Amazing how much of Libra shows up in the movie, down to the detail about FBI files containing photos of Oswald's pubic hay-ah!
― The burrito of ennui (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Thursday, 12 May 2016 00:08 (ten years ago)
this is the only film i can think of that was actually directly responsible for getting a federal law passed:
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/President_John_F._Kennedy_Assassination_Records_Collection_Act_of_1992
― (The Other) J.D. (J.D.), Thursday, 12 May 2016 00:35 (ten years ago)
i think what i actually enjoy most about this movie is the whole black ops/shadowy politics/vietnam/cuba shit, independent of the assassination stuff. it's pretty compelling.
― nomar, Thursday, 12 May 2016 00:54 (ten years ago)
very very few people know about this, ok
― The burrito of ennui (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Thursday, 12 May 2016 01:06 (ten years ago)
now i knew allen dulles very well; i briefed him many a time in his house.
― le Histoire du Edgy Miley (difficult listening hour), Thursday, 12 May 2016 01:09 (ten years ago)
Dulles, by the way, was General Y's benefactor. I got out in '64. Resigned my commission.
― nomar, Thursday, 12 May 2016 01:11 (ten years ago)
Kennedy's directives weren't implemented because of...
...bureaucratic resistance.
But one of the results was...
...the Cuban operation was turned over to my department...
...as Operation Mongoose.
Mongoose was pure Black Ops.
― nomar, Thursday, 12 May 2016 01:12 (ten years ago)
poetry
this is just to say
Kennedy's directives weren't implemented because ofbureaucratic resistance. But one of the results was
the Cuban operation was turned over to my departmentas Operation Mongoose.
and whichyou were probablysavingfor breakfast
Forgive methose Black Ops were deliciousso sweetand so cold
― The burrito of ennui (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Thursday, 12 May 2016 01:16 (ten years ago)
September '63.
― The burrito of ennui (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Sunday, 15 May 2016 01:41 (ten years ago)
the literally single flaw for me (presumably inserted so as not to offend god): "i can't tell you the shockwaves this sent along the corridors of power in washington". a long cliche with a stubby and redundant tail.
― le Histoire du Edgy Miley (difficult listening hour), Sunday, 15 May 2016 01:44 (ten years ago)
there's a circa '03 dance track where the sampled hook is "black ops...assassinations...coup d'etat...rigging elections..." and i wish i could remember what it was called because i would crank that shit right now.
― a basset hound (strongo hulkington's ghost dad), Sunday, 15 May 2016 01:59 (ten years ago)
― le Histoire du Edgy Miley (difficult listening hour),
the way Sutherland throws this line away = master acting class
― The burrito of ennui (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Sunday, 15 May 2016 02:03 (ten years ago)
― a basset hound (strongo hulkington's ghost dad),
We were good. Very good.
They Didn't Save Kennedy's Brain
― we can be heroes just for about 3.6 seconds (Dr Morbius), Sunday, 15 May 2016 02:26 (ten years ago)
never would have allowed all those wide-open empty windows overlooking dealy. never!
― le Histoire du Edgy Miley (difficult listening hour), Sunday, 15 May 2016 02:27 (ten years ago)
every time he goes to saigon on some fuckin fact-findin mission he comes back and just scares the shit outta the president.
― a basset hound (strongo hulkington's ghost dad), Sunday, 15 May 2016 02:31 (ten years ago)
A month before, in Dallas, UN Ambassador Adlai Stevenson was spit on and hit.
http://lastangryfan.com/wp-content/uploads/k-man1.gif
― nomar, Sunday, 15 May 2016 06:29 (ten years ago)
never would've allowed that man to open an umbrella!
― xyzzzz__, Sunday, 15 May 2016 08:42 (ten years ago)
The generals in the smoky room is like Patriarchy's finest minute!
― xyzzzz__, Sunday, 15 May 2016 08:44 (ten years ago)
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=VYmyMJ0H6DQ
― xyzzzz__, Thursday, 11 May 2017 21:51 (nine years ago)
I saw that a few months ago, I think. Is Sorensen in it?
