• Latest
  • Trending
Jazzy Review

Jazzy Review: Childhood Captured in Time

Demise Review

Demise Review: Vengeance Served with a Side of Camp

Seneca Review

Seneca Review: A Philosopher’s Garish Final Act

Yes, Chef! Season 1 Review

Yes, Chef! Season 1 Review: The Bitter Aftertaste of a Missed Opportunity

Not Just a Goof Review

Not Just a Goof Review: A Father, A Son, and A Legacy Reconsidered

Cubic Odyssey Review

Cubic Odyssey Review: An Ambitious Architect’s Space Dream

Rumpelstiltskin Review

Rumpelstiltskin Review: Spinning Straw into… Something

Test Review

Test Review: When Moral Lines Blur On and Off the Pitch

The Black Forest Murders Review

The Black Forest Murders Review: Beyond Spectacle, Into the Grim Expanse

Hearts Around the Table: Josh’s Third Serving Review

Hearts Around the Table: Josh’s Third Serving Review: A Gentle Tale of Teachers and Teens

Amityville: Where the Echo Lives Review

Amityville: Where the Echo Lives Review – Charting Inner Turmoil in a Familiar Frame

Game of Thrones: Kingsroad Review

Game of Thrones: Kingsroad Review: A Song of Systems and Sorrows

Gannibal Season 2 Review

Gannibal Season 2 Review: Blood Legacy and Brutal Truths Unveiled

  • Home
  • Privacy Policy
  • Terms and Conditions
  • Gazettely Review Guidelines
Sunday, June 1, 2025
GAZETTELY
  • Home
  • Movie and TV News
    Michael Cera Jackie Chan

    Michael Cera Says Jackie Chan Mistook Him for a Contest Winner

    Finn Bennett

    Finn Bennett Joins Targaryen Court in HBO’s Knight of the Seven Kingdoms

    Elio

    Pixar’s “Elio” Sets June 20 Liftoff With New Directors at the Controls

    The Return

    Malta Lines Up “The Return” and “Compulsion” for Mediterrane Film Festival

    Alan Alda Loretta Swit

    Alda Hails Swit’s Legacy After Emmy-Winning Star’s Death

    Doctor Odyssey

    Disney Faces Harassment Suit From Doctor Odyssey Crew

    paramount

    California Senate Probes Paramount’s $15 M Offer to Trump

    Valerie Mahaffey

    Emmy Winner Valerie Mahaffey Dies at 71, Publicist Confirms

    Terrifier-4

    Damien Leone Pledges Epic Backstory Reveal in Terrifier 4

  • Movie and TV Reviews
    Demise Review

    Demise Review: Vengeance Served with a Side of Camp

    Seneca Review

    Seneca Review: A Philosopher’s Garish Final Act

    Yes, Chef! Season 1 Review

    Yes, Chef! Season 1 Review: The Bitter Aftertaste of a Missed Opportunity

    Not Just a Goof Review

    Not Just a Goof Review: A Father, A Son, and A Legacy Reconsidered

    Rumpelstiltskin Review

    Rumpelstiltskin Review: Spinning Straw into… Something

    Test Review

    Test Review: When Moral Lines Blur On and Off the Pitch

    The Black Forest Murders Review

    The Black Forest Murders Review: Beyond Spectacle, Into the Grim Expanse

    Hearts Around the Table: Josh’s Third Serving Review

    Hearts Around the Table: Josh’s Third Serving Review: A Gentle Tale of Teachers and Teens

    Amityville: Where the Echo Lives Review

    Amityville: Where the Echo Lives Review – Charting Inner Turmoil in a Familiar Frame

