Despite the film's pro-Stones bias, Selvin notes that the . It would have been impossible to alter the film in such a way as to depict the movement of the head as being anything other than what it was. Marilyn recalled that the noise woke them out of their shocked trance. It seemed everyone had the same idea. Twyman continues: "I called Mr. Coburn and he told me that his optical printers in those days could certainly capture all of the information on 8mm film, between the sprocket holes and even beyond the edges of the film if one wanted. counts among the top reads on the JFKA & Vol.IV contains his work on Zapruder's film over the assassination weekend. On November 22, 1963, Abraham Zapruder shot what has become the most famous home movie of all time: a chilling 26-second snippet of film depicting the assassination of President John F. Kennedy . He had open ties to the CIA. Jackies right wrist hovers at the edge of the trunk, and her hand seems to have reached the handhold. Senator Ralph Yarborough ( D-Texas ), who was riding two cars behind Kennedy, was interviewed by Geraldo Rivera in 1975. Here, his granddaughter details exactly what happened on . Were they all suffering from the same mass hallucination ? . everybody was laying flat on the ground almost. These frames are significant because it is within these frames that the Warren Commission said the first shot was fired. Hearst Magazine Media, Inc. All Rights Reserved. The underlined statements may be true. [28], The Orville Nix film had the same technology applied to it. The car dips into the lower part of the camera frame, and as the president's body sinks down in the car toward his wife, the fatal shot strikes him. (1 HSCA 42). The Nix film shows far less detail because it was taken at a distance. 'Parkland' review: Looking back at JFK assassination Bystander Phillip L. Willis said, The shot caused me to squeeze the camera shutter, and I got a picture of the President as he was hit with the first shot. Mary Moorman and James Altgens, their cameras loaded with black-and-white film, were positioned near the curb across the street from where Abe was standing. I heard a noise from my right rear, which to me seemed to be a firecracker. The Altgens photo shows that Clint Hill still has not jumped off the running board. This week on "Sunday Morning" (April 30) - CBS News Volume 18 of the commission's hearings reproduced 158 frames from the Zapruder film in black and white.