Product Description
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November 22nd, 1963 was a day that changed the world
forever – when young American President John F. Kennedy was
assassinated in Dallas, Texas. We follow in almost real time a
handful of individuals forced to make split-second decisions
after this incomprehensible event that would change their lives
and forever alter our world’s landscape: the young doctors and
nurses at Parkland Hospital, the chief of the Dallas Secret
Service, the unwitting cameraman who captured what has become the
most watched and examined film in history, the FBI Agents who had
man Lee Harvey Oswald within their grasp and Vice President
Lyndon Johnson who had to take control of a country in a moment’s
notice. Thrust into a scenario of unprecedented drama with
unimaginable consequences, these key characters respond with
shock, outrage, determination and courage. Woven together, their
seemingly disparate perspectives make one of the most thrilling
and powerful stories never told. From producers Tom Hanks and
Gary Goetzman and writer/director Peter Landesman, Parkland is
the true story behind a tragic day in history you thought you
knew, but didn’t, and couldn’t, until now… 50 years later.
.com
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The assassination of President John F. Kennedy has
inspired a ain of speculative dissections and re-creations,
most notably Oliver Stone's propulsive conspiracy grab-bag JFK.
The measured Parkland serves as a polar site to Stone's
earlier historical frenzy, delivering an admirably clear-eyed
look at the events that occurred. Taking its title from the
Dallas county hospital, it downplays the How and Why in favor of
the actual What, detailing the bystanders and onlookers whose
lives were forever changed on 11/22/63. Inspired by Vincent
Bugliosi's book Recling History, writer-director Peter
Landesman begins with the chaos of Dealey Plaza and then expands
outward, assuming the viewpoints of those caught in the traumatic
wake, including the determined hospital workers (Zac Efron and
Marcia Gay Harden), an amateur photographer (Paul Giamatti as a
terrifically twitchy Abraham Zapruder), and a dogged FBI agent
(Ron Livingston) haunted by his prior knowledge of the assassin's
identity. Landesman, a former journalist making his directorial
debut, does a commendable job in juggling the multiple
characters, although the sheer a of information on display
does admittedly give the film a dry, procedural air at times.
(Thank goodness for Billy Bob Thornton, as Secret Service Agent
Forrest Sorrels, who kicks things back into high gear with a
rousing, ear-popping outburst.) Historical fidelity aside, the
best reason to see Parkland belongs to the great character actor
James Badge Dale, who gives a devastatingly naturalistic
performance as Lee Harvey Oswald's brother Robert, an ordinary
man all too aware of the catastrophic events unfolding around
him. He can see the future, and his family's place in it.
--Andrew Wright
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Review
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A film both somber and melodramatic that should be seen
especially by the majority of Americans - those who were not even
born at the time of the JFK assassination --Harvey S Karten,
Compuserve
The film is engrossing, quietly revelatory, and often profoundly
moving as it retells a story we only thought we knew. --Stephen
Farber, Hollywood Reporter
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