  • Game Reviews
    Cubic Odyssey Review

    Cubic Odyssey Review: An Ambitious Architect’s Space Dream

    Game of Thrones: Kingsroad Review

    Game of Thrones: Kingsroad Review: A Song of Systems and Sorrows

    To a T Review

    To a T Review: Finding Perfection in an Imperfect Shape

    Spray Paint Simulator Review

    Spray Paint Simulator Review: Coating the Town, One Careful Layer at a Time

    F1 25 Review

    F1 25 Review: A Stunning Drive, If You Have the Right Rig

    Pipistrello and the Cursed Yoyo Review

    Pipistrello and the Cursed Yoyo Review: Whip-Smart Mechanics and Pixel Charm

    Elden Ring Nightreign Review

    Elden Ring Nightreign Review: Condensed Chaos for Tarnished Veterans

    Scar-Lead Salvation Review

    Scar-Lead Salvation Review: An Anime Perspective on a Rogue-like Path

    Fuga: Melodies of Steel 3 Review

    Fuga: Melodies of Steel 3 Review: The Taranis’s Final, Heartfelt Song

  • The Bests
No Result
View All Result
  • Home
  • Movie and TV News
    Michael Cera Jackie Chan

    Michael Cera Says Jackie Chan Mistook Him for a Contest Winner

    Finn Bennett

    Finn Bennett Joins Targaryen Court in HBO’s Knight of the Seven Kingdoms

    Elio

    Pixar’s “Elio” Sets June 20 Liftoff With New Directors at the Controls

    The Return

    Malta Lines Up “The Return” and “Compulsion” for Mediterrane Film Festival

    Alan Alda Loretta Swit

    Alda Hails Swit’s Legacy After Emmy-Winning Star’s Death

    Doctor Odyssey

    Disney Faces Harassment Suit From Doctor Odyssey Crew

    paramount

    California Senate Probes Paramount’s $15 M Offer to Trump

    Valerie Mahaffey

    Emmy Winner Valerie Mahaffey Dies at 71, Publicist Confirms

    Terrifier-4

    Damien Leone Pledges Epic Backstory Reveal in Terrifier 4

  • Movie and TV Reviews
    Demise Review

    Demise Review: Vengeance Served with a Side of Camp

    Seneca Review

    Seneca Review: A Philosopher’s Garish Final Act

    Yes, Chef! Season 1 Review

    Yes, Chef! Season 1 Review: The Bitter Aftertaste of a Missed Opportunity

    Not Just a Goof Review

    Not Just a Goof Review: A Father, A Son, and A Legacy Reconsidered

    Rumpelstiltskin Review

    Rumpelstiltskin Review: Spinning Straw into… Something

    Test Review

    Test Review: When Moral Lines Blur On and Off the Pitch

    The Black Forest Murders Review

    The Black Forest Murders Review: Beyond Spectacle, Into the Grim Expanse

    Hearts Around the Table: Josh’s Third Serving Review

    Hearts Around the Table: Josh’s Third Serving Review: A Gentle Tale of Teachers and Teens

    Amityville: Where the Echo Lives Review

    Amityville: Where the Echo Lives Review – Charting Inner Turmoil in a Familiar Frame

  • Game Reviews
    Cubic Odyssey Review

    Cubic Odyssey Review: An Ambitious Architect’s Space Dream

    Game of Thrones: Kingsroad Review

    Game of Thrones: Kingsroad Review: A Song of Systems and Sorrows

    To a T Review

    To a T Review: Finding Perfection in an Imperfect Shape

    Spray Paint Simulator Review

    Spray Paint Simulator Review: Coating the Town, One Careful Layer at a Time

    F1 25 Review

    F1 25 Review: A Stunning Drive, If You Have the Right Rig

    Pipistrello and the Cursed Yoyo Review

    Pipistrello and the Cursed Yoyo Review: Whip-Smart Mechanics and Pixel Charm

    Elden Ring Nightreign Review

    Elden Ring Nightreign Review: Condensed Chaos for Tarnished Veterans

    Scar-Lead Salvation Review

    Scar-Lead Salvation Review: An Anime Perspective on a Rogue-like Path

    Fuga: Melodies of Steel 3 Review

    Fuga: Melodies of Steel 3 Review: The Taranis’s Final, Heartfelt Song

  • The Bests
No Result
View All Result
GAZETTELY
No Result
View All Result
Jazzy Review

