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JFK

JFK

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Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Best movie, ever. Period. What was lost November 22, 1963?
Review: That day America lost charismatic leadership elected by the people in favor of secret government. After WWII, we realized we could not ever be caught unprepared for war in a nuclear age, so we continued on in a state of "cold" war. JFK wanted to change this in the middle of the "Cold War"; bad timing for sure. All of those that quibble (look the word up) about Stone's details or pronounce the "LHO did it" have never fired a weapon in U.S. military service, least of all a cruddy Mannlicher-Carcano. Get one and just try manipulating the bolt fast enough for 3 shots. Then try aiming and proper breathing/trigger control. Next, watch the head of JFK react backwards from a frontal shot in Stone's showing of the Zapruder film, proving a frontal shot from a second gunman. Next ponder on the FACT that the next U.S. Government assasination investigation concluded it WAS a conspiracy requiring 2 or more gunmen. The official U.S. Government position is that there WAS A CONSPIRACY. The Warren Commission misconclusion has been superseded. Now what are YOU going to do about it?

The point is the people of America have become cowards, the secret government knows that it has to do all our dirty work because we certainly will not do it. This is why they knew they could remove the elected President by coup d'etat and get away with it, as they then proceeded to kill RFK, MLK, Malcolm-X and George Wallace, don't forget they shot Reagen, too---anyone who offered a shimmer of hope of "being his own man" while in public office/position of visibility that could awaken the lazy Gen-Me/X/Y generations.

What died that day in Dallas was the belief that a charismatic leader could inspire the populace of America to get involved in our government. Since that time its been all "down hill". And who is to blame?

We are.

When we become more intelligent as Stone's films can make us realize the nature of things, then we can take a more active role in government without the secret caretakers of this Republic getting alarmed and feel like they have to assassinate us. It took a tremendous amount of courage for Oliver Stone to make this film, and I salute everyone in the cast, too. The point of this film is to be a charismatic THINKING leader in your own right and not let the "bad people scare you" as Garrison tells his children.

Stone shows why the men who killed JFK were angry at him, and they have good reasons for their wrong doing. Still makes it wrong, but "good people" can do bad things. Look at Nazi Germany--we are not immune from mob or group-think. You don't offer to disarm in the face of world communism. See Stone's Nixon and this will be clear, too. However, the conspirators that killed our charismatic leaders are wrong because America needs people of charisma holding things together at every level, they alone can't do it all. If they wanted JFK out of office, see to it that he was voted, not SHOT out of office. What we have here today is a slow death of America at many levels by a pervading lack of trust in the people in our government, partially because we cannot seem to elect good people into office or if we did, not have them shot out.

The movie clearly poses the question of whether we are going to continue as a nation based on just a war footing run by others or are we going to stop being selfish consumerists content to let others handle the pressing matters of the nation? Or will we like Garrison/JFK seek and find the truth, dare to be different and spend our lives doing things far more interesting like space colonization and make that our nation's reason for existance? We need a competent military-industrial complex or we will not survive as a nation, but we will not survive long if we don't get an enlightened citizenry that is able to understand the complexities of the world (not quibble in order to sit on one's rear) and assume the responsibility of our nation without disarming in the face of the external enemy. The internal enemies are tougher. I think we know who they are. We have met the enemy and he is us.

Rating: 3 stars
Summary: Duh
Review: A truely genious movie with any other way, my attention is distracted by the terribly unlogical music that creates a disturbing contract between the music and the spirit of the scenes, making it bearly watchable. Sorry, it just bugs me, and that's how I saw it!

Rating: 4 stars
Summary: One of Oliver Stone's best films
Review: I liked this version of JFK better than the original version because the extra footage helped to explore the conspiracy of President Kennedy's death and Jim Garrison's attempts to uncover the truth.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Powerful Filmmaking, A Riveting Film!
Review: A triumph for everyone involved. But this is Oliver Stone's picture all the way, you can clearly see that he is also obsessed with the Kennedy assassination and that's where the film gets it's passion and it's unstoppable search for the truth. He took as a premise, the case of Jim Garrison, the only lawyer to ever take the Kennedy assassination to court. This is only the excuse for Stone to bombard us with fascinating and dangerous information that may or may not be true, but we all know that something fishy was going on. Besides being a directorial triumph it is also a technical landmark with outstanding editing, probably among the best ever. A terrific all-star cast bring all these characters to life. Some we pity, others we despise and some we respect. Kevin Costner gives a dramatically powerful and effective performance as Jim Garrison, he's got the All-American look stamped on his face. An extremely good supporting cast filled with heavy-hitters. Tommy Lee Jones is brilliant as Clay Shaw (Clay Bertrand). Gary Oldman is quietly effective as the patsy himself, Lee Harvey Oswald. Joe Pesci, Kevin Bacon and John Candy are also great. Jack Lemmon and Walter Matthau appear in yet another film together, and both deliver good performances. But it is Donald Sutherland's cameo as Mr. 'X' that is really gripping, those few scenes he is in, you can't blink. A brilliant and truly important film. From a scale of 1-10 I give this film a 9!

