home *** CD-ROM | disk | FTP | other *** search
- <text id=91TT1271>
- <title>
- June 10, 1991: More Shots in Dealey Plaza
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1991
- June 10, 1991 Evil
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- CINEMA, Page 64
- More Shots in Dealey Plaza
- </hdr><body>
- <p>Oliver Stone returns to the '60s once again with a strange,
- widely disputed take on the Kennedy assassination
- </p>
- <p>By RICHARD ZOGLIN--With reporting by Hays Gorey/Washington and
- Martha Smilgis/Los Angeles
- </p>
- <p> Did Lee Harvey Oswald act alone? Were three shots fired
- in Dealey Plaza on that awful afternoon in November, or were
- there more? Was there a large-scale, sinister conspiracy behind
- the assassination of John F. Kennedy, or just one troubled
- little man with communist sympathies and a Mannlicher-Carcano
- rifle?
- </p>
- <p> Unanswered questions about the Kennedy assassination have
- nagged the nation for nearly 28 years, rousing emotions,
- inciting speculation, provoking arguments. It was probably
- inevitable that Hollywood would step into this minefield sooner
- or later--and probably inevitable that the man leading the
- charge would be Oliver Stone, filmdom's most flamboyant
- interpreter of the 1960s (Platoon, The Doors, Born on the Fourth
- of July).
- </p>
- <p> Stone is only halfway through shooting his movie about the
- assassination, for which he has staged an elaborate re-creation
- of the event in Dallas. But already the film (at least an early
- draft of the script, which Stone has tried to keep secret) has
- come under vigorous assault. The Washington Post attacked the
- movie's "errors and absurdities." Experts on the assassination
- have voiced outrage at Stone's version of events. Stone has
- responded with dark hints of a conspiracy to discredit his
- movie. And who said the '60s were over?
- </p>
- <p> The hero of Stone's film, scheduled for release in
- December by Warner Bros., is former New Orleans district
- attorney Jim Garrison, a wide-eyed conspiracy buff who in 1969
- put New Orleans businessman Clay Shaw on trial for complicity
- in Kennedy's murder. (The case ended in a quick acquittal.)
- Stone's script, a version of which was obtained by TIME, is
- based largely on Garrison's 1988 book, On the Trail of the
- Assassins. Garrison is considered somewhere near the far-out
- fringe of conspiracy theorists, but Stone appears to have bought
- his version virtually wholesale. One need look no further than
- the actor who will play Garrison: Hollywood's reigning
- all-American hero Kevin Costner.
- </p>
- <p> In the early draft of Stone's script (co-written with
- Zachary Sklar, who edited Garrison's book), we learn that Oswald
- was just a pawn in an elaborate plot that ranged from seedy gay
- bars in the French Quarter to the corridors of power in
- Washington. We meet bizarre characters like David Ferrie, a
- homosexual ex-airline pilot with a homemade wig and greasepaint
- eyebrows who claimed involvement in the conspiracy but died
- before he could testify. We witness shadowy meetings between
- Oswald and Jack Ruby before the assassination. We are told that
- as many as seven shots may have been fired at Kennedy from three
- different directions--none of them by Oswald.
- </p>
- <p> The killing was planned, Garrison discovers in the film,
- by a coalition that included the Mafia, the CIA and other
- protectors of the military-industrial complex. In a key scene,
- the crusading D.A. has a rendezvous in Washington with a
- mysterious unnamed figure who describes how security for the
- President's visit to Dallas was slackened. It was all part of
- a plot, he tells Garrison, to eliminate Kennedy and put Lyndon
- Johnson in office so that the Vietnam War could be escalated.
- "This was a military-style ambush from start to finish,"
- Garrison tells his staff later, "a coup d'etat with Lyndon
- waiting in the wings."
- </p>
- <p> David Belin, former counsel to the Warren Commission and
- author of two books on the assassination, calls the script "a
- bunch of hokum." By ignoring key pieces of evidence and
- misrepresenting others, Belin says, Stone casts doubt even on
- issues that are relatively clear-cut, like Oswald's murder of
- Dallas police officer J.D. Tippit. (Oswald was identified as the
- gunman at the scene by at least six eyewitnesses.) "It is a
- shame that a man as talented as Stone has had to go to such
- lengths to deceive the American public," says Belin.
- </p>
- <p> In his article for the Post, George Lardner Jr., who
- covered the Shaw trial and now specializes in national-security
- issues, called Garrison's investigation "a fraud" and attacked
- the script for such dubious scenes as one in which Ferrie is
- murdered by two mysterious figures who force medicine down his
- throat. (The New Orleans coroner ruled that Ferrie died of
- natural causes, though two apparent suicide notes were found.)
- Lardner also ridiculed the film's attempt to explain away
- Garrison's botched prosecution of Shaw by inventing a Garrison
- aide who turns out to be a mole for the Feds aiming to sabotage
- the case.
- </p>
- <p> Even critics of the Warren Commission find fault with
- Stone's version of events. Harold Weisberg, author of Whitewash,
- one of the earliest attacks on the Warren Report, calls Stone's
- script "a travesty" that dredges up bogus theories and
- unfounded speculation. Among them: the suggestion that three
- hobos arrested near the assassination site were involved (they
- were vagrants who had nothing to do with the assassination, says
- Weisberg), and Garrison's "discovery" that the route of
- Kennedy's motorcade had been changed at the last minute (a phony
- charge, says Weisberg, that was based on conflicting
- descriptions of the parade route in the Dallas Morning News.)
- </p>
- <p> Stone, with some justification, has objected to his film's
- being dissected even before it is finished. The criticisms, he
- says, are based on the first draft of a script that has been
- substantially revised. (The Ferrie murder scene, for example,
- has been eliminated.) Stone compares the Post's attack on his
- film to the Hearst newspapers' efforts to suppress Citizen Kane
- five decades ago. "This is a repeat performance," says Stone.
- "But nothing is going to stop me from finishing this movie." The
- director insists, moreover, on his right to make a movie that
- expresses his view of a critical historical event. "William
- Shakespeare made Richard III into a bad guy. Now the historians
- say he was wrong. Does that mean Shakespeare shouldn't have
- written Richard III?"
- </p>
- <p> Stone appears to have less tolerance for others who want
- to do the same thing. According to Hollywood sources, the
- director has worked hard to block a movie based on Don DeLillo's
- 1988 book, Libra, a fictionalized account of the assassination.
- "Stone has a right to make his film, but he doesn't have a right
- to try and stop everyone else from making their films," says
- Dale Pollock, president of A&M Films, which has been trying to
- make the DeLillo movie.
- </p>
- <p> Stone maintains that the controversy is not something he
- has courted. "I'm not making this film for money," the director
- says of his lavishly publicized epic starring Hollywood's
- hottest leading man. "I want to pay homage to J.F.K., the
- godfather of my generation." But if his film turns out to
- distort history, he may wind up doing more harm than homage to
- the memory of the fallen President.
- </p>
-
- </body></article>
- </text>
-
-