The Guardian (USA)

Anna Nicole Smith: You Don’t Know Me review – sympatheti­c retelling of a tragic life

- Peter Bradshaw

The strange, sad story of Anna Nicole Smith is retold in this Netflix documentar­y by Ursula Macfarlane, who made Untouchabl­e, about Harvey Weinstein. Smith was the former Playboy centrefold and Guess Jeans model who wound up dead of a drug overdose in 2007 at the age of 39, soon after her 20-year-old son had tragically died the same way. There are eerie similariti­es with the life of Pamela Anderson, also a recent Netflix subject, though Anderson survives and thrives.

Smith was a smalltown Texas girl from a tough background – although she was accused by her mother of manufactur­ing abuse stories for publicity. She embraced Playboy superstard­om, tabloid notoriety and media letching that so easily flipped over into misogynist hate. Like Anderson, Smith used the “blonde” image as a kind of persona or disguise or armour and (as with Anderson) it is strange to see her pre- or non-blonde normality from private photos.

Smith started out as a dancer in a Texas strip club, having already had a baby from a rash teenage marriage; one of the customers in the club was 86-year-old oil billionair­e J Howard Marshall who became infatuated with Smith, showered her with money and gifts, and finally married her – to the rage of his grownup son Pierce, who succeeded in ringfencin­g the old man’s entire estate in a trust so Smith could get none of the money after his death.

It is an incredible story, although, frustratin­gly, this movie is too coy to just ask the Mrs Merton question: what first attracted her to the billionair­e oil baron? Oddly, the film cites Marilyn Monroe in Gentlemen Prefer Blondes – and Anna Nicole’s life is an amazing real-life revival of that story – but doesn’t quote Marilyn’s classic, impenitent line: “Don’t you know that a man being rich is like a girl being pretty? You may not love your girl just because she’s pretty, but my goodness doesn’t it help?”

This documentar­y uses a great deal of existing archive interview material (though annoyingly without giving provenance) including what appears to be Playboy TV footage of her reality-TV-style meeting with her longestran­ged dad, who had left home when she was a baby, together with a half-brother; neither of them knew who she had become before their reunion. A more facetious film would have wondered about the circumstan­ces in which these two men might already have been familiar with Smith’s image, as Christophe­r Hitchens did in his vignette for Vanity Fair. But this film suggests, grimly, that this estranged dad then tried to assault her.

In the end, Smith was a prisoner of her image, of the paparazzi celeb industry, and her own abuse of alcohol and drugs, having got addicted to pain pills after her breast enhancemen­t operation (a gruesomely metaphoric event). It’s an effective retelling, though the film could have concentrat­ed more on her tragicomic relationsh­ip with her oil plutocrat husband. Could it actually have been a love story after all?

• Anna Nicole Smith: You Don’t Know Me is released on 16 May on Netflix.

 ?? ?? A prisoner of her own image … Anna Nicole Smith: You Don't Know Me. Photograph: Courtesy of Netflix
A prisoner of her own image … Anna Nicole Smith: You Don't Know Me. Photograph: Courtesy of Netflix

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