Director: Joel Schumacher
Genre: Thriller/
Drama/ Crime
Runtime: 129
minutes
Year: 1996
Starring: Matthew
McConaughey, Samuel L. Jackson, Sandra Bulloc, Kiefer Sutherland, Donald
Sutherland, Oliver Platt, Ashley Judd, Kevin Spacey, Charles S. Dutton, Chris
Cooper, Beth Grant
Description: In Clanton,
Mississippi, a fearless young lawyer (Matthew McConaughey) defends a black man
(Samuel L. Jackson) accused of murdering two white men who raped his
ten-year-old daughter, inciting violent retribution and revenge from the Lu
Klux Klan.
Review: When Carl Lee hailey’s 10-year-old daughter is brutally abused by two
racist white men, something snaps inside him. The men will be tried in the usual
way, but Carl Lee fears they will be released very soon. According to him,
there is only one thing to do: take the law into his won hands. So he kills the
two men and is arrested by the police. A trial will have to decide whether and
how Carl Lee should be punished. As a lawyer, Carl Lee hires the inexperienced
Jake Brigance. He must go up against top lawyer Rufus Buckley. Fortunately,
Jake gets help from ambitious Ellen Roark. The trial is the subject of many
demonstrations: the Ku Klux Klan calls for prosecution, while the black
community pleads for release.
When it comes to courtroom
thrillers, author John Grisham is one of the best-known writers. Over the
years, numerous of Grisham’s books have been adapted for film.
The story is very clear in
who are the good guys and who are the bad guys. The charismatic underdog
against the cynical veteran: anyone who has every read anything by Grisham has
a clue as to who will win. On thing is certain: because of the complicated
issue is portrayed as black and white, it does make it all nice and easy to get
along with. And it’s very easy to sympathize with the main character.
A good script is essential
here, but a good cast is just as important to deliver it with credibility.
Matthew McConaughey, Samuel L. Jackson and Kevin Spacey are all fantastic in
their respective roles, as are Sandra Bullock, Kiefer Sutherland and Donald
Sutherland in smaller roles. I believe that the final plead and that ending are
a bit too dramatic for my taste, but work well as tear-jerking moments.
A film that doesn’t have a
dull moment in it.
Rating: 4/
5
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