It Feeds Review: A Dark Dive into Psychic Nightmares

The Fishing Place Review: Moral Tension Beneath the Snow

Home Entertainment Movies

Jazzy Review: Childhood Captured in Time

Arash Nahandian by Arash Nahandian
1 month ago
in Entertainment, Movies, Reviews
Reading Time: 8 mins read
A A
0
Share on FacebookShare on TwitterShare on PinterestShare on WhatsAppShare on Telegram

In the hushed corridors of modern indie film, Morrisa Maltz returns with a quiet thunder. After tracing Lily Gladstone’s pilgrimage through grief in The Unknown Country, she turns her lens to Jasmine “Jazzy” Bearkiller Shangreaux, exposing a world fragile yet relentless. Over six years, we watch Jazzy and her confidante Syriah Fool Head Means transform from wide‑eyed six‑year‑olds into self‑aware twelve‑year‑olds, each frame a living document of childhood’s shifting borders.

Maltz’s approach eludes neat labels: scenes fold into one another, poised between scripted beats and children’s spontaneous truth. This hybrid form feels intimate enough to blur where documentary ends and narrative begins. Premiering at Tribeca, the film wears its raw edges proudly—snow‑crusted playgrounds, plaintive recorder practice, whispered prayers—each detail charged with unguarded honesty.

Central to its vision is an inquiry on loss and inheritance, on bonds tested by time and circumstance. Beneath laughter and scraped knees, a faint ache hums: how does one clutch friendship as the years slip away? Jazzy’s world breathes Lakota legacy, a subtle proclamation that tradition and play can share the same breath. This is a film that courts silence, and within that hush we sense both beauty and quiet despair.

Temporal Tides and Childhood Fractures

In Jazzy, time is both a companion and a phantom, flowing with calm intention even as it erodes the innocence it carries. Over roughly eighty minutes, we witness Jazzy and Syriah blossom and wither in miniature stages—six to twelve—each birthday candle and school‑year transition a quiet monument to impermanence.

The film marks these passages not with grand fanfare but with small rituals: the soft glow of candles, the creak of a classroom door, the hushed thrum of after‑school footsteps on gravel. Such moments shape the longitudinal arc, an almost geological layering of memory and desire.

The birthday scenes function like bookends, their first‑grade reprise a pale echo of hope that has been tempered by experience. Between those two framed moments lies the bus‑ride betrayal, when Syriah’s silence becomes the loudest note in their friendship. That jarring pause on the school bus feels akin to an existential snare: the abrupt absence of a companion becomes a chasm in Jazzy’s world. When Syriah retreats to the reservation, her departure pulls at every seam of Jazzy’s identity—she is untethered, groping for new anchors.

Maltz and her editors, Vanara Taing and Laura Colwell, slip between languid, observational tableaux and brisk montage. Long, uninterrupted takes allow the girls’ off‑script chatter to resonate; later, cutting‑edge sequences propel time forward, as if memory itself were in fast‑forward. This interplay of pacing suggests that childhood is at once a sleepy dream and a kaleidoscopic blur—one we can never fully reconstruct.

Yet between games of recorder practice and frozen‑pond skates, small pieces assemble into a larger whole. A stray laugh, a whispered apology, these become scaffolding for emotional gravity. And when the screen finally fades to black, there remains a sense that life beyond this chapter is both unwritten and irrevocably begun.

Echoes in Light and Frame

A single frame can feel like a confession, and in Jazzy, Andrew Hajek’s camerawork often speaks in hushed tones. Magic‑hour silhouettes bleed into one another, as if dusk itself were leaning in to whisper secrets. Snow becomes a mirror, gleaming with pale promise and the weight of unspoken farewells.

