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A Star Is Born, 1976 Photo Sunset Boulevard/Corbis via Getty Images Though the vast majority of the general public has yet to lay eyes on Bradley Cooper’s directorial debut A Star Is Born, one scan of Twitter indicates that thousands of people have already ruled the film an unimpeachable masterpiece. They have also decided that Venom will be bad. Sorry, Venom, but there’s only room for one studio release this weekend. And for once, the rabid fandom hasn’t fallen so far from the critical press, which smiled kindly on the new melodrama and Lady Gaga’s knockout performance in particular during early premieres at film festivals in Venice and Toronto. Early reviews prophesy the rare box-office bonanza with a reputation to match, and a windfall of awards can’t be too far off. But just as the new film du Cooper will undoubtedly attract detractors before long, so too have the past iterations of A Star Is Born drawn polarized receptions, some more than others. The esteemed L. Gaga follows in the footsteps of four actresses spanning a course of decades, and they haven’t all met with universal adoration. Below, Vulture has assembled a review roundup for all the various stars that have been born, broadly appraising a story told and retold in an endless Shakespearean cycle matching its towering highs of angst. It may be time to let the old ways die, but first, we must know the old ways What Price Hollywood? 1932The first star to be born wasn’t even A Star Is Born. In the years before the repressive Hays Code put the kibosh on mature subject matter, George Cukor was free to direct a sordid tale of liquor and unbridled self-destruction, and set it in the world of film instead of music. Constance Bennett played the no-name coffee-pourer plucked from her rinky-dink diner by Lowell Sherman’s charismatic, whimsical, and ultimately unstable director as he sinks deeper into a spiral of dissolution. Though the film casts Tinseltown in a rather unflattering light, it was a success among the showbiz set and garnered an Oscar nomination for Best Original Story, all without being bolstered by a positive critical reception. Variety, the taste-making rag of the era, wrote the picture off as “a fan magazine-ish interpretation of Hollywood plus a couple of twists” that had the good fortune to be told “interestingly” by Cukor. The ambivalence continued, the review stating that the “story has its exaggerations, but they can sneak under the line as theatrical license.” Much of the writing surrounding this film comes from more modern pens, and more charitable ones at that. At the Chicago Reader, esteemed critic Dave Kehr complimented “one of Cukor’s most interesting early films” for “effortlessly shifting from satire to pathos.” Turner Classic Movies’ Leonard Maltin touts it as “a surprisingly sharp-eyed look at Hollywood,” while pre-code authority Farran Nehme sang the film’s praises at the top of her lungs on her personal review site. After celebrating the 1937 and 1954 interpretations that Cukor’s work would inspire, she clarified that it’s “no mere dated antecedent, but its own superb self and deserving of the same affection lavished on the other two.” A Star Is Born 1937Janet Gaynor and Fredric March brought this tragedy of squandered potential and volatile self-loathing into the era of glorious Technicolor with the first take under the famed name, this time pairing off as an ingenue and fading actor rather than director. This time around, Variety was more unilaterally positive. The rave began by branding the film “a smash which unquestionably will rate among the half dozen best of the season,” and went on to declare that “few pictures have touched the tear ducts so easily and unaffectedly as this one.” Of the cast, the publication ruled, “Janet Gaynor gives to her role … a characterization of sustained loveliness” and that “she is equally as good in the comedy passages,” while Fredric March “creates a finely drawn portrait of weakness without viciousness.” They weren’t alone in their glowing praise. The Film Daily wrote that William Wellman’s film was “superbly done in all departments,” and TCM quotes the New York Times’ Frank Nugent as calling it “the most accurate mirror ever held before the glittering, tinseled, trivial, generous, cruel, and ecstatic world that is Hollywood.” Nugent also singled out the brilliant use of color “Technicolor need not, should not be restricted to the gaudy costume drama” and the industry’s willingness to look inward “… convincing proof that Hollywood need not travel to Ruritania for its plots; there is drama aplenty in its own backyard”. Of course, not everybody was onboard; ever the wild card, Pauline Kael described the film as “peculiarly masochistic and self-congratulatory” in the pages of The New Yorker. A Star Is Born 1954Though Cukor was offered the first A Star Is Born and reneged, claiming that it was too similar to What Price Hollywood?, he caved when Warner Bros. came to him once more. Kael smiled more kindly on the next go at the story, in which an effervescent Judy Garland breaks into the music business with the help of a broken-down James Mason. She called the film “grandiose” and “emotionally charged,” in addition to praising the “remarkable” Mason for giving a performance that “brings a bloom to the movie” as well as Garland’s “nakedly intense” work. Though it may not sound like it, Kael was praising the production when she wrote that “this updated version is a terrible, fascinating orgy of self-pity and cynicism and myth-making.” Variety continued to beat the drum, effusing, “Judy Garland glitters with that stardust which in the plot wastrel James Mason