First
mass school shooting of TV age recounted in 'Tower'
movie
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[March 19, 2016]
By Jon Herskovitz
AUSTIN, Texas (Reuters) - To tell the story of the first
mass school shooting of the television era, filmmaker
Keith Maitland interspersed his new documentary with
animation so students of today could emotionally enter
into a slaughter 50 years ago in Austin.
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The movie called "Tower" premiered this week at the South by
Southwest, or SXSW, film festival in Austin, blocks from where
Charles Whitman climbed a clock tower at the University of Texas
in 1966 and unleashed 90 minutes of terror by shooting more than
40 people with a sniper rifle from one of the highest spots in
the Texas capital.
"We chose to do animation because this film needs to speak, the
story needs to be explored, by young audiences. It is high
school and college kids who live under the threat of this kind
of violence every day," Maitland told the audience after a
screening on Monday.
The film was the Grand Jury winner for documentary features at
SXSW.
The Texas shooting in which Whitman killed 16 people before
being fatally shot by police was considered one of the seminal
events of the era and shook the country.
For the survivors and family members of victims of the Austin
rampage, the carnage from mass shootings that now seem to play
out almost weekly in the United States serves as a reminder that
no one has found a way to halt the violence.
"I feel that no lessons have been learned," said John "Artly"
Fox, then a 17-year-old student who crossed one of the killing
fields to help pull a pregnant woman shot by Whitman to safety.
"It seems to me that Whitman, as disturbed as he was, gave a
template of action to other disturbed minds," Fox told Reuters
this week, nearly 50 years after the event.
"Tower" uses animation, black-and-white footage from the event
and full-color interviews to relive tales of the survivors and
bereaved families. Maitland steered the movie away from Whitman,
a 25-year-old former Marine who brought a cache of weapons to
the tower's observation deck about 250 feet (76 meters) in the
air.
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'IT NEVER STOPS'
In animation where they appear as their characters' younger selves,
the voices of actors speak in words used by the protagonists, such
as former Austin police officer Houston McCoy, one of the three
officers and one civilian who climbed the tower to confront Whitman.
"I realized something is happening that I ain't ever seen before," a
voice actor portraying McCoy said in an animation.
Along with McCoy who was armed with a shotgun, Ramiro Martinez,
another of the officers, turned a corner on top of the tower armed
only with his service revolver to take on Whitman.
Martinez, in real life, speaks about changes since then in helping
police and students better react to active shooters. He also
reflects on the unrelenting spate of carnage.
"The cycle just keeps on going. It never stops," he said in remarks
filmed at a law enforcement training class.
A new monument to the victims is due to be unveiled at the
university on the shooting's 50th anniversary on Aug. 1.
That is also the day a new law backed by the state's Republican
leaders goes into effect that will allow students with concealed
handgun permits to bring firearms into classrooms.
(Reporting by Jon Herskovitz; Editing by Jill Serjeant and Peter
Cooney)
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