Britney Spears Oops I Did It Again Poster

2021 documentary boob tube film

Framing Britney Spears
Framing Britney Spears poster.jpg

Boob tube release poster

Directed by Samantha Stark
Starring
  • Britney Spears (archival footage)
  • Dave Holmes
  • Wesley Morris
  • Felicia Culotta
Music by John E. Low
State of origin U.s.
Original language English
Production
Producers
  • Liz Twenty-four hours
  • Liz Hodes
  • Mary Robertson
  • Ken Druckerman
  • Jason Stallman
  • Sam Dolnick
  • Stephanie Preiss
Cinematography Emily Topper
Editor Geoff O'Brien
Running time 74 minutes
Product companies The New York Times Company
Left/Right Productions
Distributor
  • FX / Hulu (Usa)
  • Red Arrow Studios International (international)
Release
Original release February 5, 2021 (2021-02-05)

The New York Times Presents: Framing Britney Spears is a 2021 American documentary moving-picture show directed past Samantha Stark, reported and produced past Liz 24-hour interval, and produced past Liz Hodes, Mary Robertson, Jason Stallman, Sam Dolnick, Ken Druckerman and Stephanie Preiss. The documentary follows the life and career of American vocaliser Britney Spears; her rising to fame as a global music superstar at historic period 16, her gratis and misogynistic handling past the media and paparazzi, her highly publicized breakdown in 2007, the conservatorship that during 2008–2021 placed her involuntarily nether the command of her begetter Jamie Spears, and the #FreeBritney movement sparked by Spears'due south fanbase.[1]

The documentary was released on February 5, 2021 as an edition of The New York Times Presents on FX and FX on Hulu. Before long afterwards the documentary aired, a probate judge dismissed objections by Jamie regarding the co-conservatorship organisation.[two] The documentary garnered critical acclaim, and widespread international media coverage, contributing to heightened mainstream public awareness of the conservatorship dispute and a reassessment of Spears' sexist & complimentary treatment. The documentary won the TCA Award for Outstanding Achievement in News and Information, and received two nominations at the 73rd Primetime Creative Arts Emmy Awards, including for Outstanding Documentary or Nonfiction Special.[3]

Synopsis [edit]

In 2021, at historic period 39, Britney Spears, i of the world'southward almost successful pop stars with an estimated internet worth of $59 million, has remained legally nether the command of her father Jamie Spears since 2008.

Framing Britney Spears re-examines Spears's career, her rise to fame, and personal struggles throughout her iii decades in show business. Former Jive Records marketing executive Kim Kaiman, who helped cultivate Spears'due south image once she signed a recording contract, describes Jamie as being disconnected from his daughter's life and highly financially motivated. "The just thing Jamie ever said to me was 'My daughter's gonna be then rich, she'due south gonna buy me a boat'", Kaiman says.

Interviewers and paparazzi are shown at various times asking Spears sexist and distressing questions. Ivo Niehe, so 53, asked a 17-yr-old Spears most her breasts and her thoughts about chest implants, calculation, "You lot seem to go furious when a talkshow host comes upward with this subject."[four] In an interview following Spears'southward breakup with Justin Timberlake, Diane Sawyer accused her of mistreating Timberlake, driving Spears to tears, and of "upsetting a lot of mothers in this land" with her provocative music videos. The film alleges that Timberlake weaponized his breakup with Spears in the "Weep Me a River" music video, where the vocal'south unfaithful girlfriend was portrayed as Spears, and in an interview where he enthusiastically claims he has had sexual practice with her (contrary to Spears'southward claim that she was waiting until marriage).

The documentary too explores Spears'south breakup in 2007, and interviews paparazzo Daniel "Dano" Ramos who photographed Spears attacking his car with an umbrella moments later ex-husband Kevin Federline denied her visitation of her children. "She never gave a clue or information to u.s. that, I don't appreciate you guys, leave me the eff alone," Ramos says, to which the director asks, "What about when she said, 'Leave me alone'?" It is alleged that Spears may have been suffering from postpartum depression at this time. Intrusive actions of the paparazzi are portrayed as exacerbating factors in her condition.

