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poster of JFK
Rating: 7.607/10 by 2103 users

JFK (1991)

Follows the investigation into the assassination of President John F. Kennedy led by New Orleans district attorney Jim Garrison.

Directing:
  • Susan Malerstein
  • Joe Burns
  • Joseph P. Reidy
  • Deborah Lupard
  • Philip C. Pfeiffer
  • Oliver Stone
Writing:
  • Oliver Stone
  • Zachary Sklar
  • Jim Garrison
  • Jim Marrs
Stars:
Release Date: Fri, Dec 20, 1991

Rating: 7.607/10 by 2103 users

Alternative Title:
JFK - Affaire non classée - FR
JFK - avoin tapaus - FI
JFK, i istoria pou harahtike sti mnimi mas - GR
John F. Kennedy - Tatort Dallas - DE
JFK: Dzonas F. Kenedis. Suviai Dalase - LT
JFK - saken fortsetter - NO
JFK: Kapanmayan Dosya - TR
J.F.K.: Caso abierto - ES
JFK:1991 - JP
JFK - Un caso ancora aperto - IT

Country:
France
United States of America
Language:
English
Español
Runtime: 03 hour 08 minutes
Budget: $40,000,000
Revenue: $205,405,498

Plot Keyword: vietnam war, central intelligence agency (cia), assassination, usa president, government, politics, homophobia, texas, new orleans, louisiana, investigation, john f. kennedy, historical figure, president, conspiracy, district attorney, death, john f. kennedy assassination, taunting, assassination of president, speculative, usa history, shocking, 1960s, somber, courtroom drama, suspicious, legal thriller, jacqueline kennedy, america, ambiguous, antagonistic, defiant

Kevin Costner
Jim Garrison
Gary Oldman
Lee Harvey Oswald
Kevin Bacon
Willie O'Keefe
Michael Rooker
Bill Broussard
Jack Lemmon
Jack Martin
Sissy Spacek
Liz Garrison
Joe Pesci
David Ferrie
John Candy
Dean Andrews
Walter Matthau
Senator Long
Sally Kirkland
Rose Cheramie
Ed Asner
Guy Bannister
Lolita Davidovich
Beverly Oliver
Jim Garrison
Earl Warren
Wayne Knight
Numa Bertel
Beata Pozniak
Marina Oswald
Tony Plana
Carlos Bringuier
John William Galt
L. B. J. voice
Ron Jackson
FBI Spokesman
Sean Stone
Jasper Garrison
Gail Cronauer
Janet Williams
Gary Carter
Bill Williams
Jo Anderson
Julia Ann Mercer
Marco Perella
Mercer Interrogator
Edwin Neal
Mercer Interrogator
Darryl Cox
FBI Agent #2 with Hill
T.J. Kennedy
Hill Interrogator
J.J. Johnston
Mobster with Broussard
R. Bruce Elliott
Bolton Ford Dealer
Wayne Tippit
FBI Agent - Frank
Dale Dye
General Y
Jerry Douglas
Board Room Man
Ryan MacDonald
Board Room Man
Duane Grey
Board Room Man
George R. Robertson
White House Man
Baxter Harris
White House Man
John Seitz
General Lemnitzer
Alex Rodine
White House Man
Sam Stoneburner
White House Man
Bob Gunton
TV Newsman #3
John Finnegan
Judge Haggerty
Walter Breaux
Vernon Bundy
Melodee Bowman
FBI Receptionist
Peter Maloney
Colonel Finck
Richard Rutowski
Fence Shooter
Bill Bolender
Prisoner Powell
Gil Glasgow
Tippet Shooter
Bob Orwig
Officer Poe
George Kelly
Jerry Johnson Sidekick
John Larroquette
Jerry Johnson
Maria Mason
Garrison's Secretary
Ron Rifkin
Mr. Goldberg (Spiesel)
Frank Whaley
Oswald Imposter
Kevin Beard
(uncredited)
Jeffrey Bornstein
Hitman (uncredited)
Marie Del Marco
Secretary in Window (uncredited)
Alan Donnes
Reporter (uncredited)
Orlando Gallegos
Plaza Witness (uncredited)
Robert J. Groden
Courtroom Projectionist (uncredited)
Chuck Kelley
Dallas County Sherriff (uncredited)
Codie Scott
Man in Court (uncredited)
Martin Sheen
Narrator (voice) (uncredited)
John F. Kennedy
Self (archive footage)
Stanley White
B Team Shooter
Fidel Castro
Self (archive footage)
Jacqueline Kennedy
Self (archive footage)
John Connally
Self (archive footage)
Allison Pratt Davis
Elizabeth Garrison
Scott Krueger
Snapper Garrison
Ngô Đình Diệm
Self - Walking with Stick (archive footage)
E.J. Morris
Plaza Witness #1
Cheryl Penland
Plaza Witness #2
Jim Gough
Plaza Witness #3
Perry R. Russo
Angry Bar Patron
Mike Longman
TV Newsman #1
Ann Strub
Banister's Secretary
Amy Long
Virginia Garrison
Red Mitchell
Sgt. Harkness
John C. Martin
Prison Guard
Willem Oltmans
George DeMohrenschildt
Roxie M. Frnka
Earlene Roberts
Zeke Mills
J.C. Price
Spain Logue
FBI Agent #1 with Hill
Barry Chambers
Man at Firing Range
Alec Gifford
TV Newsman #2
Eric A. Vicini
French Reporter
Michael Gurievsky
Russian Reporter
Helen Miller
Garrison Receptionist
Norman Davis
Colonel Reich
Errol McLendon
Man with Umbrella
Bruce Gelb
Board Room Man
Nathan Scott
John Chancler
Jorge Fernández
Miguel Torres
Doug Jackson
Stage Manager
Murray Stokes
F.B.I. Agent at Airport
Odin K. Langford
Officer Habighorst
John St. Paul
Airport Police Sergeant
Lori Randolph
Girl at the Parade (uncredited)
Roy Barnitt
Irvin F. Dymond
Carolyn T. Wright
Clinton Witness
Henry Tull III
Clinton Sheriff
Michael Skipper
James Teague
Joseph Nadell
Dr. McClelland
Chris Renna
Bethesda Doctor
David Benn
Kenny O'Donnell
Dalton Dearborn
Army General
Merlyn Sexton
Admiral Kenney
Steve F. Price Jr.
Pathologist #1
Tom Bullock
Pathologist #2
Ruary O'Connell
Pathologist #3
Christopher Kosiciuk
FBI Agent at Autopsy
John Reneau
A Team Shooter
Larry Melton
Patrolman Joe Smith
Carol Farabee
Carolyn Arnold
Willie Minor
Bonnie Ray Williams
Ted Pennebaker
Arnold Rowland
Bill Pickle
Marion Baker
Mykel Chaves
Sandra Styles