Rating: 3 stars
Summary: Director's Cut Worse Than Original Print Released
Review: In the director's cut, James Garrison (Kevin Costner) ends a scene by telling an aide (Jay O. Sanders) that they're going to have to bring in Clay Shaw for questioning--BEFORE Garrison learns that the real name of Clay Bertrand is Clay Shaw! This makes no sense. The added 17 or so minutes do not enhance the film, which was terrific in its initial release. Sorry, Oliver Stone, but whoever persuaded you to drop those minutes & alter sequences was right. Bring back the print first released: it was a great film.

Rating: 4 stars
Summary: WOW!
Review: This movie was one of the best movie's ever! Although they don't really give you an answer of what happened. The depiction was SUPERB! Kevin Costner, Joe Pesci, John Candy, etc. They were fantastic in this movie! A little long...But you know what? Over thirty years later, people are still trying to figure it out...So I think 3 hours to explain what happened is fantastic!

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: A Mind-Blowing Experience!
Review: If not the best film of the 90's, it's certainly the most important one. When I first saw this film in the theaters during its initial release, I was just totally blown away, I sat there in my seat after the final credits and tried to gather my thoughts together after what I had witnessed. I was astonished at the sheer brilliance of the filmmaking, JFK has to rank as the best edited film of all time. Technically, the film is brillant and breathtaking. A richly textured and dazzling cinematic experience. However, this is not style over substance. Stone presents us with a huge amount of information: names, dates, different theories, flashbacks, flashbacks within flashbacks, ect... It's incredible how much information, how many ideas Stone packs into his film, but his direction is so assured that we are NEVER for one moment confused or lost in the material. He and his co workers have masterfully assembled all this material into a hypnotic tapestry (his use of the Zapruder footage in the film is brilliant). The assassination of JFK is one of the most tragic events in modern American history. I've never subscribed to the Warren Commission explanation, and Stone does a masterful job illustrating his ideas and theories. It's important to remember that this is NOT a documentary, its one filmmakers exploration of a pivotal moment in U.S. history. Even if you dont subscribe to Stone's theory, you gotta admit, it's a breathtaking film. This film will scare you, inspire you, and force you to think and act. It's so refreshing to see an American film that is SO political and thought provoking. It's over 3 1/2 hours, but you'd never know. A MUST SEE!

Rating: 4 stars
Summary: Good Movie, Poor Labeling
Review: I enjoyed this movie immensely when it came out so I decided to purchase the DVD. When I played it on my DVD player I noticed that I wasn't getting a Dolby Digital 5:1 sound field. I immediately checked the box and at the bottom of the box on the back it says that this is encoded in Dolby Digital 5:1. So I then checked Amazon's listing for this movie. Sure enough, Amazon says that this movie is encoded in Dolby 2.0 and , furthermore in their "Sound Quality" review they give it a rating of 4.5 saying.."The Dolby® Digital matrix surround DVD soundtrack has an excellent sense of surround envelopment". This is entirely untrue, as I found the sound field to be terrible. Yes, I did double check and triple check to see that I had all my settings correct on my equipment, and I had. Furthermore, the box says that in the interactive menus there are production notes, of which there are absolutely none. Also, as Amazon has pointed out, the box mistakenly says that this DVD is set up for 16:9, which it is not also. So come on you big studios. We consumers deserve better than this, especially with a movie as fine a this one.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: A Historical Document
Review: Forget about the fact that Oliver Stone's bias skewed some of the facts in the film. Forget the fact that occasionally Kevin Costner's suthun' accent slips a little bit. Forget that fact that your bum may ache a little after sitting through this film's epic running time. The one fact that remains is that when all is said and done, this is one heck of an ambitious and (above all) endlessly intriguing masterpiece that has effectively dramatized one of the most enduring passions of Americans for the past forty years, and it stands as a towering triumph and call to arms for the simple advocacy of something that our government (including the present, past, and probably future administrations) consistently chooses to keep from the citizens of this nation: T-R-U-T-H. In the years to come, regardless of a few historical machinations, it is my hope that this film is shown in classrooms across the nation along with classics like "Schindler's List" or "Glory." 5 stars (of 5)

Rating: 1 stars
Summary: Tedium
Review: This was one of the most boring and uninteresting movies that I have ever sat through. The message was just as dubious. "Is the government worth preserving when it lies to the people?" My answer: "Since when have governments ever done anything else?" It was just a big waste of time.


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