― the Rain Man of nationalism. (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Thursday, 11 May 2017 21:57 (nine years ago)
hitchens and cockburn (still buddies at the time) both loathed jfk: cockburn went on to write some very funny stuff abt how all the conspiracy theories are garbage (and also how conspiracy theory is an intrinsically reactionary mindset), plus an excellent description of the type of comrade oswald actually was, a type anyone wd recognise from the marxist* subculture (a "trotskyite dweeb" who made an obsessive pest of himself in meetings, causing them to overrun and everyone secretly hating him; then suddenly there he was on TV and they were all frantically burning their address books and pretending they'd never met him)
*actually most cultures which require AGM's have someone like this, tho they don't always go on to shoot someone
― mark s, Thursday, 11 May 2017 22:10 (nine years ago)
Well Hitchens talks about how conspiracy theorists are a kind of democrat in this.
Is Sorensen in it?
No. Salinger (former press sec) is.
Hitchens' ability to make people completely lose it on TV is in full show here. Salinger just wanted to smash his face in.
― xyzzzz__, Thursday, 11 May 2017 22:27 (nine years ago)
democrat or Democrat?
― mark s, Thursday, 11 May 2017 22:29 (nine years ago)
democrat as in a supporter of democracy (nothing to do w/the Democratic party)
― xyzzzz__, Thursday, 11 May 2017 22:30 (nine years ago)
wait, is he pro the film or just trolling?
― mark s, Thursday, 11 May 2017 22:31 (nine years ago)
Hitchens argues his way around conspiracy theory as a viable erm activity, just doesn't like the film - mainly because it tries to show Kennedy as a white knight (and thinks the actual conspiracy depicted in jfk is bollocks)
― xyzzzz__, Thursday, 11 May 2017 22:35 (nine years ago)
btw I gotta say James Wolcott is so wrong on Mr.X scene. Its the best thing in the film and not too long at all.
idk enough about the Garrison summation, kinda lose interest by the time the trial starts.
― xyzzzz__, Thursday, 11 May 2017 22:41 (nine years ago)
ah ok -- yes actually i vaguely remember him taking a less sharp line on CT in general come to think of it, viz that it was some kind of dissident counter to Very Serious Peoplethink, which is probably the start of his slippery slope tbh
(bcz cockburn was correct on this point)
― mark s, Thursday, 11 May 2017 22:42 (nine years ago)
james wolcott is wrong about everything, it's his thing
also he's the worst writer in america
― mark s, Thursday, 11 May 2017 22:43 (nine years ago)
― The burrito of ennui (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Sunday, May 15, 2016 3:03 AM (eleven months ago) Bookmark Flag Post Permalink
otm btw
― nomar, Thursday, 11 May 2017 22:48 (nine years ago)
and I gotta read Harlot's Ghost. ffs.
xp = I found it...sorta convincing - as, well, CT as a kind of hyper-cynicism that could fucntion as keeping instituions in check. I wouldn't blame ppl for more than questioning the Warren Commission. The problem is the people who get into it are almost always...not about being a democrat and its pretty destructive in the way it operates and poisons. xxp
― xyzzzz__, Thursday, 11 May 2017 22:49 (nine years ago)
the whole movie despite being a ridiculous fiction has a very sinister and creepy edge, it crescendos with this scene and Sutherland really elevates it (compounded by the music and editing.)
― nomar, Thursday, 11 May 2017 22:50 (nine years ago)
i shd watch it in the cinema, my line on stone used to be the world's most brilliant film-maker who's also an idiot, but i liked W (and for neither of those reasons)
no one shd shut up more *talking* abt his films tho
(cockburn noted that gary oldman didn't know how to play oswald, which iirc is true and a good point)
― mark s, Thursday, 11 May 2017 22:57 (nine years ago)
Oswald is the movie's least flashy and most convincing performance -- Oldman plays him as a cipher.
― the Rain Man of nationalism. (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Thursday, 11 May 2017 22:59 (nine years ago)
Yeah, the whole mood of thing up to Mr. X is so well done - as for those 20 mins...just when you think the monologue could be losing puff (not that it even threatens to) the scenes around the Pentagon are just marvellous.
None of the commentators -- apart from maybe Wolcott -- really talk about it as a film. Everyone has their own different agenda.
― xyzzzz__, Thursday, 11 May 2017 23:00 (nine years ago)
xp to nomar
they don't talk abt it as a film bcz stone had been charging around the place announcing it was a new way of recounting history (bcz he's an idiot)
Oldman plays him as a cipher
this sounds bad not good
― mark s, Thursday, 11 May 2017 23:02 (nine years ago)
not necessarily! I'm not sure how else you would direct an actor play him. In Libra he's got modest abilities but no will, and that's how Oldman plays the part.
