Nelson Mail

Zapruder’s assassinat­ion photos brought only heartbreak

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UNITED STATES: At first, he wasn’t even going to bring his camera.

On November 22, 1963, the day Abraham Zapruder would forever surrender his name to an American tragedy, the Dallas dressmaker who loved to shoot home movies had decided to leave his Bell and Howell Zoomatic at home. It was his assistant who convinced him that President John F Kennedy’s motorcade through Dealey Plaza might be worth getting on film.

Four hundred and eighty six frames later, Zapruder had not only captured history, he had made it. The 26-second Zapruder film of Kennedy’s assassinat­ion marked the pre-dawn of the viral video age – ordinary citizens with cameras documentin­g extraordin­ary events.

His 8-millimetre images initially helped guide Warren Commission investigat­ors to their conclusion that Lee Harvey Oswald acted alone.

Later, parsed and scrutinise­d to this day, the Zapruder film cast doubt on the official explanatio­n and spawned a swirl of conspiracy that would define not just the event but the modern era.

‘‘Without the film, I don’t think there ever would have been a controvers­y over the Warren Commission or anything like what has gone on for the last 50 years,’’ said Josiah ‘‘Tink’’ Thompson, author of Six Seconds in Dallas, a seminal assassinat­ion analysis.

When the reluctant Zapruder finally climbed up on a concrete pedestal, 20 metres from Elm St, he gave himself a nearly perfect vantage point on destiny.

‘‘It is exactly where a Hollywood director would have set up,’’ Thompson said. ‘‘At the limo’s closest approach to his camera, Kennedy’s head explodes.’’

President Donald Trump yesterday reiterated his promise to release the final cache of classified JFK documents being held by the National Archives.

As historians, journalist­s and the public waited to begin reading them, memories quickly revert to that silent, flickering sequence, as chilling as it is familiar: the approachin­g convertibl­e, the waves of a crowd about to lose its innocence, the president clutching his throat, the crimson bloom in frame 313 (which wasn’t shown publicly for 12 years), Jacqueline Kennedy’s primal scramble over the trunk, the rush of the motorcade off to a hospital and an America forever changed.

‘‘He really did a remarkable job,’’ Thompson said of the amateur film-maker.

It was an achievemen­t that Zapruder would have gladly avoided. The 58-year-old owner of Jennifer Juniors, who came from Russia as a teenager, loved the Kennedys. He climbed down from his perch, put the camera down and screamed ‘‘They killed him! They killed him!’’

‘‘I think he was very sorry to be the guy who got it on film,’’ said Alexandra Zapruder, the filmmaker’s granddaugh­ter, who last year wrote Twenty-Six Seconds, a personal history of the film’s effect on her family. ‘‘It brought him nothing but heartbreak.’’

In the chaos after the shooting, according to an exhaustive timeline compiled by the assassinat­ion website JFK Lancer, a Secret Service agent rushed Zapruder to a Kodak lab where the film was processed on the spot. Zapruder provided two copies to the government, and kept the original and one copy himself. Within three days, he’d sold the original and all rights to Life Magazine for $150,000, giving $25,000 to the widow of a policeman who was killed by the fleeing Oswald.

That would set off a decadeslon­g convolutio­n of legal battles, bootleg copies, court rulings and acts of Congress, questions of authentici­ty, charges of profiteeri­ng and copyright infringeme­nt. Investigat­ors, journalist­s and legions of conspiracy spinners would make it arguably the most dissected strip of film in history, pulling from its coloured shadows Umbrella Man, Black Dog Man and other icons of intrigue.

To many assassinat­ion scholars, Zapruder’s biggest impact was to cast doubt on the central conclusion of the government investigat­ion: the lonegunman theory. The gruesome climax of the sequence shows a plume of gore erupting from the front of Kennedy’s head. Oswald fired from behind.

That spawned debates over neuro-spasms and the jet effect that have never gone away. But because the issue is never even mentioned in the Warren Commission report, the official version was hopelessly compromise­d for many.

‘‘The climax of the film is not the scenario that they put forward,’’ Thompson said. ‘‘If it weren’t for the film, the logical problems of the Warren Commission would not have been exposed.’’

Zapruder died of cancer in 1970. The battle over who shot JFK and who controlled the film of the assassinat­ion raged on. Geraldo Rivera showed it on television in 1975, frame 313 and all. Oliver Stone put it on the wide screen in 1991’s JFK.

Life magazine sold the rights back to Zapruder’s family for $1 in 1975. The federal government took the original as an official ‘‘assassinat­ion record’’, paying the family $16 million under eminent domain in 1999. The family donated the copyright and their own archive to the Sixth Floor Museum in the former Texas School Book Depository in 2000.

‘‘It embodies all the contradict­ions that can’t be resolved,’’ said Alexandra Zapruder. ‘‘Not just the forensics and the ballistics, but the cultural problems, our inability to make sense of the senseless.’’

It’s the movie that will never fade to black. – Washington Post

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PHOTO: SUPPLIED

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