recognizes,” ultimately deeming the film “never wanting for heart-wallop and gutsy entertainment values.” Pretty much everybody jumped on the Judy Garland train Time crowed that she “gives what is just about the greatest one-woman show in modern movie history” and Newsweek assessed her as “as an actress … more than adequate. As a mime and comedienne, she’s even better. But as a singer, she can handle anything from torch songs and blues to ballads. In more ways than one, the picture is hers.” The New York Times legend Bosley Crowther delivered my personal favorite soundbite “The Warners and Mr. Cukor have really and truly gone to town in giving this hackneyed Hollywood story an abundance of fullness and form.” A Star Is Born 1976After giving a pass to the 1954 version, Kael kept New Yorker readers on their toes by trashing the film as “sentimental, without being convincing for an instant” in a lacerating piece titled “Contempt for the Audience.” Film critic emeritus Roger Ebert wasn’t so taken with the film either, half-praising Streisand’s talent while knocking her limits as an actress “There’s just no way, after all the times we’ve seen Streisand and all the ways she’s imprinted herself on our minds and tastes, for us to accept her as a kid on the way up, as an unknown who hitches her destiny to a star. Even in her first rags-to-riches movie, even in Funny Girl, we knew and she knew that she was Barbra Streisand. I guess in A Star Is Born we’re supposed to forget that. Fine; we could try if she’d let us.” Over at the New York Times, Vincent Canby wasn’t feeling much rosier. After joining Ebert in his doubts about Streisand’s plausibility in her role, he added, “There’s also something completely bogus in the pairing of Miss Streisand and Mr. Kristofferson, who, as lovers, are less exciting than King Kong and Jessica Lange. It would be easy to say that it’s not Mr. Kristofferson’s fault, but I’m not sure it isn’t. He walks through the film looking very bored.” And while many shaggy 70s studio-funded disasters have been reclaimed my modern media, this A Star Is Born has had no such luck. Vulture’s own Mark Harris succinctly captured the film’s reputation in 2018, calling it “by leagues the most financially successful and artistically forgettable version.” It is true that Frank Pierson’s film landed a staggering box-office return, for the runt of the litter. Time Out got their shots in as well “… this version vaunts its modernity by vulgarizing everything in sight, making the characters mouthpieces for foul language and equally foul sentimentality.” A Star Is Born 2018Now that Bradley Cooper and Lady Gaga have assumed the mantle of those select stars which are born, critics have been lining up to lay hosannas at their feet. The Guardian awarded the film a perfect five-star score, and critic Peter Bradshaw commended Cooper “He de-machos the role, and creates a backstory of vulnerability. Yet the crunch question is how are Lady Gaga and Bradley Cooper going to reinvent that terrifying award-ceremony scene, when he embarrasses her publicly? Well, the climax of their ordeal is bigger than I ever thought possible. It’s the final station of the cross.” The Los Angeles Times’ Kenneth Turan burst out of the gate with the gauntlet-throwing first line, “Passionate, emotional and fearless, the gangbusters A Star Is Born is poised to become the movie of the moment — the one everyone has to see right now.” NPR’s Linda Holmes was a fan as well, writing, “Cooper credibly builds a love story that’s fraught from the beginning, even as it leads to soaring moments for both Jackson and Ally. The musical moments that are meant to seem enormous actually do, and the relationship is suffused with a specific, cocooning intimacy that foregrounds the difference between how close they feel to each other and how uneasy both are with their public standing.” Variety’s Owen Gleiberman may have given the highest praise of all “A Star Is Born is that thing we always yearn for but so rarely get to see a transcendent Hollywood movie. It’s the fourth remake of a story that dates back to 1932, but this one has a look and vibe all its own — rapturous and swooning, but also delicate and intimate and luminous.” One must look a little harder to find mixed reviews, but they’re out there. The Hollywood Reporter’s David Rooney conceded, “The first-time director’s grasp of pacing could be improved and the overlong movie can’t quite sustain the energy and charm of its sensational start. But this is a durable tale of romance, heady fame and crushing tragedy.” Our very own David Edelstein contrasted the first half “couldn’t be more charming” with the second “much lesser”. Even so, the smart money says that this will do little to deter the oncoming box-office tsunami. Revisiting the 1937, 1954, 1976 Versions of A Star Is Born
guidingstar for an edition that we hope will lead us all to rediscover the pleasure and emotion of sharing a film screening che, nelle serate, accoglierà la programmazione di Pratello Pop, una sottosezione di Ritrovati e Restauratiche guarda ai nuovi Cinema Ritrovato was born 36 years ago and where, in the evenings, we will host the
UserScore Play Trailer Overview Seasoned musician Jackson Maine discovers — and falls in love with — struggling artist Ally. She has just about given up on her dream to make it big as a singer — until Jack coaxes her into the spotlight. But even as Ally's career takes off, the personal side of their relationship is breaking down, as Jack fights an ongoing battle with his own internal demons. Bradley Cooper Director, Screenplay Eric Roth Screenplay Will Fetters Screenplay You need to be logged in to continue. Click here to login or here to sign up.
