Wow, this was kind of a roller coaster ride with a strange destination. Natalie Portman does a spectacular job of portraying the crash and burn end of a career for a glam rocker.
But it didn't start out that way. Willem Dafoe is the narrator who introduces us to the 13-year-old
Celeste, played by the remarkable Raffey Cassidy. Out of the blue, she finds herself badly
injured during a Columbine-like school shooting, a tragic
common-occurrence staple these days. The incident inspires her
to write a musical lament — and the song, cowritten with her older
sister Eleanor (Stacy Martin), surprisingly catapults her into the
celebrity sphere virtually overnight. Suddenly, Celeste is has a manager (ably played by Jude Law, who does absoultely every sleezy thing you would imagine a manager to do) who has sold her to the highest bidder. From L.A. video
shoots to recording studios in Stockholm, the teenager is shoved into a
world for which nothing has prepared her, especially a pregnancy that
results from a one-night stand with an older Brit rocker.
And so it goes. The drugs, the alcohol, the grueling travel schedule, the people hanging on, sooner or later it would take a toll on anyone, and Natalie Portman's character takes us down and through that rabbit hole.
Wednesday, February 6, 2019
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
No comments:
Post a Comment