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The Most Important Film of All Time: 26.6 Seconds by Abraham Zapruder
The Daily BEast ^ | 11/22/2015 | Ted Gioia

Posted on 11/23/2015 12:29:51 PM PST by Borges

What is the most influential film of all time?

If you trust the 846 cinema experts polled by film magazine Sight & Sound magazine, you might pick Alfred Hitchock’s Vertigo—which won the periodical’s most recent vote for the best movie of all time. Old-school purists might still choose Citizen Kane, runner-up in that poll, for its cinematic virtuosity and denunciation of overreaching American ambition. Other obvious candidates include The Godfather, which held the top spot in a recent list compiled by the staff of The Hollywood Reporter, or The Wizard of Oz, which leads the ranking of influential aggregator site Rotten Tomatoes.

Or, if you prefer to let money do the talking, you will select Avatar, which generated a stunning $2.8 billion in box office receipts. Or you can follow the lead of ABC, which recently picked Star Wars as the most influential American film. If you are uncomfortable with Hollywood’s dominance of this list, you can always champion Sergei Eisenstein’s Battleship Potemkin or Jean Renoir’s The Rules of the Game or Akira Kurosawa’s Seven Samurai.

Those are all fine movies, but my pick for the most influential film is a different one—and has nothing in common with any of these cinema classics. In fact, my choice is an amateur movie made with a handheld camera. This film only lasts 26.6 seconds.

Abraham Zapruder, who worked across the street from the Texas Book Depository building in Dallas, had not even brought his Bell & Howell camera to work on Nov. 22, 1963. He had decided against filming President Kennedy’s motorcade because of rainy weather that morning. But the skies cleared, and his assistant encouraged Zapruder to return home and bring back his high-end home camera.

This spur-of-the-moment decision allowed Zapruder to capture the only footage of President Kennedy’s assassination that offers a clear view of the event. Indeed, Zapruder’s choice of location was uncanny. When the first bullet hit the motorcade, the presidential limousine was almost exactly in front of Zapruder’s position. He had the ideal vantage point to witness—and document—one of the most tragic events of modern American history.

For these reasons alone, the Zapruder footage has earned its place in cinematic history. But its influence extends beyond the film’s role in documenting the Kennedy assassination, or its notoriety as evidence for both the Warren Commission and generations of conspiracy theorists. The Zapruder footage also anticipated the viral news videos of the current day. Nowadays bystanders around the world follow in Zapruder’s footsteps by capturing breaking news stories with a handheld device even before the professional journalists show up. In addition, the Zapruder film broke through taboos and conventions dictating what is appropriate for audiences to see.

At the time of the Zapruder film, the Production Code that regulated Hollywood movies prohibited the depiction of blood during a gunshot scene. If you look at old Hollywood gangster films, you will find the camera focusing on bullets hitting walls, furniture, windshields and other objects, but rarely do you see their impact on soft tissue. The Code didn’t specifically prohibit the depiction of a bullet hitting a human body, but directors rarely tested this loophole. Certainly the kind of stomach-churning moment of violence captured by Zapruder could never have been shown in movie theaters at the time of the Kennedy assassination.

And this victim wasn’t a Hollywood actor playing a role, but one of the most beloved world leaders of the 20th century. Almost as horrifying as the damage inflicted by the bullet is the sight of the first lady crawling on to the back of the limousine convertible immediately after the shot, perhaps in an attempt to escape, or help a Secret Service agent climb into the car, or—most disturbing hypothesis of all—to grab for part of her husband’s head before it falls away into the street.

How could news networks put this footage on television? CBS News was fortunately exempted from having to make that decision. Despite the network’s determination to get the film from Zapruder, CBS lost a bidding war to Life magazine, which paid $150,000 for the film. As a result, the world’s first introduction to the Zapruder film came in the form of frame-by-frame photographic images. These appeared in the Nov. 29, 1963, issue of the magazine, originally in black-and-white, but Life published color images a week later. The only accommodation to the public’s sensibilities was the omission of a single frame—the one (frame 313) that documented the moment of impact.

For a while, few people were allowed to see the film in its entirety. Author Don DeLillo notes that this footage “was sold and hoarded and doled out very selectively.” Yet the images were emblazoned in the minds of the public—even before the entire film was broadcast on television in 1970, people had already assimilated its horrific perspective. We all viewed the president’s shooting from the standpoint of Zapruder’s lens. I’m hardly surprised that director Oliver Stone incorporated the actual Zapruder footage into his 1991 film JFK. Although his movie played fast and loose with historical facts, Stone realized that our perceptions of the assassination were inseparable from the images captured by an amateur videographer back in 1963.

Can it be mere chance that Hollywood taboos of on-screen violence collapsed in the aftermath of the Zapruder film? Over the next several years, Hollywood directors pushed for greater realism in the depiction of gunshots and other violent encounters. Arthur Penn’s film Bonnie and Clyde (1967)—by coincidence, filmed in and around Dallas, not far from where Zapruder made his movie—changed the rules on what you could show in a cinematic shot-out. The following year, Hollywood scrapped the Production Code that had set rules for onscreen violence since the ’30s, and replaced it with a rating system.

Can it be mere chance that Hollywood taboos of on-screen violence collapsed in the aftermath of the Zapruder film? But by then, the public’s tolerance for violent images had been changed permanently. The graphic coverage of the Kennedy assassination—and the live transmission of the shooting of Lee Harvey Oswald a few hours later—had set the tone for journalistic reporting on the Vietnam War. Violence was no longer hidden from public view, but highlighted and promulgated as part of the dominant cultural memes of the day.

