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<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>