JFK Scenes

2021-11-14 08:01
According to the records of the Kennedy period archives, every detail of the president's office has been carefully reconstructed. This reconstruction cost a total of 70,000 US dollars, however, in the movie, it only appeared for eight seconds.
After the movie was released, it caused huge controversy. Many people accused Stone of fabricating facts. Stone published a detailed annotated version of the script in which every request in the film was justified by him.
After reading Jim Garrison's book, Stone immediately bought the film adaptation rights with his own money.
Stone hired Jane Rossini, who had just graduated from Yale, to research and collect material about Kennedy's assassination. After he finished filming "Born on July 4th," Jane Rossini has read 200 books about Kennedy's assassination.
Stone and Warner reached a restrictive clause, if the film exceeds the budget of 20 million, the company will retain all the rights and interests of the film. This is because you don't want the script to be passed around between film companies and cause leaks.
The first draft of the script was 190 pages thick, but it was reduced to 156 pages for the convenience of shooting.
In order to reproduce the scene of Kennedy's assassination in Dallas, the producer paid a large sum of money to the local government to hire police to change traffic and close the streets. Stone only had ten days to complete these shooting tasks. In order to complete the shooting as quickly as possible, his photographer used two 35mm and five 16mm cameras.
When shooting, Stone couldn't find a gun that could emit so much smoke, because the gun had almost no smoke at that time, and they had to resort to other methods to get the real effect.
In New Orleans, Stone borrowed a dog from the screenwriter to serve as the Garrison dog. 
The film stated that Oswald did not receive any legal aid during the trial. But the truth is that Oswald has repeatedly rejected the lawyers hired for him, including those hired by his brother Robert.
The film proposed that Oswald could not have leisurely arranging the fired cartridge cases.In fact, the cartridge cases on the existing photos were erected by federal agents.
In the play "David Ferrie (:en:David Ferrie|David Ferrie) admitted to Jim Garrison and his investigation team that the assassination of the president was a premeditated act" is completely fictitious. In fact, Philip has never publicly stated that he had participated in planning or had any organization to assassinate the president.
Oliver Stone admitted that in the film, the communication interruption in the capital before the assassination in Washington, DC|Washington was fictitious.
"The bigger the lie, the more people believe" this sentence was quoted by Garrison in the play and was mistakenly attributed to Hitler. In fact, this famous quote comes from Joseph Goebbels (:en:Joseph Goebbels|Joseph Goebbels, Minister of Propaganda of Nazi Germany).
In his book "Recovering History", Vincent Bugliosi used a chapter to discuss the film and Jim Garrison himself. He cited "32 lies and forgeries in the film" and claimed that "This film is a long-standing lie." , In which Stone could not find an invention and deception that could be explained unintentionally.".
Jack Valenti, the then President of the American Film Institute used a seven-page statement to condemn the film. He wrote, "Similarly, the German boys and girls in 1941 were also stigmatized by Renée Refenstach’s "Victory of Will". Fascinated, Hitler is described as a god in the film. JFK and the victory of the will are both propaganda classics and also lie. Mr. Stone and Refenstacher have a gene in common, and neither of them has declared in the film. Its content is completely fictitious."
Clay Shaw came twice to stand up to hear the trial.
It is assumed that the surveillance camera used before the assassination was not manufactured until 1969.
The slogan "Louisiana, taxis are free" appeared in the 1980s.
When Ferry and Garrison were arguing in the hotel, his reflection in the nearby mirror seemed to be talking, but he didn't actually speak.
Gary Carter, the actor who plays Bill Williams, his name appears twice in the closing subtitles.
When Garrison and Willie started their discussion, Willie put a cigarette in his mouth twice.
When Garrison and Senator Long were sitting on the plane, there was a shot of them looking down at the White House. In fact, since World War II, no civil aviation planes have been allowed to pass within three miles of the White House.
When Dean Andrew stood up from the table, he was wearing sunglasses. In the next shot, he held his hat, but his glasses disappeared. Later when he put the hat on his head, the glasses came back.
As the trial continued at the end of the movie, the color of Lu's clothes changed. 
Clay Shaw came twice to stand up to hear the trial.
The slogan "Louisiana, taxis are free" appeared in the 1980s.
When Garrison and Willie started their discussion, Willie put a cigarette in his mouth twice.
As the trial continued at the end of the movie, the color of Lu's clothes changed.
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Extended Reading
  • Dahlia 2021-11-14 08:01:25

    The final climax is really wonderful, although the truth may never be dark

  • Helmer 2022-03-23 09:01:41

    9.4/10 What is even more shocking than the conspiracy is the male supporting cast, which is also a bit eclipsed by the actress and the middle-aged superstar Joe Pesci, Tommy Lee Jones, Gary, the old driver, Jimin Meng, Walter, Matthew Michael Captain Luke Yondu, Jay Sanders. The Shawnk Warden Kevin Bacon, the old Sutherland Edward Asner Seinfeld, who only appeared on TV 2, the big fat guy, the soundtrack actually found John Williams, and the photography was actually Robert Richardson, beautiful on the big screen, is already guessing who the master is.

JFK quotes

  • [first lines]

    title card: "To sin by silence when we should protest makes cowards of men." - Ella Wheeler Wilcox

    President Eisenhower: ...We have been compelled to create a permanent armaments industry of vast proportions. And to do this three and a half million men and women are directly engaged in the defense establishement. We annually spend on military security alone...

    Narrator: January, 1961. President Dwight D. Eisenhowers's Farewell Address to the Nation.

    President Eisenhower: ...This conjunction of an immense military establishment and arms industry is new in the American experience. The total influence - economic, political, even spiritual - is felt in every city, every Statehouse, every office in the federal government. We must guard against the aquisition of unwarranted influence - whether sought or unsought - by the military-industrial complex. We must never let the weight of this combination endanger our liberties or democratic processes.

    M. L. King, Jr.: ...that "All men are created equal."

    JFK: Every degree of mind and spirit that I possess will be devoted to the cause of freedom around the world.

  • Jim Garrison: The war is the biggest business in America, worth $ 80 billion a year.

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