Janis Ian: Breaking Silence

2024

Biography / Documentary / History / Music

Rotten Tomatoes Critics - Rotten 100% · 11 reviews
Rotten Tomatoes Audience - Upright 100%
IMDb Rating 7.6/10 10 220 220

Plot summary

In 1965, Janis Ian, a 14-year-old singer-songwriter from New Jersey, wrote “Society’s Child” about an interracial relationship. Recorded and released a year later, the song launched Ian's career, but its subject matter ignited controversy, even resulting in death threats. The fallout plunged Ian into an emotional tailspin–and yet a few years later she emerged from the ashes with an even bigger hit, “At Seventeen.” Over six decades, Janis Ian gained ten Grammy nominations in eight different categories, saw her song “Stars” recorded by such luminaries as Nina Simone and Cher, and overcame homophobia, misogyny, and a life-threatening illness to produce an indelible body of work that continues to draw audiences around the globe. Featuring Janis Ian, Joan Baez, Jean Smart, Arlo Guthrie, Lily Tomlin, and Tom Paxton, among other icons.

Director

Top cast

Jean Smart as Self
Arlo Guthrie as Self
Lily Tomlin as Self
720p.WEB 1080p.WEB
1.03 GB
1280*720
English 2.0
NR
Subtitles us  
23.976 fps
1 hr 54 min
Seeds 43
1.91 GB
1920*1080
English 2.0
NR
Subtitles us  
23.976 fps
1 hr 54 min
Seeds 62

Movie Reviews

Reviewed by 10 / 10

A Must See Film

Janis Ian: Breaking the Silence is a searing portrait of a groundbreaking singer-songwriter who has long demanded closer attention. Her monster hit, "At Seventeen," is perhaps the most insightful piece of music ever written about adolescent girlhood. Not only did Ian write the deep and soulful "Society's Child" at the age of fourteen, she stood up to the major record companies and refused to change a word. Director Varda Bar-Kar fully captures the scope of Janis Ian's accomplishments, as well as her unflappable courage amid a life of profound trials and tribulations. That the film resonates so deeply is a tribute to both artists.
Reviewed by 10 / 10

An outstanding documentary and experience

Varda Bar-Kar's beautifully crafted documentary of one of our time's until now too-hidden heroes is, like her earlier "Fandango at the Wall", a feast of both filmmaking and subject.Janis Ian is nothing less than a national treasure--her songs, her singing of them, and also her life. The steadiness of Ian's compassion and the ferocity of her attention are both exemplary. Her work carries the long tradition of American narrative song into current-world context and content. From her first hit, a song about interracial dating in the 1960s, "Society's Child," to the much-covered classic "Jesse," to the fireband-bright declarations of the late-life song, "I'm Still Standing," Ian has been ground-breaker, silence breaker, truth sayer.Anyone who's heard Ian's songs still recalls them. But only some know the lifelong body of work, and fewer still know Ian's own life story, or quite realize how much courage, from start to now, it must have taken. Bar-Kar's always-moving and always-questioning camera, mix of interviews, archival footage, animation, and reenactment gives us that life--significant and moving in itself--its pitched lows, its highs, its determinations, loves, losses.Above all, the film gives us Ian's fidelity to what matters, her fidelity to what is (old fashioned though the thought is) right, and her fidelity to, above all, simply what is.For a person who knows Ian's music, Breaking Silence will expand what lies around, behind, and beneath it. For those who don't (yet), the documentary stands on its own, both as introduction to the songs and as an introduction to one unexpected and sui generis person, who's spent a lifetime in the making of sense through the making of art.
Reviewed by 10 / 10

The perfect cinematic tribute to an exceptional Singer/Songwriter, the iconic Janis Ian

60 years ago the song "Society's Child" hit the scene like a sonic shockwave. Dozens of record labels refused to release it. Until Verve Records (renowned for jazz) stepped up and did the right thing. Radio stations also banned it.The year was 1965 and America was experiencing the societal shocks of the Civil Rights movement. It was a 15 year-old slip of a girl, JANIS IAN who had unleashed an astounding song - that spoke of young love across the racial divide - that provoked such fury in some quarters, and admiration from others, including maestro Leonard Bernstein.This is the opening sequence of an important film JANIS IAN: BREAKING SILENCE. The film's director, Varda Bar-kar (Fandango at the Wall, Big Voice) succeeds superbly in achieving the balance of Janis Ian's life story and musical journey; both the human story and the splendid music are given plenty of space to breathe.Every meaningful song was showcased, including my favourites, "At Seventeen," "Jesse," "Stars," and "Between the Lines."This weekend we were invited to see an early screening of the documentary at a Palm Springs Film festival. I was moved and inspired by it. And it's no wonder that in the day, Janis Ian's albums sat beside Paul Simon, Bob Dylan, Carol King and Joni Mitchell in my vinyl collection.Varda Bar-Kar, with her deft touch and directorial vision, has taken this singer/songwriter with a sublime voice and insightful and poignant pen from the shadows, and has placed Janis Ian where she belongs, besides the greatest peers of her generation.It is fitting that this musical protege is finally acknowledged in film, on the 60th anniversary of Society's Child, and that Janis Ian's genius of American song is showcased to the world.Please, when JANIS IAN: BREAKING SILENCE comes to a theater near you, make sure you see it ?(Full declaration: I do appear on screen underscoring the significance of Janis Ian's stand for integrated audiences under apartheid South Africa.)a former record executive and author.
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