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60 Years after JFK's Assassination Fading Memories and a Legacy Forgotten
DOWN IN DALLAS TOWN From JFK to K2
Streaming Premiere on President's Day February 19, 2024
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Down in Dallas Town is a startling film about the shifting terrain of
public memory sixty years after the murder of John F. Kennedy. Through interviews with people on the street and songs recorded to memorialize JFK in the mid-1960s, the film explores the impact of the assassination on issues in today’s world, from lingering conspiracy theories to the proliferation of gun violence, homelessness, and the scourge of K2.
Personal narratives are juxtaposed with the sentiments articulated in blues, gospel, norteño, and calypso recordings to haunting affect. Especially poignant is the account of Mary Ann Moorman, who returns to the assassination site fifty years later and details the making of her Polaroid photograph of the fatal head shot that killed JFK as the motorcade passed through Dealey Plaza. This resonant new film by Alan Govenar confronts ways we come to terms with the past through the power of storytelling, image-making, and a songbook that is
largely unknown.
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"A gripping portrayal of how JFK's legacy still reverberates
through the streets of modern-day Dallas and beyond." -Chris Jones, Overly Honest Movie Reviews
"A haunting portrait of the lingering trauma that pervades the streets of Dallas." -Ben Friedman, Highbrow Magazine
"Beautifully crafted with sensitivity and intelligence."
-Andrea Chase, Killer Movie Reviews
"Down in Dallas Town is an illuminating documentary that delves into the memory of Kennedy, the art of photography and music, the struggles of homelessness, and the prevalence of gun violence…the mixture of perspectives makes for a riveting and emotionally powerful experience."
-Andrew Stover, Film Threat
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DOWN IN DALLAS TOWN
A film by Alan Govenar 73 minutes | color | 2023 Featuring Mary Ann Moorman Krahmer, Brian Wallis, Guido van Rijn, Gerald Williams, Alisa Flores, Baldo Flores, Renee Joseph Hall, Dorothy Elliott, Bruce
Elliott and more
Begins Streaming on Amazon on February 19, 2024
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About Filmmaker Alan
Govenar
Alan Govenar is an award-winning writer, poet, playwright, photographer, and filmmaker. He is director of Documentary Arts, a non-profit organization he founded to advance essential perspectives on historical issues and diverse cultures.
Govenar is a Guggenheim Fellow and the author of more than thirty books, including Boccaccio in the Berkshires, Paradise in the Smallest Thing, Lightnin’ Hopkins, Untold Glory, Texas Blues, Stompin’ at the Savoy, Everyday Music, Texas in Paris, and A Pillow on the Ocean of Time. His book Osceola: Memories of a Sharecropper’s Daughter won First Place in the New York Book Festival (Children’s Non-Fiction), a Boston Globe-Hornbook Honor; and an Orbis Pictus Honor from the National Council of Teachers of English.
Govenar’s film, Stoney Knows How, based on his book by the same title about Old School tattoo artist Leonard St. Clair, was shown at the Museum of Modern Art in New York and the Centre Georges Pompidou in Paris and was selected as an Outstanding Film of the Year by the London Film Festival. His documentaries The Beat Hotel, Master Qi and the Monkey King, You Don’t Need Feet to Dance, Tattoo Uprising, Extraordinary Ordinary
People, Myth of a Colorblind France and Looking for Home are distributed by First Run Features.
Govenar’s theatrical works include the musicals Blind Lemon: Prince of Country Blues, Blind Lemon Blues, Lonesome Blues (with Akin Babatundé), Texas in Paris, and Stompin’ at the Savoy.
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