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Non in programmazione Trama Ally fa la cameriera di giorno e si esibisce come cantante il venerdì sera nel pub locale. È lì che incontra per la prima volta Jackson Maine, star del rock. Un super alcolico tira l'altro e i due trascorrono insieme la serata e Ally si ritrova in una situazione veramente assurda. La vera favola comincia però quando un giorno Jackson invita sul palco Ally, rivelando finalmente il suo talento al mondo e, mentre per lei da lì a poco comincerà una brillante carriera, quella di Jack inizierà a vacillare. Ti potrebbe interessare 14 1645 16 0005 17 1440 19 1050 19 0520 14 0125 16 0130 15 1505 14 0305

1 Lady Gaga – Chromatica Label: Interscope Records – B003347901, Streamline Records – B0, Interscope Records – LG-6, Streamline Records – LG-6 Formaat: Vinyl, LP, Album, Deluxe Edition, Limited Edition, Heruitgave, Stereo Land: VS Uitgebracht: 25 juni 2021 Genre: Elektronisch, Pop 2. Lady Gaga, Bradley Cooper – Een ster is geboren-soundtrack Label:

Scopri dove vedere A Star Is Born in streaming. Per ogni piattaforma troverai la disponibilità dello streaming di A Star Is Born in gratis con pubblicità, abbonamento, noleggio, acquisto e prezzi per la risoluzione in qualità SD, HD, 4K. Trova dove sono disponibili l'audio e i sottotitoli in italiano ITA e inglese ENG. Trovi A Star Is Born in streaming in abbonamento su Netflix. Il film A Star Is Born è disponibile in streaming a noleggio su CHILI a 3,99€ per la versione HD+; Google Play. A Star Is Born è disponibile in streaming con la modalità acquisto su CHILI a 9,99€ per la versione HD+; Google Play. Dove vedere in streaming A Star Is Born In 3 piattaforme streaming Gratis Abbonamento Noleggio Acquisto CHILI Non disponibile Non disponibile 3,99€ HD+ Vedilo su CHILI 9,99€ HD+ Vedilo su CHILI Google Play Non disponibile Non disponibile Disponibile Vedilo su Google Play Disponibile Vedilo su Google Play Netflix Non disponibile Disponibile Vedilo su Netflix Non disponibile Non disponibile
Martedì15 settembre, in prima visione deluxe su Canale 5, arriva " A Star Is Born ". Il film che ha segnato il debutto alla regia di Bradley Cooper e
Critics and moviegoers alike are excited, to say the least, about Friday’s theatrical release of A Star Is Born — but this is not the first time the story will play on the big-screen. The latest version, starring Lady Gaga and Bradley Cooper who also directed, is the fourth in almost a century. Each of the film’s three previous iterations starred a female icon of its moment — not to put pressure on Lady Gaga, whose limited film acting credits include 2013’s Machete Kills and 2014’s Sin City A Dame to Kill For. She plays a waitress whose life is changed by fame after a country-music star spots her singing in a bar. A Star is Born is already set to be a huge hit after garnering critical acclaim after its August premiere at the Venice International Film Festival. And, if the movie’s previous versions are any indication, Oscars may be coming Each of the three A Star Is Born movies was nominated for and two of the three films won Academy Awards. However, not every iteration of the film had the same style, plot or music. In fact, the original was not even a musical. Here’s what made each of the film’s adaptations special — and what contemporaneous TIME critics had to say about them. 1937 The original, a romantic drama A poster for the original "A Star Is Born," 1937. United Artists/Kobal/REX/Shutterstock The Plot The plot of the first film differs the most from the following renditions, as the lead character’s passion is for acting rather than singing. Janet Gaynor 1906-1984 plays Esther, who grew up on a farm in North Dakota. After Esther moves to Los Angeles to pursue acting, she meets Norman Maine Fredric March, an alcoholic actor Esther looks up to. What the Critics Said A May 3, 1937, TIME review critiqued Gaynor, not only for her acting in A Star Is Born, but for her talent in general. March stole the show and lent the movie its “effectiveness” A Star Is Born United Artists starts by making the point that one girl in a hundred thousand who go to Hollywood to be stars becomes one. It then examines the career of the exception—Esther Victoria Blodgett Janet Gaynor who, the day she arrives on the Coast, financed by her grandmother’s nest egg, tiptoes into the outer lobby of Grauman’s Chinese Theatre and stands tremulously in the cement footprints