And did this desensitization spur reciprocal violence among those exposed to these images? Shortly after the Kennedy assassination, two high-profile mass murders horrified the public—and each had a Texas connection. Perhaps the most eerie is the case of “Texas Tower” sniper Charles Whitman, who killed 14 people and wounded 32 others at the University of Texas at Austin in August 1966. This was the first campus massacre by a crazed shooter, but hardly the last. And just two weeks before Whitman’s assault, Richard Speck had made headlines when he killed eight student nurses in Chicago. I note that Speck had just moved from Dallas where he had lived for most of his life. These were the two most prominent mass murders in America during the middle decades of the 20th century. Both happened just a few months after the Kennedy assassination, and each was perpetrated by a young male with Texas ties from the same generation as Oswald.

Of course, any high-profile crime can produce copycat responses. But we’ve learned in recent years that intensive media coverage of a shooting adds to the risk. Certainly the Zapruder film played a key role in turning this tragic event into a platform for viral images. And were there copycats? I note that no high-profile political assassination had taken place in the U.S. during the two decades before the JFK shooting, but in the following two decades they were frequent news events—with Martin Luther King, Robert Kennedy, Gerald Ford (twice), George Wallace, and Ronald Reagan finding themselves as targets for unhinged shooters.

Perhaps all of these calamities would have ensued even without the Kennedy assassination, and Abraham Zapruder on hand to document it. But when I try to pinpoint a turning point in our attitudes toward violence—whether on film, in journalism, or in real life—I keep going back to Dealey Plaza on Nov. 22, 1963. Everything changed in the aftermath of that moment—captured in frame 313 of Zapruder’s home movie.

And even today, when events such as the Paris terrorist shootings take place, we are living in a world in which almost any one of us might be called upon to be an Abraham Zapruder, documenting and sharing world-shaking news and blurring the line between journalist and participant. Even Citizen Kane and The Godfather, for all their merits, can’t claim that distinction.


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To: Borges

Bookmark


41 posted on 11/23/2015 2:36:56 PM PST by JDoutrider
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To: Borges
Everything changed in the aftermath of that moment -- captured in frame 313 of Zapruder's home movie.

Boomer arrogance? Laziness?

What actually changed?

And what did the film clip do or cause?

42 posted on 11/23/2015 2:51:14 PM PST by x
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To: Borges

Didn’t see Neil Armstrong landing on the moon among the candidates.

Of course that would make America look good, and we can’t have that.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=RMINSD7MmT4


43 posted on 11/23/2015 3:46:14 PM PST by Stosh
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To: Stosh

Candidates for what? This is a one off article about the impact the Zapruder film had on American film culture.


44 posted on 11/23/2015 3:54:50 PM PST by Borges
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To: Borges

“What is the most influential film of all time?”

I thought that was the first line in the article posted.


45 posted on 11/23/2015 3:59:54 PM PST by Stosh
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To: DesertRhino
We know what happened. Anyone with doubts about the narrative can read Bugliosi's book, which essentially confirms that the Warren Report was mostly correct. Oswald did it, acted alone, and was executed by a crazy Kennedy fan/mob wannabe.

Much like Wikileaks debunked the 9/11 truthers once and for all, we now have 50 years of history with not one one shred of evidence to any conspiracy to confirm it.

46 posted on 11/23/2015 6:56:04 PM PST by GunRunner
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To: Borges
when I try to pinpoint a turning point in our attitudes toward violence—whether on film, in journalism, or in real life—I keep going back to Dealey Plaza on Nov. 22, 1963.

Pretty weak hypothesis. There were millions of Americans involved in live combat in WW2 only 18 years earlier, and if you've ever seen the pictures in Time and Life magazines from WW2, the pictures are often very graphic. Burnt Japs running out of caves, piles of dead Germans. I don't think the graphic images of JFK would have been a singular turning point. His death, coinciding with the baby boomers coming of age and a general relaxation of morals and standards, combined to give us realistic violence.

47 posted on 11/23/2015 8:15:18 PM PST by Defiant (I wouldn't have to mansplain if it weren't for all those wymidiots.)
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To: thestob

Am I correct in noticing that Jackie is lucky to have not been hit?


48 posted on 11/23/2015 8:18:36 PM PST by Auntie Mame (Fear not tomorrow. God is already there.)
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To: Borges

And if you see the whole length of the film it ends with a quick look behind the picket fence on the grassy knoll. Nothing is there.


49 posted on 11/24/2015 4:23:45 AM PST by mfish13 (Elections have Consequences.)
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To: Borges

It’s maddening that the first bullet hits Kennedy just as a large highway sign comes between Zapruder and the president.


50 posted on 11/24/2015 7:00:48 AM PST by Oratam
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To: circlecity
One of Seinfeld's best scenes.Ever!


51 posted on 11/24/2015 7:17:50 AM PST by newfreep (TRUMP/Cruz 2016 - "Evil succeeds when good men do nothing" - Edmund Burke)
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To: Oratam
Not true. Frame 224 is the first hit (2nd bullet fired) and while most of his head and body are still behind the sign, BOTH of his hands are visible and you can see them start to react to the first shot through the neck.

Frame 224 also proves there was a single bullet that went through Kennedy's neck and hit Connolly because you can not only see Connolly's position in the car (turned to the right), but his reaction to being hit and his collar flipping out as the bullet passes through him and hitting the collar.

It's all there.

52 posted on 11/24/2015 8:00:18 AM PST by GunRunner
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To: Auntie Mame

Only by the shooter on the grassy knoll


53 posted on 11/24/2015 7:47:30 PM PST by Oztrich Boy ('Life is a comedy to those who think and a tragedy for those who feel' - Horace Walpole)
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To: prisoner6

I have seen the film many times but never that slowly. He is shot in the neck first and Jackie responds to him then he is hit on the head.


54 posted on 11/24/2015 7:52:58 PM PST by Ditter (God Bless Texas!)
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