
JFK Footage Revealed
The Long-Withheld Orville Nix Film
Of JFK Assassination Is Released In Dallas
(The
second most important footage of the assassination)

by Mike Crissey, The Associated Press, November 22, 2000
D A L L A S, Nov. 22 The second most important footage of the
assassination of John F. Kennedy has been made available to the public
exactly 37 years after his presidency abruptly ended in a hail of bullets.
About 200 people crowded into the Texas Book Depository Building on
Tuesday to watch the 24½-second film recorded Nov. 22, 1963,
by Orville Nix Sr
.
The footage is the only known motion picture of the assassination that
also shows part of the grassy knoll, the area where speculation about
a second gunmen persists.
Filmed from the south curb of Houston Street and the northwest corner
of Main Street, the footage contains three scenes: the motorcade entering
Dealey Plaza, the last shot of the assassination in front of the grassy
knoll, and the panic and confusion afterward.
The most well-known frames of the film show Jackie Kennedy climbing
over the trunk of the presidential limousine, scrambling to pick up
pieces of the presidents shattered skull, and Secret Service agent
Clint Hill climbing onto the trunk.
Vital Evidence
The Nix film is considered by historians and other experts to be the
second most important piece of footage because it was filmed from the
opposite angle of the Abraham Zapruder film and shows what was going
on behind Zapruder in the grassy knoll. In Nixs film, Zapruder
can be seen in a few frames.
Nix donated a first-generation copy and the copyright to the color home
movie to The Sixth Floor Museum at Dealey Plaza. The 8 mm camera is
also on display at the museum.
One of the things we hope for the Nix film is that as technology
advances ... hopefully we can find something, said Jeff West,
executive director of the museum.
Nixs son, Orville Nix Jr., told viewers his fathers film
was largely happenstance and took so long to reach the public partly
because the family wanted to keep their privacy.
He loved that camera, he was always taking pictures of things
and this was something that just happened, Nix said of his father,
who died in 1972. It was a sad thing to see.
Now, I want people to see and draw their own conclusions, it is
part of history, he said.
Original Missing
At the time of the investigation, the FBI used the Nix film to study
the assassination and the Warren Commission reproduced six frames. Portions
of the film were used in Oliver Stones 1991 movie JFK.
Museum officials said the location of the original film is unknown.
United Press International purchased it in December 1963, but when UPI
returned the copyright to the Nix family along with several duplicates
of the film the original was missing.
The Nix images were included with footage by Tina Towner Barnes, who
also filmed the motorcade, and Malcolm Couch, who rode behind the president
as a photographer for Dallas TV station WFAA.
Some of those who attended the invitation-only screening said it gave
them a firsthand glimpse of a tragedy many people remember but didnt
witness.
Many of us only had the radio to initially tell us about the event,
the films gave me a different perspective of the assassination,
said Mary Katherine Maddox, 65.
Source:
http://abcnews.go.com/sections/us/DailyNews/jfkfootage001122.html
Related Site: http://john-f-kennedy.net/abrahamzapruderfilm.htm
At this site you can view the complete Zapruder film.
Marie
Muchmore Film Restored: http://www.john-f-kennedy.net/mariemuchmorefilm.htm
JFK
Oliver
Stone's self-proclaimed "countermyth," JFK mocks the doubtful
veracity of the Warren Commission's findings on the Kennedy
assassination and summmarizes some of the myriad theories
that have been proposed in its stead. Focusing on the investigation
by New Orleans district attorney Jim Garrison into the activities
of the FBI and other government agencies as well as their
attempted cover-ups, Stone weaves fact and speculation into
a compelling argument for the reopening of the case files.
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