of her favorite actor, Norman Maine. From this point on, the story of A Star Is Born does not differ in superficial outline from the story that has been told a hundred times, usually as an excuse for weak screen musicals. TIME’s critic also praised the film for containing “a magnificent shot which is possibly the best individual justification of Technicolor yet seen on the screen.” The Music The scoring of the movie, which was not a musical, was not nominated for an Oscar, despite its well-known composers. The music was written by Dorothy Dick and Max Steiner of Gone With the Wind, with the full soundtrack sung by Buddy Clark. The Awards The original A Star Is Born, directed by William A. Wellman, was nominated for seven Academy Awards. Gaynor, having already starred in 1927’s Sunrise and 1928’s Street Angel, was certainly Hollywood’s it-girl of the late 1920s and 1930s. Both films won her the respective year’s Best Actress in a Leading Role award at the Academy Awards. Her 1927 win for Sunrise was monumental, as it took place at the first Academy Awards ceremony in history, making Gaynor the first-ever Best Actress award recipient. However, though she was nominated, Gaynor lost the Best Actress in a Leading Role award. March, who played Norman Maine, was nominated for but ultimately lost the Best Actor in a Leading Role Academy award, too. 1954 The musical adaptation James Mason and Judy Garland in "A Star Is Born," 1954. Warner Bros/Kobal/REX/Shutterstock The Plot 1954’s A Star Is Born, directed by George Cukor, took inspiration from the original and showed Esther again as an aspiring Hollywood star. This time, the it-girl of the 1950s was Judy Garland 1922-1969, whose career had taken off with her role Dorothy in 1939’s The Wizard of Oz. Garland’s leading man was played by James Mason, a British actor known for his role in Hitchcock’s North by Northwest 1959. What the Critics Said TIME’s October 25, 1954 issue applauded her performance for her musicality and acting, highlighting the improvement in her skills As for Judy, she has never sung better. Harold Arlen and Ira Gershwin have given her six good songs—among them one unforgettable lump in the throat, The Man That Got Away. Her big, dark voice sobs sighs, sulks and socks them out like a cross between Tara’s harp and the late Bessie Smith. An expert vaudeville performance was to be expected from Judy; to find her a dramatic actress as well is the real surprise—although perhaps it should not be. In such pictures as Wizard of Oz, The Clock and Meet Me in St. Louis, Judy showed the first flutters of a nature that could give and sympathize deeply, even where it could not control. In Star the control is still unsure. But the confidence of the heart—which shows in the sudden warm going-under-now look in the eyes—is impressive. Everything she does is a little overdone, but it is a pleasure to see such things done at all. Everybody’s little sister, it would seem, has grown out of her braids and into a tiara. The Music The movie’s Oscar nominations included Best Original Song for the TIME-acclaimed “The Man That Got Away” and Best Scoring of a Motion Picture by Ray Heindorf. Heindorf later won the same award for his scoring of 1962’s The Music Man. The Awards Like her predecessor, Gaynor, Garland also lost the Best Actress in a Leading Role Oscar. She lost to Grace Kelly for her role in The Country Girl. According to Telegram!, a book of Hollywood history by Linda Rosenkrantz, Garland, who missed the Academy Awards because she was still in the hospital after giving birth to her son, was the favorite for that year’s coveted award. Disappointed with Kelly’s win, Groucho Marx sent Garland a letter, calling her loss “the biggest robbery since Brink’s.” 1976 The musical remake A promotional image of Barbra Streisand and Kris Kristofferson in "A Star Is Born," 1976. Warner Bros/Kobal/REX/Shutterstock The Plot The 1976 adaptation of A Star Is Born — perhaps better known as the Barbra Streisand version — took the previous two films’ backdrop of Hollywood and turned its star into an aspiring singer rather than an actress. Directed by Frank Pierson, who co-wrote the movie with Joan Didion and John Gregory Dunne, the film opens with Streisand’s Esther is discovered by John Norman Howard Kris Kristofferson, a rock star, as she performs in a bar. This plot line is the most similar to 2018’s rendition. What the Critics Said TIME didn’t love Streisand’s