Spears'due south relationship with Sam Lutfi, who then identified himself as her new manager, is speculated in the film to be a turning indicate for her father to first negotiate a conservatorship and is described as "attaching himself to celebrities, often at vulnerable moments for them." The moving-picture show explains that conservatorships are put in place for people who are unable to make their own decisions or are mentally incapacitated. Spears is shown working consistently throughout her conservatorship. Information technology is alleged that Spears requested that the bank manage her manor rather than her father. Spears's longtime family friend and sometime banana Felicia Culotta says she is baffled well-nigh the conservatorship arrangement "particularly for somebody Britney's historic period and somebody capable of so much that I know firsthand she's capable of." The film notes that Spears has unsuccessfully moved for her father to be removed from his conservator part and shows clips of her fans in the #FreeBritney move enervating the courts fulfill her wishes.

The documentary concludes with a list of individuals who declined to comment or be interviewed for the picture show, which include Spears's family. Spears was also asked to be interviewed, but it was "unclear if she received the requests."

Reception [edit]

Ratings [edit]

The first-run airing on the FX channel had 265,000 same-twenty-four hour period viewers, merely information technology was available on Hulu the aforementioned day as the circulate premiere.[5] In the United Kingdom, its first broadcast averaged over 200,000 viewers on then-months-former channel Sky Documentaries, tripling the channel's previous viewership record.[vi] In Australia, the first broadcast on the Ix Network attracted 484,000 unique viewers and was the tenth most watched television program of the day.[7] Information technology was i of Hulu'southward about watched originals for 2021.[8]

Critical response [edit]

On Rotten Tomatoes, the documentary holds an blessing rating of 94% based on 33 reviews, with an boilerplate rating of 7.7/x. The website's critics consensus reads: "Framing Britney Spears asks more questions than it can answer, just remains a sobering test of the toxic nature of celebrity culture."[ix] On Metacritic, the picture has an aggregate score of 75 out of 100 based on ten critics, indicating "more often than not favorable reviews".[10]

Daniel D'Addario of Variety stated "This film provides a sort of pocket portrait of a person for whom freedom has been denied, and for whom that denial comes as no surprise. Before [Spears'due south] begetter, the culture that idolized her had kept her a captive, too."[11] Reviewing it for The Times, Ed Potton suggested information technology was "not an easy sentry" due to the negative portrayal of Spears's father.[12] Writing for The Guardian, Lucy Mangan noted the manner the documentary emphasizes the consequences of sexism.[13] For Fiona Sturges of The Contained, the documentary is "lacking in journalistic rigour."[14] Writing for NME, Nick Levine described it as a "heartbreakingly human story that still lacks a happy ending."[15] In a critical review for The Telegraph, Anita Singh opined that afterward decades of unwelcome attention from paparazzi, the documentary is "a help rather than a hindrance as she tries to reclaim control of her life."[sixteen] Multifariousness named it 1 of the Best TV Shows of 2021, saying "The very all-time of the year's scripted and unscripted projects seeking to reframe and reclaim recent popular-culture history, this doc had a seriousness of purpose and — non for nothing — could be argued to accept made a greater bear upon than any other entrant on this listing.".[3]

Public response [edit]

On February 7, 2021, the phrase "Nosotros are sorry Britney" trended on Twitter.[17] Several celebrities and goggle box personalities received widespread backlash for their past remarks virtually Spears or interview questions directed at her, including Justin Timberlake, Diane Sawyer, Sarah Silverman, Joel McHale, Ivo Niehe, John O'Hurley, and Perez Hilton.[18] [19] [twenty]

On February 12, 2021, Timberlake issued a public apology to Spears via Instagram, pledging to "take accountability" and that "I tin can do meliorate and I volition exercise better."[21] This response was met with further backlash and criticism, as many establish the apology "years too late."[22]

