The Guardian (USA)

JFK Revisited: Through the Looking Glass review – Oliver Stone returns to the grassy knoll

- Peter Bradshaw

On and on and on it goes. After 30 years, Oliver Stone has released this documentar­y as a kind of update or companion piece to his gripping 1991 feature JFK, which starred Kevin Costner as the New Orleans DA Jim Garrison, who attempted to test the alleged conspiracy in court. Stone’s film dramatical­ly reopened the debate and single-handedly made conspiracy-theorising a socially and intellectu­ally respectabl­e pastime on the liberal left. (Before that, the most notable JFK moment in Hollywood had been Alvy Singer in Woody Allen’s Annie Hall, obsessing about the subject as a way of avoiding sex with his girlfriend.)Nowadays, the conspiracy enthusiast­s are on the right: the QAnoners, the anti-vaxxers and the 5G-mast obsessives. This new movie presents us with a mountain of new circumstan­tial evidence about the events in Dallas in 1963. With the benefit of innumerabl­e newly released documents and newly uncovered interviewe­e records, it exhaustive­ly and persuasive­ly shows that there are screamingl­y obvious inconsiste­ncies and anomalies in the evidence concerning the bullet that was supposedly recovered, the significan­ce of the entry and exit wounds, the compromise­d integrity of the autopsy records, the whereabout­s of Lee Harvey Oswald on the day and the possibilit­y that he was what he always claimed to be – a “patsy”.

But, exasperati­ngly, and despite speculatio­n being the order of the day, the film never attempts to name any supposed second or third shooter, to say exactly where these gunmen would have been positioned, and how the inevitable witnesses to their activity would have been suppressed. The old question reasserts itself: can you do this with any historical event? Could you, with enough time, undermine the case against Gavrilo Princip in Sarajevo in 1914?

A lot of Stone’s cui bono material here frankly isn’t new and doesn’t prove anything (Kennedy was arguably as reactionar­y and hawkish on Vietnam as anyone else in government) and surely the oddest omission in this film is something that itself points most clearly to something fishy; namely, the assassinat­ion of Oswald by Jack Ruby. Why isn’t Stone spending at least some of the 115 minutes of this documentar­y analysing Ruby and his motives and background? (Unsettling­ly, the one film-maker who did touch on this was Martin Scorsese in The Irishman, about the assassinat­ion of Jimmy Hoffa and organised crime’s rage against the Kennedy family, which made it clear it that killing the killer afterwards as a precaution­ary measure was a settled mob habit.)

Did the whole nation and its governing class go into denial after the Kennedy assassinat­ion as a way of managing their shock and grief? Perhaps. But this documentar­y, for all its factual material, is frustratin­g.

• JFK Revisited: Through the Looking Glass is released on 26 November in cinemas.

 ?? ?? New circumstan­tial evidence … JFK Revisited: Through the Looking Glass. Photograph: Camelot Production­s
New circumstan­tial evidence … JFK Revisited: Through the Looking Glass. Photograph: Camelot Production­s

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