performance nearly as much as the magazine had appreciated her predecessors’ takes on the role. In a review headlined “Barbra, a One-Woman Hippodrome,” film critic Jay Cocks wrote that Streisand’s rock n’ roll interpretation was questionable. Rock n’ roll is not the only problem with A Star Is Born, nor even the basic one. Still, it is a fair place to start. The trouble with rock n’ roll in A Star Is Born is that there isn’t any. The soundtrack is filled with homogenized harmonics passing for rock, but not a single song is good enough even to be counterfeit. There are whimpy ballads and, on occasion, an up-tempo number that might make the Peter Duchin Orchestra restless. No recognizable rock, however, which is a distinct handicap in a movie that deals with two pop superstars who are supposed to be singing it, playing it and living it. The Music Despite Cocks’ concern, the music was perhaps more successful than the film. “Evergreen” also won a Grammy award as the Song of the Year, and the score, composed by Williams and Kenny Ascher, also won a Grammy. Streisand and Kristofferson both sang on the soundtrack, which reached No. 1 on the Billboard 200 chart in February of 1977. The Awards Despite some less-than-stellar reviews, the film grossed $80,000,000 in the United States box office and was nominated for four Academy Awards, winning one for Best Original Song. The winning song, “Evergreen,” was co-written by Streisand and Paul Williams. The first two versions of A Star Is Born depicted Esther winning an Oscar award, but in this one, the character won a Grammy. Because the first two lead actresses lost those awards in real life, Barbra Streisand is the only lead to win the same kind of award for the film as her character does in her respective version. Write to Rachel E. Greenspan at
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The film starts with the famous singer, Jackson Maine Bradley Cooper, getting ready to perform to a sold-out audience, but only after secretly taking a few pills with some whiskey. He sings the song "Black Eyes," which the crowd Ally Lady Gaga is a songwriter working at a catering hall. She is seen breaking up with someone over the phone before joining her friend Ramon Anthony Ramos at work, where she gets constantly chewed out by her boss Bryan Jacob Schick. After work, Ally heads toward a performance while singing to Jack's show, his driver, Phil Greg Grunberg, brings him to a drag queen bar. There, he meets Ramon and has some drinks as Ally goes up to perform "La Vie en Rose." Jack is moved to tears by Ally's voice, and Ramon arranges for the two of them to meet in the dressing room. Jack charms Ally and invites her to have a drink, but first, Jackson performs a song for one of the drag queens takes Ally to a cop bar where she tells him that she doesn't sing her own songs because people have told her that while they like her music, they don't like her face. Jack disagrees and tells Ally that she is beautiful. An off-duty cop then walks over and harasses Jack for a photo, which Ally finds disrespectful, and she punches the man in the face. Jack then takes Ally to a grocery store to get frozen peas for her injured hand. Outside the store, Ally sings the song "Shallow" that she wrote, and Jack loves brings Ally home to his house and invites her to see him perform at a show, but she declines as she has to go to work. Ally returns home to her father, Lorenzo Andrew Dice Clay, and his friends, whom all work together as part of a limo driving later goes to Ally's home to pick her up to fly her to the show, but Ally insists that she has to work. While at work, Ally gets annoyed when Bryan chastises her for being late, so she finally decides to quit, and she takes Ramon with her to fly and see Jack, who starts by performing one of his hits, "Maybe It's Time." At the show, Jack invites a nervous and hesitant Ally onstage to sing "Shallow" together, and the audience loves it. Videos of their performance become a viral brings Ally back to his hotel room for some alone time. However, Jack gets high and passes out. His manager/older brother Bobby Sam Elliott has to help Jack to bed. Bobby tells Ally that he hasn't seen Jack perform like that in a while, and he credits her for that, but he also warns her to be careful around starts to join Jack as he tours around the country, and they start to form a relationship. One day, Jack tries to bring Ally to a farm that he