From more than eight million feet of newsreels, amateur footage, tape-recordings and more, David L. Wolper presents a priceless detailed account of the time and events surrounding the assass... Read allFrom more than eight million feet of newsreels, amateur footage, tape-recordings and more, David L. Wolper presents a priceless detailed account of the time and events surrounding the assassination of President John F. Kennedy.From more than eight million feet of newsreels, amateur footage, tape-recordings and more, David L. Wolper presents a priceless detailed account of the time and events surrounding the assassination of President John F. Kennedy.
- Nominated for 1 Oscar
- 1 win & 1 nomination total
- Self
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- (as Mrs. John Connally)
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- (as Richard Cardinal Cushing)
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- Director
- Writer
- All cast & crew
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Featured reviews
It speaks about the tragedy from the first day President Kennedy and his wife arrive in Texas, till the sad day of his burial.
The movie is very well narrated and it makes you feel almost like if we were there at that moment.
We can see all the speeches that JFK did until the morning of his assassination, showing a man with a great sense of humor. It's too bad that he left so early. He looked like a great person even if it wasn't the same advice for everyone.
At any rate, it's a great period piece, a product of its immediate era.
While it's just a compilation of footage and doesn't address anything controversial (e.g., Oswald is presumed "guilty") it's a poignant time capsule, with its noble-tragic tone -- managing to be touchingly doom-riddled and yet somehow ice cold.
It couldn't be anything else.
This film is a no-miss and if you get a chance to see it on History Channel, better yet, as they interview the director during the breaks.
*** (out of 4)
Oscar-nominated documentary taking a look at the four days in November where the country changed forever. I've watch dozens of documentaries on Kennedy and several just this past week on the 50th Anniversary of the president's assassination. I was rather late coming to see this popular film and even though I've seen quite a few there was still countless bits of footage that I had never seen before. I think what really makes this documentary stand apart is that it was made less than a year after the assassination so needless to say there's all sorts of footage that just typically doesn't get shown today. I think some of the most interesting moments deal with the moments right after the assassination when people were just hanging on to see whether or not the president was going to survive his wounds. The aftermath of course is another thing and it's interesting to note that hints of a conspiracy theory on displayed here and a couple of them would later be used in Oliver Stone's JFK. There's no doubt that history buffs will want to check this thing out because there's simply so much news footage that you really get a great idea of what it was like, television wise, when this happened. I will say that the film feels a tad bit long when watched today and it's also a bit too dry and at times lingers on. Still, there's no question that all the news footage makes this one worth checking out.
Did you know
- TriviaThe film's home-video sleeve notes declare that this film was produced "from more than 8,000,000 feet of professional newsreel and amateur footage, stills, snapshots and tape recordings."
- GoofsThe narration states that school in Dallas had been let out for the day to enable children to see the President's motorcade. This did not happen, as the school district was debating what to do with early release after the assassination and finally determined that the school buses would run at the regular times that afternoon.
- Quotes
Himself - Narrator: There are only two occasions when the cannon of the military district of Washington fire a 50 gun salute to the nation; Each 4th of July to celebrate the country's birth and after the death of a President of the United States.
- ConnectionsEdited from ABC Close-Up!: Adventures on the New Frontier (1961)
- SoundtracksIn the Summer Of His Years
Performed by Millicent Martin
Details
- Release date
- Country of origin
- Official site
- Language
- Also known as
- 4 Days in November
- Filming locations
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- See more company credits at IMDbPro
- Runtime2 hours 2 minutes
- Color
- Sound mix
- Aspect ratio
- 1.66 : 1