After the documentary's release, numerous celebrities voiced support for Spears, including Howard Stern,[23] Miley Cyrus,[24] [25] Dua Lipa,[26] Kim Kardashian,[27] Paris Hilton,[28] Olivia Newton-John,[29] Kacey Musgraves,[xxx] [31] [32] [33] Sarah Jessica Parker,[24] [30] [32] Bette Midler,[24] [32] Kathy Najimy,[34] Sara Sampaio,[35] Josh Gad,[36] Cardi B, Sam Smith,[32] Charlie Puth,[37] Ellie Goulding,[25] Ava Max,[38] Hayley Williams,[24] [xxx] [32] [31] [39] Vanessa Carlton,[32] [40] Hayley Kiyoko,[32] [41] Bella Thorne,[42] Courtney Love,[32] [43] Jon Bon Jovi,[44] Amy Lee,[45] Sandra Bernhard,[46] Garbage,[32] Emma Caulfield,[47] Jameela Jamil,[48] Pitbull,[49] volition.i.am,[50] Heather Morris,[51] Elizabeth Reaser,[52] Lexi Alexander,[53] Rebecca Mader,[54] Rico Nasty,[31] Andy Cohen,[55] Valerie Bertinelli,[56] and Liz Phair.[57] Chika'due south support, however, was couched as a reflection on Timberlake's historical behavior, for which he had offered an amends.[31] [21]

Spears's reaction [edit]

On March 30, 2021, Spears wrote about her feelings about the documentary on Instagram. While she admitted she did non watch it in total, she said from the parts she did come across "I was embarrassed past the low-cal they put me in... I cried for two weeks and well .... I all the same cry sometimes!!!! [sic]".[58] Spears further specified in an Instagram postal service later on in July that she "didn't like the way the documentaries bring up humiliating moments from the past".[59] Notwithstanding, fans remain skeptical on whether Spears posted the caption or non following claims by her sometime makeup artist, Billy Brasfield, that she does not command her social media accounts.[lx]

International broadcast [edit]

Exterior the United States, the documentary is distributed past Cerise Arrow Studios, parent company of co-producer Left/Right Productions.[61]

Follow-ups [edit]

On September 24, 2021, FX aired the follow-upwards documentary Controlling Britney Spears, being simultaneously added for streaming by Hulu. It was as well created by The New York Times and made past the aforementioned creators of Framing Britney Spears, equally part of The New York Times Presents series.[62] Its initial broadcast on FX earned 197,000 same-mean solar day viewers.[63]

Left/Right was revealed on April 26, 2021, to be developing a documentary on the Super Bowl XXXVIII halftime show controversy in which Timberlake partially exposed R&B vocaliser Janet Jackson'due south chest at the terminate of the halftime show. The New York Times reportedly reunited with Left/Right on the documentary, and FX and sister service Hulu distributed it on linear idiot box and streaming, respectively.[64] The documentary, Malfunction: The Dressing Downwardly of Janet Jackson, premiered on November 19, 2021, nine months after Framing Britney Spears.[65]

Awards and nominations [edit]

Year Clan Category Work Outcome Ref.
2021 2021 MTV Movie & Television Awards All-time Music Documentary Framing Britney Spears Nominated [66]
73rd Primetime Creative Arts Emmy Awards Outstanding Documentary or Nonfiction Special Nominated [67]
Outstanding Movie Editing for a Nonfiction Program Geoff O'Brien, Pierre Takal Nominated
37th TCA Awards Outstanding Achievement in News and Information Framing Britney Spears Won [68]

References [edit]

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  33. ^ @KaceyMusgraves (February 9, 2021). "Y'all..it'south plaguing me that nobody knows if @britneyspears is truly okay. Actually hoping that if she isn't she tin…" (Tweet). Retrieved June 28, 2021 – via Twitter.
  34. ^ Najimy, Kathy [@kathynajimy] (February 10, 2021). "What'south happening is No. FreeBritney" (Tweet). Retrieved Feb 12, 2021 – via Twitter.
  35. ^ Sampaio, Sara [@SaraSampaio] (February 13, 2021). "Finally watched the Britney documentary and information technology made me so damn sad... wish I could just give her a hug :((( #FreeBritney" (Tweet). Retrieved February 16, 2021 – via Twitter.
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  39. ^ @yelyahwilliams (Feb 7, 2021). "the Framing Britney Spears physician holy fuck. no artist today would take to endure the literal torture that media/socie…" (Tweet). Retrieved June 28, 2021 – via Twitter.
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External links [edit]

  • Framing Britney Spears at IMDbEdit this at Wikidata

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Source: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Framing_Britney_Spears

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