Tower

The 1966 University of Texas clock tower shooting ought to be a footnote in American history and not a reference point for contemporary national woes. That Tower, documentary filmmaker Keith Maitland’s animated chronicle-cum-reenactment of that massacre, should feel as relevant and of the moment as it does, then, is startling, or perhaps just disheartening. It was 50 years ago this past August that Charles Whitman ascended the university tower with a cache of guns, killed three people inside, and went on to kill another 11 plus an unborn baby over the course of an hour and a half. Back in those days, a public act of violence on this level was an anomaly piercing the veil of our sense of security. Today, it’s just Sunday.
Orlando, Roanoke, Fort Myers and Houston, among far too many others, are the tragedies we contend with today, but in 1966 in Austin, Whitman arguably wrote the urtext for the modern mass-shooting culture Americans have numbed themselves to, one gun-facilitated incident after another. Whitman wasn’t the first person to rain death on unsuspecting people going about their daily routine—Howard Unruh has him beat by just under two decades—but his actions maintain their infamy regardless. Tower wraps the horror Whitman wrought in a rich, rotoscoped blanket, the vibrancy of Maitland’s palette lending urgency and vitality to the horror he and his cast recreate on screen. You could call it sensational. You could call it exploitative. You could also be wrong. Bucking convention isn’t the same thing as profiteering.
Besides, Tower is invested in its primary sources. They’re an essential component of Maitland’s production, “they’re” translating to “survivors of the shooting,” whom the audience first becomes acquainted with through surrogacy. Maitland has assembled an ensemble comprised of mostly unknown actors (for context, Violett Beane and Chris Doubek are probably the highest-profile performers of the bunch) to bring the shooting to life, such as it is, and alongside his troupe he has collected the people who lived through it, including Claire Wilson (Beane), the first victim of Whitman’s rampage (her baby was the second) and John “Artly” Fox (Séamus Bolivar-Ochoa), a UT student who helped pull Wilson to safety as she lay bleeding on the ground beside her dead fiancé, Thomas Eckman.