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Dear Friends,

I have attended a screening of the new film "Parkland" and written a review on the IMDb website: http://www.imdb.com/title/tt2345112/reviews-11

In reviewing the film, I attempted to compare the research apparent in the "Parkland" film to that of Oliver Stone in the 1991 film "JFK."

I am pasting up the entire text of my review below, which appears under my user name of "lavatch" on the IMDb site. This review site is an excellent venue to post alternative views to mainstream films like "Parkland."


James Norwood


*********


Parkland Fails to Assess the Facts in the JFK Assassination

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Author: lavatch from Twin Cities, Minnesota
6 October 2013


For a number of years, I taught a course on the JFK assassination at a major American university. I was looking forward to "Parkland" as a film that could provide new insights into the case at the time of the fiftieth anniversary. Unfortunately, the film presents a superficial account of the events of the tragic assassination weekend. Above all, it fails to assess the wealth of new information we have today to understand why and how President Kennedy was murdered.

The film is structured around four main stories unfolding during the assassination weekend--the events at Parkland Hospital, the famous home movie taken by Abraham Zapruder, the instant arrest and subsequent killing of Lee Harvey Oswald while in custody of the Dallas police, and the handling of the case by the FBI. In every instance, the filmmakers fail to probe beneath the surface to shed light on the assassination.

While the film pays tribute to the heroic efforts of the Parkland medical professionals to save the life of President Kennedy, it completely ignores the most important testimony of those eyewitness at the hospital. Researcher Robert Groden interviewed 82 members of the medical staff--the precise group of characters depicted in the film--and learned that every eyewitness (100%) indicated that the president was shot from the front of the limousine, due to the tiny entry wound to his throat. The significance of this detail is that Oswald could not have been the only shooter in the case. The film neatly sidesteps this essential issue.

In depicting the historic role played by dress manufacturer Abraham Zapruder, the film is hopelessly mistaken on crucial details about Zapruder's home movie. Zapruder himself provides a fascinating and detailed account of his filming and his recall of the events in Dealey Plaza, as published in the Warren Commission hearings. It is not clear that the screenwriters even consulted this essential primary source. After returning to his office, Mr. Zapruder first locked the film in his safe. He insisted on working personally with Secret Service agent Forrest Sorrels to try to ensure the integrity of the evidence. The film, which depicts Sorrels coercing Zapruder, does not come close to depicting the original handling of the film and how the chain of custody in this crucial piece of evidence was broken during the assassination weekend.

In its portrayal of the alleged assassin Lee Harvey Oswald, the film made the fatal mistake of developing Oswald from the perspective of his brother Robert. We never saw the vehement attempts of Oswald to proclaim his innocence, wherein he informed the media that "I did not shoot anyone" and "I'm just a patsy." In the film's odd treatment of Marguerite Oswald, the performer adopted a Southern accent; but the short Marguerite did not speak with a Southern drawl. In the film, Marguerite claimed that Lee Harvey Oswald was a government agent. But the film never made the effort to determine whether or not there was any truth in Marguerite's assertion.

In perhaps the most accurate subplot depicted in "Parkland," the film focuses on the intentional destruction of evidence by the Dallas FBI office when SA Gordon Shanklin orders Agent James Hosty to destroy its file on Oswald. This strand of the film is revealing because we never see the FBI actually investigating the crime scene: Oswald is immediately arrested, identified as the killer of President Kennedy and Officer Tippit, prior to being shot by Jack Ruby on live television. Immediately, Oswald was convicted in the minds of the public through the efforts of the FBI and, later, the Warren Commission. Astonishingly, the crime scene was not secured, evidence was destroyed, and the facts were subsequently manipulated to fit the instant conclusion of Oswald's guilt.

In 1991, director-writer Oliver Stone was condemned by the media for his three-hour treatment of the assassination in the film "JFK." But Stone and his screenwriter Zachary Sklar published a 600-page book (still in print), documenting sources for every fact in the film. Will the filmmakers of "Parkland" also be providing a companion source book to demonstrate the extent of their research? Or, was the goal merely to present the same story told to the public after Americans returned to work on November 26, 1963?
Quote:Will the filmmakers of "Parkland" also be providing a companion source book to demonstrate the extent of their research?

Ya... it's called the Warren Report... get the Cliff notes..

