to do. I have no illusions about it. I'm not going to be on the stage come Oscar night. ” “Ballad for the Kid” arose partly out of Jean's long‐standing interest in writing (“I've always written poetry, some good and some bad”) and partly out of the fact that she was between films, “Various projects come up and then don't come off. ” And tho the following pics are intended to show her devotion to such, viewers will be 'forgiven' if they can't get past her visage. Love you, Jean... See More.
Laura Dern is amazing tbh. So underrated.
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