‘JFK’ (1991) – Interview:
In 1992, Oliver Stone was interviewed by ITN's Fiona Murch on his new film, JFK, and his belief that the assassination of US President John F Kennedy was the result of a conspiracy at the
In 1992, Oliver Stone was interviewed by ITN's Fiona Murch on his new film, JFK, and his belief that the assassination of US President John F Kennedy was the result of a conspiracy at the
In 1991, JFK did not merely reopen a murder case — it reopened an epistemological wound in American culture. Directed by Oliver Stone, the film presents the assassination of President John F. Kennedy not as a tragic historical
When Oliver Stone released JFK in 1991, he did more than revive public interest in the assassination of President John F. Kennedy. He fundamentally reshaped how millions of Americans understood one of the most studied events in modern history.
When JFK premiered in December 1991, it was not just another historical drama. It arrived at a moment of national uncertainty and cultural transition — and detonated a new era of mainstream skepticism about American institutions. Blending
In 1991, director Oliver Stone released JFK, a sweeping, confrontational epic that challenged Americans to reconsider one of the most traumatic moments in modern history: the assassination of John F. Kennedy. Blending courtroom drama, investigative journalism, and experimental montage,