This is a clip from the movie "Executive Action" which has views of Dealey Plaza from 1973 when this movie was made. This movie was rather ridiculous in many ways, however I do find the scenes of Dealey Plaza interesting- which is why I put this clip in here. The movie editors or whomever does the editing, mix scenes of the real Dealey Plaza (1973) with scenes from some other locations which they want us to think is Dealey. It is obvious what is Dealey and what are the other locations. The Dealey Plaza locations are the ones which are taken from a helicopter's vantage point, or up high usually or from the ground of an individual building only. The scenes with the actors are taken at other locations. When you see an actor in a scene in what they intend or suggest is Dealey Plaza, you pretty much know that is not the actual Dealey Plaza.
Some of the film is exaggeration; a disclaimer at the start says so. What isn't questionable is that bullets hit JFK from both the front and rear. Lone gunman? No way.
primogennaio 6 months ago
@Obelisk2290
after some arm-twisting by some uniidentifiable someone.. who was getting instructions from the people who had designed the actual mechanics of the shooting.. (ALLEN DULLES, MAJ. GEN EDWARD G. LANSDALE, GEN. CHARLES CABELL, ALL OF WHOM WERE FIRED AT THE BAY OF PIGS INVASION FIASCO) the mayor EARLE CABELL ( YEP.. THE BROTHER OF GEN CHARLES CABELL, FORMERLY 4TH IN COMMAND OF THE CIA ), the route was changed in order to afford the shooters to triangulate their firing posts.
kingcoach13 1 year ago
@migo53333
the route WAS ON THE FRONT PAGE OF EVERY DALLAS PAPER ON THE DAY OF THE ASSASSINATION!! HELLO?!?
kingcoach13 1 year ago
@themeaningoflife38
with some heavyhanded behind-the-scenes arm-twisting by the G
kingcoach13 1 year ago
Filmmakers on 70s period films just did not care. It doesn't matter when it's set, people have 70s hair and fashion. I cannot think of ONE period film made in the 70s that kept true to the fashion of the time.
ricarleite 1 year ago
its interesting to note that this movie came out in 1973 and may come the closest to the truth of what happened in Dallas
bigjohnmac 1 year ago
Former Dallas Police Chief Jesse Curry admitted that it appeared that shots had come from the fence area.
themeaningoflife38 1 year ago
@chubbsuperfly Jack Valente is probably why this movie recieved poor reviews & was only shown in a small number of theaters for a few weeks until being removed entirely.
themeaningoflife38 1 year ago
@themeaningoflife38 Mac Wallace also worked for Byrd, cousin of Harry Byrd, btw. Wallace's print matched the latent print on carton #A on the 6th floor. Wallace was an excellent shot and preferred his Mauser, which was originally the murder weapon until LHO's Manlicher-Carcano peashooter was "found" Why Stone never acknowledged EA is a mystery, too. Valenti sux.
chubbsuperfly 1 year ago
Yeah, by '91 most people bought the conspiracy rubbish thanks to Stone's "JFK" and "The Men Who Killed Kennedy", which, by the way, was so fraudulent that the British TV company that produced it almost lost their license. That's why it was sold to a US company. It was only shown in the UK once.
As to "JFK" - Stone did get the date right, he got the location right, and he got the correct victims; other than that, it was just one continuous lie after another.
sudaev 1 year ago