Jazzy Review

Close‑ups blur at the edges, soft focus capturing the girls’ faces in what feels like a dream half‑remembered—an approach that gestures toward childhood’s slippery passage, each laugh and tear melting like grains of sand through an unseen hourglass.

Adults remain ghosts at the margins. We hear their conversations—muffled laughs, clipped worries—but seldom see their forms. The camera retreats to the world it cares about most: two children forging intimacy amid rusted trailers and unnamed anxieties. Such framing suggests that innocence is an island, isolated but vital, ringed by unseen currents of adult concern.

The landscape itself asserts presence. The grey‑planked mobile‑home park sprawls like a network of small truths, each structure a testament to lives lived in the margins. On the reservation, redrock horizons open up—ancient as memory, vast as possibility. These settings are woven into the girls’ psyches; location acts as a silent guide, charting the terrain of their evolving selves.

Colour shifts feel almost like emotional punctuation. Warm light bathes scenes where Syriah appears—an amber promise that friendship can brighten the dimmest world. When Jazzy stands alone, tones become cool, as though loss chills the very air. There is no artifice of fill lights or studio sheen; natural light reigns, lending each shot an austere honesty.

Sequences unfold in free‑form montages—school‑bus rides merge into birthday rituals, community gatherings blur into first‑grade recorder practice—while the camera dances around the pair with a quiet choreography. Unbroken takes allow their spontaneous banter to breathe, only to be interrupted by sudden cuts that thrust us forward in time. In these shifts, one senses the film’s silent question: can we hold onto moments that insist on slipping away?

Flicker of Becoming

Central to Jazzy is Jasmine “Jazzy” Bearkiller Shangreaux, whose gaze carries both wonder and aching foresight. In one moment, she asks, “What do you think growing up feels like?”—a question laden with childish hope and underlying dread. She leaps into play with unguarded laughter, only to recoil in raw despair when friendship fractures. That shift—from pure delight to gut‑wrenching betrayal—unfolds without melodrama, as if her heart itself were on the screen, exposed and beating.

Jazzy Review

Opposite her, Syriah Fool Head Means provides a silent gravity. Syriah’s composure feels deliberate: her serious tone and measured speech hint at unseen burdens, perhaps the weight of familial expectations or the looming reality of departure. Her stoicism fades in small gestures—a timid glance, a faltering smile—revealing the quiet heartbreak behind her resolve. Together, they form a counterpoint of exuberance and restraint, their interplay evoking a fragile dialectic of freedom and constraint.

Surrounding the two leads are voices that hover just out of focus. Mothers’ voices tremble with worry, a baby’s cry punctures a serene tableau, and each off‑screen murmur anchors the girls to an adult world they barely comprehend. Then Lily Gladstone appears as Tana, her presence like a sudden flame in darkness—she offers guidance in a single scene, her weighty voice bridging this film to The Unknown Country and suggesting lineage beyond what we can see.

This drama of real children emerges from collaboration: the screenplay credits Jazzy’s mother and the young actors themselves. Their unscripted exchanges—an offhand comment about “dream cars,” a whispered apology—feel less like performance and more like lived moments captured forever.

That tension between planned narrative beats and spontaneous truth creates a space where authenticity trembles on the brink of fiction. Their chemistry, sustained through six years of filming, becomes the very pulse of the movie, reminding us that innocence, once ruptured, cannot simply be rewritten.

Rituals of Farewell and Becoming

In its quiet way, Jazzy stages girlhood as a series of rites—each laugh, each tear, a threshold into new awareness. Friendship itself is portrayed as a trial: the dizzying highs of shared secrets are shadowed by the ache of betrayal. Here, first crushes become rites of passage, bodies shift and surprise, and every whispered confession carries the weight of an unspoken promise about who one might become.