― the Rain Man of nationalism. (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Thursday, 11 May 2017 23:05 (nine years ago)
as for the Sutherland-DC section: most of that account of post-WWII dirty tricks is true! Young me reading about the CIA and Guatemala would hear the PEEEOWWW and Sutherland's voice as I learned about Arbenz, the Dalai Lama, the attack on Adlai Stevenson, etc.
Best use of those John Williams orchestral swells too; they sound like manipulated street traffic (JFK motorcade echoes?).
― the Rain Man of nationalism. (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Thursday, 11 May 2017 23:08 (nine years ago)
no will
this seems a weird read on who and what he was tbh: the entire story of him becoming a soviet citizen and then de-defecting suggest someone p wilful
also libra isn't very good (bcz delillo): the mailer book is much better, gives a much better sense of what a weirdo quite-smart crank-loser he was (and cockburn's "trotsykite dweeb" wd also be an interesting and historically plausible way to play him)
modest abilities
he decided to assassinate the president of america BY HIMSELF and did so
― mark s, Thursday, 11 May 2017 23:12 (nine years ago)
I prefer Mailer's book too.
tbh it's hard for me to think Kennedy was actually killed. He was shot, there were people around him, pillbox hat, LBJ, PWWWOMMMM the Vietnam War.
― the Rain Man of nationalism. (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Thursday, 11 May 2017 23:15 (nine years ago)
I think that's one reason the Sutherland/black ops stuff is so effective; fundamentally people are suckers for the truth. And the truth was (at least there) on Stone's side, Bubba.
― nomar, Thursday, 11 May 2017 23:15 (nine years ago)
garrison was the louise mensch of black ops
(not that this affects the film)
― mark s, Thursday, 11 May 2017 23:18 (nine years ago)
"Let's cast Garrison as Earl Warren then!"
― the Rain Man of nationalism. (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Thursday, 11 May 2017 23:19 (nine years ago)
james wolcott is wrong about everything, it's his thingalso he's the worst writer in america― mark s, Thursday, 11 May 2017 Bookmark Flag Post Permalink
― mark s, Thursday, 11 May 2017 Bookmark Flag Post Permalink
Lmao there is a piece by him in the LRB today!
(btw if I see a screening I'll let you know - I've never seen this in the cinema)
― xyzzzz__, Friday, 12 May 2017 18:49 (nine years ago)
haven't seen the ollie stone film since i was a teenager but the alex cockburn line on conspiracies cited above by mark s itself seems lazy and reactionary to me, ignoring all of the actual reasons ppl doubt the warren commission version of the kennedy assassination. i.e., oswald's murder by mob-connected jack ruby (ppl always say "i think oswald acted alone" as if that settled it when what they actually ought to say is the clunkier and actually-this-sounds-kinda-shady-doesn't-it line "i think oswald acted alone and i think ruby also acted alone), oswald's complete lack of a plausible motive and insistence to his dying breath that I DID NOT DO IT I AM A PATSY, which makes little sense coming from any assassin let alone a guy who supposedly did it to be famous or did it for a cause, oswald's very peculiar career involving a "defection" that may have been part of a cia operation, the endless unsolveable debates over who shot from what direction, and the HSCA's conclusion that jfk had been killed by a conspiracy. the warren commission was also basically run from behind the scenes by allen dulles, prob one of the worst americans of the 20th century. so as silly or unpersuasive as most of the conspiracy theories are it's not like there's definitely nothing there.
also cockburn's line about conspiracies seems especially lame to me given that he was a fuckin' *climate-change denialist*, literally the most dangerous type of conspiracy theorist in the world, a hundred times worse worse than every bonehead 9/11 truther put together.
― (The Other) J.D. (J.D.), Sunday, 14 May 2017 22:49 (nine years ago)
lol, clearly i felt so worked up about that i felt the need to throw in an extra "worse" for good measure
― (The Other) J.D. (J.D.), Sunday, 14 May 2017 22:50 (nine years ago)
"I extend to you, and your families, my best wishes for a happy Easter."
― omar little, Sunday, 1 April 2018 21:51 (eight years ago)