::headbang::
Thank you James, very good, clear, informative review.:Clap: Appears to be another, disappointment, but I doubt any of us really expected better....carry on..b..
Bernice,

Many thanks for your kind words. It is so disappointing that "Parkland" will probably be the only JFK feature film surrounding the 50th anniversary. In the film, there were good actors, such as Paul Giamatti (playing Zapruder) and Billy Bob Thornton (playing Forrest Sorrels). A number of years ago, Giamatti played the role of John Adams in the HBO series. Shouldn't these performers take an interest in preparing for their roles by studying the latest research and findings about their characters? As it stands, "Parkland" will stand as the film equivalent of Bill O'Reilly's mainstream book "Killing Kennedy."

I'm surprised that Oliver Stone has not re-released "JFK" at the time of the 50th anniversary. His film would introduce an entirely new generation to the topic, and it would undoubtedly generate more box office revenue than "Parkland."


James
James Norwood Wrote:Bernice,



I'm surprised that Oliver Stone has not re-released "JFK" at the time of the 50th anniversary. His film would introduce an entirely new generation to the topic, and it would undoubtedly generate more box office revenue than "Parkland."


James

One of the theater chains here in Kansas City (AMC) is showing JFK in November.
Jim,

Thank you for your excellent commentary! You are right: the filmmakers of "Parkland" may have slightly opened the door in Marguerite's line about her son as a "government agent." The performer playing the role of Marguerite was Australian actress and former Academy award nominee Jacki Weaver, and she delivered an earnest performance, never lapsing into caricature. But it was curious why Weaver would adopt a Southern accent when all of the extant recordings of the short, stout Marguerite include no hint of a Southern drawl. The real Marguerite Oswald (tall, slender, born and raised in the South) undoubtedly did speak with a Southern accent. The 84-year-old Robert Oswald still speaks with a heavy Southern accent. June Oswald (born in the Soviet Union and raised in Texas) speaks with a pronounced Southern accent. But her dad--the man shot by Jack Ruby in Dallas--had no trace of a Southern accent. The careful viewer of Oliver Stone's "JFK" will detect a slight Russian accent in Oswald, as played by Gary Oldman. It turns out that Oldman--a brilliant British character actor with the ability to adopt an infinite range of vocal characterizations--studied the audio recordings of Oswald. Oldman came to the conclusion that Oswald spoke English with a Russian accent. Throughout "JFK," this was the kind of care and thoroughness that defined Oliver Stone's work. Unfortunately, the cast, screenwriter, and director of "Parkland" failed to do their homework. In your outstanding "Harvey and Lee" home page, one of the themes that you and John unfold is that the truth lies in the details. This was a major shortcoming of the "Parkland" film.

To their credit, the filmmakers of "Parkland" inserted a short scene where Robert Oswald meets with his "brother" in the Dallas jail. In the short conversation, Harvey tells Robert, "Do not form any opinion on the so-called evidence." Of course, this line was drawn from Volume I of the Warren Commission hearings, where Robert Oswald recalls this significant moment for the committee. But the film never describes any of the suspect evidence, including the backyard photos to which Oswald was almost certainly alluding. This kind of detail was what Oliver Stone was able to layer into the three-hour "JFK" film. But at slightly more than 90 minutes, "Parkland" barely scratched the surface of the four major topics it raised (the medical scene, Zapruder, the FBI, and Oswald). As David Josephs posted on this thread, the film was a "Cliffs Notes" version of complex issues never resolved for the viewer. As a result, Americans will walk out "Parkland" dazed, conflicted, and confused, just as they were after the assassination weekend.


James
I think the most dangerous thing about 'Parkland' is people believe it who don't know the facts.
T Harry Evans Wrote:I think the most dangerous thing about 'Parkland' is people believe it who don't know the facts.


Don't worry about it.

Nobody is seeing the thing. There were exactly four other people in the theater where I saw it tonight. Joe McBride said that was how many people were in the theater he saw it at.

It did less than a half million its first weekend. It is a bomb both box office wise and review wise.

Boy and does it deserve it. What a bore. Landesman never brought anything to life in the entire film.

It really makes you appreciate Stone's movie. And thank God that will be rereleased next month.
Jim DiEugenio Wrote:Landesman never brought anything to life in the entire film.


[FONT=&amp]Jim,

Perhaps "Parkland" director Peter Landesman summed up his work best when, during an interview, he stated the following: "It's taking a thing you think you know everything about and making you realize you know nothing." [/FONT]After ten million dollars and the final editing of the film, shouldn't this director know more about his subject than when he started?

Landesman was also proud of the fact that he kept the film at 90 minutes. A better venue for "Parkland" might have been the Lifetime cable network!


James


The Landesman interview appears at this site: http://abclocal.go.com/kabc/story?sectio...id=9277159
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