Right its blag time from the other blog, so its yet another movie, and this time its Oliver Stone's acclaimed epic drama JFK.
JFK is a dramatisation of the events that surrounded John F. Kennedy's
assassination that took place on 22 November 1963 in Dallas, Texas and
the aftermath of its investigation. So as usual here is the plot summary:
On the day of the assassination,
in New Orleans, District Attorney Jim Garrison (Kevin Costner) is
informed by one of his staff Lou Barnes (Jay Sanders). After Kennedy's
death is announced officially on television, the suspected assassin Lee
Harvey Oswald (Gary Oldman) is arrested and taken to the station for
questioning. Garrison then plans to investigate any suspects and
associates of Lee Harvey Oswald's that might be under his jurisdiction
in New Orleans, however before he can do that, Oswald is assassinated
live on TV by Dallas mob man Jack Ruby (Brian Doyle Murray). Regardless
of Oswald's shock assassination, Garrison brings in one of Oswald's
alleged known associates, David Ferrie (Joe Pesci) who naturally denies
he ever knew Oswald. However Ferrie gives a very shaky account of his
activities on the day of the assassination which Garrison quickly
disbelieves and has Ferrie detained for more questioning by the FBI,
regardless of this though Ferrie is let go, after which Garrison decides
not to continue investigating any further.
Three years
later in 1966, after sharing a conversation with a senator (played by
the late great Walter Matthau) on an airplane, Garrison starts to have
serious doubts and suspicions about the events of the assassination and
that Oswald was the lone gunman. After more digging around, and reading
over the 26 volumes of the official assassination investigation,
published by Warren Commission and conducted by chief judge Earl Warren,
Garrison decides to re-open the investigation of the crime. With his
small team of staff, Garrison questions many different witnesses to the
shooting, and potential suspects that may have been connected to the
assassination. As Garrison and his team investigate further, a name
that keeps popping up is Clay Bertrand, who is later revealed to be Clay
Shaw (played by Tommy Lee Jones) a well respected businessman and
entrepeneur. However on bringing Shaw in for questioning, Shaw
categorically denies any knowledge of Oswald, Ferrie or any one else
potentially involved in the conspiracy, as well as denying his Clay
Bertrand alias. But soon after their meeting, Garrison's investigation
is made public and soon the press and media come down hard on him. Now
forced to operate out in the open, Garrison faces tough choices ahead of
him in carrying out his investigation, after receiving various death
threats, crank calls, and narrowly escaping frame ups to discredit him.
Eventually after rigorous investigations, including a discussion with
an ex-military figure who simply calls himself "X" (Donald Sutherland)
who provides him with important background knowledge to the events
surrounding the assassination, Garrison decides to arrest Shaw and
prosecute him for his possible involvement in the alleged conspiracy to
assassinate Kennedy. What follows after this is a lenghty trial sequence where Garrison presents his case for the prosecution of Clay Shaw as well as his speculation on the events on the day of the assassination in Dallas.
JFK is without a doubt a great
achievement in its own, as Oliver Stone took a controversial subject and
turned into a film that is fascinating, intelligent and gripping. If
you look at the events and evidence that are presented in the film, it
certainly does a great job at convincing you that there was a possible
conspiracy involved. Jim Garrison himself showed tremendous moral
courage and character in bringing such a trial to the public eye, as he
himself faced great danger in pissing off the government and endangering
his own life in the process. But Garrison is never potrayed as
anything else other than a very decent man who in reality at first was
never really keen on Kennedy at the time, but during his investigation
came to admire him for what he stood for and tried to do in the United
States.
But whether or not a conspiracy took place in
Dallas that day or not, no one really knows, but I do think there was more than enough evidence to point towards one. One of key aspects of
the assassination as highlighted in the film was that it seemed highly
unlikely that Oswald could have fired 3 shots that from the book
depository window, in such a short space of time (5 seconds), and do it with such precision from the distance he was at from the motorcade. And that is where the other riflemen come into the equation and overall it sounds like a far more likely scenario than a lone guman, as the team would be able to place themselves in fixed positions to ensure the assassination would be carried out precisely. Another crucial
crux of the film and the case was, there had to be more than just 3
shots, as if for no better reason, there were four known wounds, three
to Kennedy (in the throat, back and head) and one to Governor Conally
(one in the back). This is where the Warren Commission presented the
ridiculous "magic bullet" theory that one bullet accounted for the
wounds between Connally and Kennedy. Also based from the facts given from the film, it seems unlikely that if
after Oswald committed the crime, that he would be able race down the
stairs in about 90 seconds, only to face a police officer who was
checking out the building, to ask whom he was, and appear not to be out
of breath, which the policeman testified later that Oswald was
absolutely not out of breath.
And overall too much
evidence points toward the possibility of a conspiracy, with so many
witnesses later on dying in mysterious circumstances, or being bribed in
order to be kept quiet, the events after the assassination regarding
the car also appear strange, as the car is washed and rebuilt before any
forensics can be taken. There were also many different documents,
interview notes from suspects that were also either torn up or burnt.