bought for Bobby, only to find that Bobby sold it. He finds Bobby and punches him in the face, feeling that Bobby betrayed him and their late father. Bobby blames their alcoholic dead father for introducing Jack to alcohol when Jack was only a teenager, and he states that their father's body was washed away in a storm. Bobby then quits working with joins Jack for another performance onstage to sing "Always Remember Us This Way." After the show, Ally meets Rez Gavron Rafi Gavron, a record producer who wants to sign her to his label. Although he's not crazy about the idea, Jack supports Ally's choice to join the label and stands behind soon becomes a rising star in music, and she and Jack start to live together in a country house with a dog named Charlie. During one of her shows, she chooses to leave her dancers offstage, which doesn't sit well with Rez. He also suggests that she dye her brown hair blonde, which Ally doesn't want to do. She eventually dyes it a bright red tells Ally that he will be at one of her shows, but he actually gets loaded and passes out in front of the home of his old friend, George "Noodles" Stone Dave Chappelle, a retired musician. Noodles invites Jack inside to share a meal with his wife and kids. Ally later shows up and forgives Jack for missing out on her. He goes into another room and cuts a piece of guitar string to fashion into a ring. With it, he uses it to propose to Ally, and Noodles then suggests that he can arrange for them to be married the same day. With several people in attendance, Jack and Ally tie the knot in a private wedding the next few months, Ally's career continues to skyrocket, while Jack's career deteriorates, and he continues to hide his substance abuse from the public. Rez books Ally a spot as the musical guest on "Saturday Night Live" where Alec Baldwin is hosting. She performs a new song, "Why Did You Do That?" As Jack watches Ally onstage, Bobby shows up, and the two of them Ally is taking a bath, a very drunk Jack starts to berate Ally for her suggestive new song, making her seem like a whore and calling her ugly. Ally angrily throws Jack gets nominated for three Grammy Awards, including Best New Artist. Jack is hired to play a Roy Orbison tribute with a younger artist. During the performance of "Pretty Woman," Ally notices that Jack is clearly drunk/high, but he manages to make it through the at the Grammys, Halsey announces Ally as the Best New Artist winner. Ally goes up to accept and gives a speech, but the very drunk Jack screws it up by hobbling onstage and then pissing himself right next to Ally, and finally fainting on stage. Lorenzo and his friends bring Jack into a nearby bathroom, where he yells at Jack for ruining Ally's big night. Ally stays by Jack's side in the later, Jack enters a rehab program and attends weekly group AA meetings. When Ally visits him, Jack tearfully apologizes to her for what he's been time later, Jack finally comes home from rehab. Ally tries to suggest to Rez that Jack join her for her upcoming tour to rejuvenate his career, but he says that's out of the question for the stress might trigger a relapse, and Ally says she would rather cancel the tour at the risk of her own career. Rez later personally talks to Jack at his home and tells him that he ought to stay away from Ally because he is just going to drag her down with his behavior and substance heading to one of her shows, Ally tells Jack that she is canceling her tour so that they can spend the summer together. Jack promises he will go to her last concert and try to stay is at her show waiting for Jack to show up, but he is at home, having taken some pills and booze. He goes into his garage with his belt and shuts the door with Charlie sitting outside. In between songs, Ally asks someone to go to the house to pick Jack up, but he has already hung learning of Jack's suicide, Ally is distraught and spends time alone, but she has a mental breakdown and smashes a couple of her framed posters. Bobby consoles her and tells her that Jack's death was his own fault and not her own. She is remorseful because the last thing she did was lie to memorial service for Jack is held. Ally performs a song that Jack had written but never sang called "I'll Never Love Again." As she sings, there are clips shown of the time the two spent together, ending with Jack singing the end of the song himself for Ally.

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