Jazzy Review

Lakota heritage breathes through the film like wind across the plains. Scenes of language practice—soft syllables rolling between Jazzy and Syriah—speak to an inheritance far older than their childhood games. On the reservation, ritual mournings at a funeral turn private grief into collective memory. In these moments, loss is not only personal but communal, and the land itself feels alive with voices of ancestors.

Play and adult anxieties collide in the margins. We hear parents arguing about bills or a move, filtered through a child’s oblivious delight in recorder practice or a game of tag. This tension reveals a truth: innocence can hold wisdom that half‑understands grown‑up concerns even as it mocks their obsession with dream cars or frivolous fears of ice cream.

When Syriah leaves, Jazzy must learn to stitch her broken world back together, scouting new alliances and testing resilience. Syriah, in turn, grapples with what it means to carry tradition into unfamiliar territory. Each girl’s path hints at something universal: the struggle to keep roots alive while wings stretch toward the unknown.

Though deeply rooted in one community’s story, the film’s core question echoes beyond its frames: how does friendship endure when life demands change? In that echo lies a shared pulse, reminding us that across any boundary—geographic or existential—human connection remains our truest inheritance.

Echoes of Absence and Becoming

Sound in Jazzy feels like a companion and a question—sometimes tender, often unsettling. Neil Halstead and Alexis Marsh’s score drapes scenes in sparse chords that swell like hesitant breaths, then retreat into silence, as if the film itself were listening. Their judicious music never overwhelms but hovers at the edge of consciousness, reminding us that absence can ring louder than melody.

Jazzy Review

Diegetic sounds ground us in the girls’ small cosmos: the crisp crunch of footsteps in snow, the distant rumble of the school‑bus engine, an off‑key recorder note quivering in the cold air. A baby sister’s soft cry weaves through these moments, a fragile heartbeat that anchors the domestic universe around Jazzy.

Silence becomes punctuation, carving space for hurt or wonder to settle into the frame. In those hushed stretches, emotions reverberate—each unspoken glance or dropped toy gains weight. It is in these intervals that the film poses its darkest question: what do we hear when all noise fades?

Audio bridges stitch past and present, voices bleeding from one memory into another. A laugh in first grade echoes amid a later monologue on loss, collapsing years in a single tonal arc. This layering amplifies emotion without resorting to overt sentiment, trusting that a whispered lullaby or a sliver of guitar can carry the weight of everything the heart cannot speak.

Aftermath and Resonance

A final glimpse into Jazzy underscores its power as a quiet elegy to youth and a testament to cultural memory. This is not mere nostalgia but a tender interrogation of how childhood fractures and reforms under the weight of heritage. Morrisa Maltz has moved beyond the plaintive road‑movie intimacy of The Unknown Country, carving here a seamless fusion of lived truth and crafted narrative—proof that her voice can inhabit both observation and invention.

Jazzy Review

Festival whispers hint at wider attention, and one can imagine distributors drawn to its hushed intensity. There is a hunger for stories that void Hollywood gloss and embrace uncertainty over easy resolution. If Jazzy finds its way into homes and minds, it may inspire other filmmakers to linger in the margins where real lives unfold.

The film closes on an open score—childhood both captured and slipping away, a promise that these girls will return in memory or in future work. In that space between frame and afterimage, we carry their laughter and loss into whatever comes next.

Full Credits

Director: Morrisa Maltz

Writers: Morrisa Maltz, Lainey Bearkiller Shangreaux, Vanara Taing, Andrew Hajek

Producers: Morrisa Maltz, Lainey Bearkiller Shangreaux, Miranda Bailey, Natalie Whalen, Elliott Whitton, John Way, Vanara Taing, Tommy Heitkamp

Executive Producers: Lily Gladstone, Mark Duplass, Jay Duplass, Mel Eslyn, Jason Beck, Bill Way, Shuli Harel

Cast: Jasmine Bearkiller Shangreaux (Jazzy), Syriah Foohead Means (Syriah), Lily Gladstone (Tana), Raymond Lee (Isaac), Richard Ray Whitman (Grandpa August)

Director of Photography (Cinematographer): Andrew Hajek

Editors: Vanara Taing, Laura Colwell

Composer: Alexis Marsh​

The Review

Jazzy

9 Score

Jazzy stands as a haunting ode to the vanishing moments of youth and the weight of ancestral memory. Morrisa Maltz’s fusion of narrative and lived experience transforms small gestures into profound meditations on loss, identity, and the endurance of friendship. Its quiet pulse reverberates long after the frame fades.