But the one piece of evidence that does remain however is the film
footage, taken by an onlooker Abraham Zapruder, which shows the
assassination itself, and gives possible clues of the direction of where
the bullets came from. The footage itself is terrible to watch, as it
signified the start of several public assassinations (Oswald himself, Martin
Luther King and Robert Kennedy followed), and Garrison himself later
subpoenaed the Zapruder film for his trial (the footage itself was later
televised for the first time in 1975 on American television). Another
key point was surely, if Oswald was even the lone gunman, he would not
have acted alone, as he must been acting on behalf of powerful people
behind the scenes, in this regard Oswald himself could well have been a
sleeper cell, who was set in motion at the key moment, but again this is
just a bit of speculation.
But back to the actual
film, JFK is without a doubt fascinating to watch, and features so many
great performances and cameos from its a big cast. Kevin Costner, while
not the best actor in the world, does give a fine performance as the DA
Jim Garrison, who takes on the massive task of bringing the JFK
assassination to trial, he also shows Garrison as being a man of moral
decency, as well as being very strong and stubborn in the face of
adversity. Joe Pesci also probably gives the film's best performance as
Dave Ferrie, the crazed suspect (replete with a ridiculous wig and
eyebrows!) who later admits to his involvement with Oswald, as he shows a
mixture of malice and remorse. Tommy Lee Jones gives an excellent
performance also as Clay Shaw, and he depicts as a very sly businessman,
who is clearly also very manipulative. The other smaller character
roles are equally impressive, with fine stuff from Michael Rooker as
Bill (one of Garrison's staff), Laurie Metcalf as Susie, another staff
member, and of course Jay Sanders as Lou Barnes, who was in reality one
of Garrison's key members of staff (although the film depicts Barnes as
quitting the investigation, in reality he didn't). Also Kevin Bacon, is
excellent as Willie O'Keefe (who in reality was based on
one of Garrison's key witnesses, Perry Russo) the gay prostitute who claimed to have known
and had sexual relations with Shaw. Donald Sutherland is similarly
great as the mysterious "X" who delivers a very lengthy 17 minute
dialogue giving Garrison the background info surrounding the events
leading up to the assassination. Also there is the superb Jack Lemmon
as Jack Martin, who worked for another one of the possible key people
behind the assassination, Guy Banister (played by Ed Asner) who died
shortly after in 1964. And last but by no means least, there is Gary
Oldman as Lee Harvey Oswald. Oldman is great as Oswald, and potrays him
as a complex and private man, who remained a mystery even after his
death. Gary Oldman also facially resembles Oswald a fair bit, and does
an excellent job at reproducing his unusual American accent, which had a
tinge of Russian to it.
Overall the film moves at a
great pace, but also is on the verge of bombarding you with too much
information at times, so it definitely takes a few viewings to get the
gist of all the details. The only other thing I would say about the
film that probably lets it down slightly is the melodrama of Garrison's
home life, as he argues with his wife Elizabeth (Sissy Spacek) who is
frustrated by the amount of time he devotes to the case. It is however
key to the film as well I guess, as it is important to show how the
events of the investigation impacted on Garrison's personal life, and
later in reality, his first wife Elizabeth did divorce him. But not to
take away from Sissy's performance, as she herself does very well with
her role in the film, for her all she wants to do is get her normal life
back. Another slight problem with the film, and probably the case in
general is there is not much evidence that cold links Shaw to knowing
Oswald, as it ultimately is just the word of people who have witnessed
seeing Shaw and Oswald together in the past. But it was later revealed
in 1978, four years after Shaw's death, by the at the time CIA director,
Richard Helms, that Shaw did actually work for the CIA as a
contractor (this is added in as insert at the end of the film). And based on the Richard Helms testimony, it proved that
Shaw was guilty of perjury. But people of power and persuasion like Shaw, can as it seems get away with
murder (or assassination in this case).
However
Garrison's trial definitely did raise enough questions about the dubiety
of the Warren Commission's conclusions and of the many loose ends that
peppered the investigation. And as portrayed in the film, a key moment
where Clay Shaw gives away his alias as Bertrand to a police officer
after his arrest, the officer in question Aloysius Habighorst's
testimony wasn't allowed and was ruled inadmissible by the judge. This
in itself seems very peculiar that the testimony wasn't allowed, and as
the film almost shows that even the judge and court system was corrupt
enough to cover things up. In the end of course, Clay Shaw is acquitted
of the charges and found not guilty and allowed to go free, once again
to "walk between the rain drops". It also does raise that Clay Shaw
could also been as Ferrie in the film states as being "untouchable, with
the highest clearance". Whatever way it was, Shaw was also an enigma
and in the end he got away, guilty or not.
Soooooooo
after that rather exhaustive entry, JFK is definitely one of my
favourite films and its great to revisit it once in a while, kind of
like a fine wine (don't buy (or watch) it too much in other words). And
if you haven't seen it, then it certainly will be an eye opener behind
the events one of America's most disgraceful crimes.
So that is that.
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