wizzardss

On 22 November 1963, President John F. Kennedy was assassinated in Dallas, Texas. On 24 September 1964, the President's Commission on the Assassination was presented to Kennedy's successor, President Lyndon B. Johnson, presenting the results of the official Government investigation. _JFK_ follows New Orleans District Attorney Jim Garrison (Kevin Costner) as he form his own alternative investigation, culminating in the trial of businessman Clay Shaw (Robert De Niro) on 29 January 1969 for conspiring to assassinate President Kennedy. This is, to date, the only trial to have been brought for the assassination of President Kennedy. As political dramas go, _JFK_ is aimed at the truly hardcore fans. With its three hour runtime, the first two hours of the film are spent delving into the background of Kennedy's death and setting up the plausibility of the "alternative" scenario. It is important to remember that this is, ultimately, a propaganda film and whether you believe the events or not, it differs from the official Government narrative. For a newcomer to the events of 22 November 1963 - which I was - this extended setup is simultaneously extremely helpful and mentally exhausting, and it is difficult to keep both awake and aware, so approaching the film with some knowledge - even of the Government narrative - is beneficial. However, the final act of the film is extremely compelling watching, featuring Costner delivering a famous soliloquy that undoubtedly helped to influence later courtroom dramas, such as A Few Good Men and Amistad, as they pitch one man against the Government. While _JFK_ was - rightly - nominated for a number of Oscars, including Best Picture and De Niro as Best Supporting Actor, and won Best Cinematography and Best Film Editing, it is difficult to feel that Costner was inexplicably overlooked as he singlehandedly carries the final act. Extremely dry, but immensely compelling. You will question what you have just witnessed.

CinemaSerf

It's all the more fascinating to watch this again in 2021, almost sixty years on, when the office of the US Presidency is still mired in conspiracy and controversy. This film deals with Louisiana District Attorney Jim Garrison (Kevin Costner) and his almost obsessive quest to prove that the assassination of President John F. Kennedy in Dallas in 1963 was a concerted effort by rogue elements in the American establishment - government, military and industry - to avert his withdrawal from Vietnam and ensure billions of dollars continued to line the pockets of many a vested interest. Oliver Stone has amassed a creditable cast to illustrate the developing theorem postulated by Garrison - despite personal and professional threats - that proves both compelling and interesting to watch. My snag is that the hook on which much of this drama is based - the characterisation of Garrison - is really poor. Costner just doesn't deliver. He is weak and uninspiring; his impassioned search for truth and justice is set up well by the strong supporting efforts, but his on-screen persona just lacks the zeal and intensity needed to sustain the intensity of this investigation. Plaudits ought to go to an excellently enigmatic Donald Sutherland as his latter day deep throat "X"; and to Tommy Lee Jones as the seriously seedy "Shaw". Kevin Bacon also performs well as the aptly named, glorified rent boy "Willie". Maybe it is the presence of such acting luminaries - Matthau, Lemmon and Sissy Spacek (Garrison's wife) that serve to further compound the inadequacies of the lead? A failure that is finally embodied by the missed opportunity to present his rousing denouement to an open court that is quickly reduced to something akin to a third grade chemistry lecture with little inflection or potency. It's long, at times feeling unnecessarily weighty. Perhaps, had the director not gone for a box office pappiness to head this otherwise gripping docu-dramna, then it could have been a great movie. As it is, it's good but lacking. Congress ordered an evaluation of the documents supporting/contesting these assertions in 1992 - the absence, meantime, of any further developments will ensure this film stays pertinent, however flawed, for many years to come...


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