PROS

  • Deeply authentic central performances
  • Luminous, naturalistic cinematography
  • Poetic fusion of narrative and documentary
  • Thoughtful portrayal of Lakota heritage
  • Emotional honesty without sentimentality

CONS

  • Deliberate pacing may test some viewers
  • Minimal conventional plot structure
  • Sparse dialogue can feel elliptical

Review Breakdown

  • Overall 0
Tags: Bill WayDramaFeaturedJason BeckJay DuplassJazzyJazzy (2024)Lainey Bearkiller ShangreauxLandon AdamsLily GladstoneMark DuplassMel EslynMorrisa MaltzRaymond LeeVertical
Previous Post

It Feeds Review: A Dark Dive into Psychic Nightmares

Next Post

The Fishing Place Review: Moral Tension Beneath the Snow

Try AI Movie Recommender

Gazettely AI Movie Recommender

This Week's Top Reads

  • The Librarians: The Next Chapter

    The Librarians: The Next Chapter Season 1 Review – Bridging Eras with Spellbinding Charm

    26 shares
    Share 0 Tweet 0
  • Mountainhead Review: Deepfakes and Deep Trouble

    1 shares
    Share 0 Tweet 0
  • Boglands Review: Shadows and Whispers in the Irish Mist

    1 shares
    Share 0 Tweet 0
  • Death Valley Review: A Witty Welsh Wander into Cosy Crime

    1 shares
    Share 0 Tweet 0
  • The Better Sister Season 1 Review: Not Quite a Killer Thriller

    8 shares
    Share 0 Tweet 0
  • Nine Puzzles Season 1 Review: Puzzle Pieces, Pain, and Police Procedurals

    1 shares
    Share 0 Tweet 0
  • MobLand Season 1 Review: Family Ties and Underworld Intrigues

    1 shares
    Share 0 Tweet 0

Must Read Articles

Game of Thrones: Kingsroad Review
Reviews Games

Game of Thrones: Kingsroad Review: A Song of Systems and Sorrows

19 hours ago
Stick Season 1 Review
TV Shows

Stick Season 1 Review: Owen Wilson Drives a Heartfelt, Flawed Dramedy

20 hours ago
Destination X Review
Entertainment

Destination X Review: A Game of Veiled Realities

2 days ago
Earnhardt Review
Entertainment

Earnhardt Review: The Anatomy of a NASCAR Titan

2 days ago
The Ritual Review
Entertainment

The Ritual Review: An Unsettled Echo in a Somber Chamber

3 days ago
Loading poll ...
Coming Soon
Who is the best director in the horror thriller genre?

Gazettely is your go-to destination for all things gaming, movies, and TV. With fresh reviews, trending articles, and editor picks, we help you stay informed and entertained.

© 2021-2024 All Rights Reserved for Gazettely

What’s Inside

  • Movie & TV Reviews
  • Game Reviews
  • Featured Articles
  • Latest News
  • Editorial Picks

Quick Links

  • Home
  • About US
  • Contact Us
  • Advertise with Us
  • Review Guidelines

Follow Us

Facebook X-twitter Youtube Instagram
No Result
View All Result
  • Home
  • Movies
  • Entertainment News
  • Movie and TV Reviews
  • TV Shows
  • Game News
  • Game Reviews
  • Contact Us

© 2024 All Rights Reserved for Gazettely

Go to mobile version