This is showing in NYC (Film Forum) next week and I am debating whether to see it or not. I am a student of history, and one of the most worthless debates/arguments to engage in are those that deal with counterfactuals and historical conjecture and what-ifs. The only reason I am entertaining the notion of seeing this is because many speculate that JFK was killed because he didn't want the war in Vietnam and would have ended it in his second term. If one even recognizes this as a possibility as the reasoning behind his death, it assumes that there was "historical" guesswork (then: prediction) being done, and that there might have been enough evidence at the time to point to this assertion. That is why I feel this documentary of historical guesswork might not be 100% BS.VIRTUAL JFK investigates one of the most debated "what if" scenarios in the history of U.S. foreign policy: What would President John F. Kennedy have done in Vietnam if he had not been assassinated in 1963, and had he been re-elected in 1964? The film employs what Harvard historian Niall Ferguson calls "virtual history," assessing the plausibility of counterfactuals - "what ifs" - and the outcomes they might have produced. The heart of the film deals with the question: Does it matter who is president on issues of war and peace?
Anyone else interested in this film?
As I tried to infer above, if not successfully, I can completely understand why someone would not have any interest in this, as I agree historical what-ifs are useless.