apparent authenticity.
Actual film footage, some of it quite moving (Walter Cronkite fighting for composure after announcing President Kennedyâs death and the wrenching images captured on Zapruderâs home movie), was woven together so seamlessly with recreations that it is difficult at times to separate the two. Stoneâs blurring of that line intensified the movieâs documentary-like quality, the sense that this is
the real thing
. But the chief reason for that impression is its real-life protagonist. Stone tried to deflect criticism about his choice there by claiming the man on the screen was âa fictional Jim Garrison who is dealing with facts. And, sometimes, speculation.â 4 But audiences experienced the screen version as an accurate portrayal, or a close facsimile. The movie wouldnât have worked otherwise. The American people didnât want some screenwriterâs fantasy about the assassination. They wanted
the truth
. Stone understood that, for it was what he, too, wanted. He couldnât deliver it but whether or not he realized that initially, or if he ever did, is unclear. What is clear is that he knew how to make a film that
appeared
to deliver it.
Those who had not spoken up beforehand weighed in now.
âStone went too far,â said former Texas Governor John Connally, who was wounded in the Dallas shooting. âThis was a national tragedy. [Stone] mixed fact and fiction in such a way that heâs going to convince practically every young person that the federal government, their own government, conspired to kill an American president. And I think thatâs evil, frankly.â Connally ridiculed the sheer size of Stoneâs conspiracy, which he called âludicrous.â President George Bush, on tour in Australia, responded to a question by saying he had seen âno evidenceâ that the Warren Report was wrong but didnât think Stone should be censured for putting his own spin on the assassination.
Newsweek
published an eight-page cover story that labeled the film âpropaganda.â Two former aides to President Lyndon Johnson joined the fray. Joseph A. Califano, Jr., writing in the
Wall Street Journal
, said that
JFK
was âa disgraceful concoction of lies and distortions.â Jack Valenti, now president and chief executive of the Motion Picture Association of America, waited until after the Academy Awards balloting * to denounce the film as a âsmearâ and âa hoaxâ on the order of Leni Riefenstahlâs Nazi propaganda film
Triumph of the Will
.
The most serious objection was voiced by Brent Staples in the
New York Times
who pointed out that âhistorical lies are nearly impossible to correct once movies and television have given them credibility.â Echoing Governor Connally, Staples predicted that âthe children of the video age will swallow JFK whole.â He noted that policing art âfor inaccuraciesâ was an impossible task and the best that society could do was to âdenounceâ such history as âbogus.â 5 The harshest words came from Washington columnist George Will. Stone, he said, was âan intellectual sociopath, indifferent to truthâ who combined âmoral arrogance with historical ignorance.â The film he called âexecrable history and contemptible citizenship.â 6
As debate on the subject inundated the country, talk radio and television commentators jumped into the fray; university symposiums and town hall meetings were held to discuss the controversy, and it quickly escalated into the most extraordinary war of words ever exchanged over a movie. What was missing in that great debate was
Clay Shaw
. Except for a few muffled voices in New Orleans, virtually no one spokein his defense. No national figure uttered his name. Everyone was focused on the grand conspiracy. No one seemed to care about Shawâs reputation, his fate, or how it came to pass. No
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