Herald on Sunday

Stone revisits JFK theories

NZ Exclusive: Oliver Stone on why he’s not done with JFK and has a new series out, writes Dominic Corry

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For a period beginning with 1986’s Platoon and continuing through a stunning run of hit films including Wall Street, The Doors and Natural Born Killers, filmmaker Oliver Stone was firmly at the centre of the zeitgeist, sparking debate and creating iconic cultural moments with everything he made.

During this fruitful period, the Oliver Stone movie that unquestion­ably had the largest impact was 1991’s JFK, which presented a widerangin­g “countermyt­h” to the official story of the assassinat­ion of US President John F. Kennedy on November 22, 1963.

The film elevated interest in the JFK assassinat­ion to a level that can still be felt, and Stone is revisiting the subject in the new four-part documentar­y event series JFK: Destiny Betrayed, available on the DocPlay streaming service.

“This is not a dramatisat­ion, this is a documentar­y,” Stone tells the Herald on Sunday in an exclusive interview. “This is fact. It is crucial that people understand this came out of the Assassin- ation Records Review Board, [an independen­t agency] that was created out of the [reaction to the 1991] film. Unfortunat­ely, the media didn’t pay any attention to the files. So we had to do this. I have to do it.”

The series presents a raft of eyeopening material from files declassifi­ed by the ARRB covering the cor- ruption of the evidence chain, witness accounts contradict­ing the official timeline, the farcical autopsy and the notion that Lee Harvey Oswald was working alone. “All I can do is show you what we found out from this and you’ll see that it’s clear that there was more than one gunman. It’s also clear that there’s a motive for Kennedy’s death. And it’s damn clear that there’s a lot of corruption around the case.”

Speaking to the Herald on Sunday via a Zoom video call from his booklined home office, the multi-Oscar winner is as passionate as ever about the JFK assassinat­ion. In JFK: Destiny Betrayed, he posits that Kennedy’s liberal, globalist policies were starting to re-shape the planet when he was murdered giving rise to a more militarise­d approach. “Since he was killed, we’ve been unable to change the lock that the national security state has on all of our countries. Kennedy was breaking through that. It would have been a happier world if he’d been successful.”

When JFK was released, conspiracy theories were almost romantic. But events in the last several years have illustrate­d the real-world dangers of such thinking. I ask Stone, perhaps the world’s most famous conspiracy theorist, if he thinks conspiracy theories are out of control. “I can’t talk about these other things that people talk about. Crazy things get said all the time. I’m not responsibl­e for that. But I do believe this case is valid and important because it sets our policy today.”

He acknowledg­es that JFK led to greater suspicion of government­s.

“I think in general, my film contribute­d to it. Government­s lie. This is not news. But it’s news for a lot of people who grow up very naive.” Does Stone think the public is equipped to distinguis­h between genuine coverups and paranoid fantasies? “It’s always hard. This

is what history is about — it’s a fight. People have to decide for themselves and hopefully every citizen should be concerned. “What we need to understand is the our government, the US government, is corrupt.

“It was corrupted after World War II, in that period when we became another kind of nation, we became an armed citadel. [The JFK] assassinat­ion opened the gates of corruption in a big way.”

I end up asking Stone if he still remains hopeful for the future.

“I’m always hopeful because I’m an optimist. We have to be.

“It’s the only way humanity can survive . . .” He smiles.

“I’m still alive. They haven’t killed me yet.”

Episode one of JFK: Destiny Betrayed is on DocPlay now. Episodes are released Mondays.

 ?? Photo / Getty Images ?? Oliver Stone — passionate about JFK.
Photo / Getty Images Oliver Stone — passionate about JFK.
 ?? ?? Michael Douglas — star of Wall Street.
Michael Douglas — star of Wall Street.
 ?? ?? Woody Harrelson and Juliette Lewis.
Woody Harrelson and Juliette Lewis.
 ?? ?? JFK: Kevin Coster as Jim Garrison.
JFK: Kevin Coster as Jim Garrison.

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