I really wanted to see Selma, but it was out of theatres before I was gearing up for my annual Oscarpalooza film watching, the one time of year I go to the movies a lot and without Graham. Actually, almost everything was out of the theatres this year, so I don't have much to go on.
On the other hand, I have studied a lot about the Civil Rights Movement. JFK wasn't particularly interested; it was Bobby who pushed for him to call Coretta Scott King when MLK was in jail, because Bobby cared more and was able to make an argument about how it would play. When LBJ became President, he used a lot of "we must pass this for our fallen leader!" to get Civil Rights legislation passed, but it was mostly a line. Some years before, all Southern congressmen but three signed a document against integration and equal rights for blacks. Those three were Al Gore, Sr., Estes Kefauver, and Lyndon Johnson.
When he signed the Voting Rights Act, he said, "This will lose us [the Democratic Party] the South for a generation." But he did it anyway.