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Trial film

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Genre

Trial film is asubgenre of thelegal/courtroom drama that encompasses films that are centered on acivil orcriminaltrial, typically atrial by jury.[1][2]

The trial genre differs from the broader courtroom drama in that the latter includes any film in which ajustice system plays an integral role in the film's narrative, and thus does not necessarily require the inclusion of a legal trial.[2]

Notable films

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In 1989, theAmerican Bar Association rated the 12 best trial films of all time in theirABA Journal, providing a detailed and reasoned legal evaluation for its choices. Ten of the films are in English;M (1931) is in German andThe Passion of Joan of Arc (1928) is a French silent film. Moreover, ten of them take place (at least, in part) in a courtroom.[3]

In 2008, theAmerican Film Institute compiled its own "courtroom drama" top-ten list, five films of which were also on the ABA list.[2]

The ABA also published a list of the 12 best trial stageplays, noting that the transition from film to the stage is sometimes difficult. It also has an extensive honorable mention list.[4]

TitleRelease yearTop ten list[2][3]Notes
12 Angry Men1957American Bar Association (ABA);

American Film Institute (AFI)

Nominated for 3Academy Awards.[2]
A Cry in the Dark1988AFINominated for an Academy Award, based on a real trial.
A Few Good Men1992AFICourt-martial
A Man for All Seasons1966ABA and AFINominated for 8 Academy Awards, winning 6.[2] Based on a real trial.
In Cold Blood1967AFINominated for 4 Academy Awards. Based on a real trial.
Anatomy of a Murder1959ABA and AFINominated for 7 Academy Awards. Based on a real trial.[2]
Inherit the Wind1960ABA and AFINominated for 4 Academy Awards. Based on a real trial.
Judgment at Nuremberg1961ABANominated for 11 Academy Awards, winning 2. Based on areal trial.
Kramer vs. Kramer1979AFINominated for 9 Academy Awards, winning 5 of them.
M1931ABA
Paths of Glory1957ABABased on a real court-martial.
The Passion of Joan of Arc1928ABABased on a real trial.
The Trial1962ABA
The Wrong Man1957ABABased on a real trial.
To Kill a Mockingbird1962ABA and AFINominated for 8 Academy Awards, winning 3.[2]
The Verdict1982ABA and AFINominated for 5 Academy Awards.[2]
Witness for the Prosecution1957AFINominated for 6 Academy Awards.

Varieties

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Aside from the first few minutes of the film,12 Angry Men (1957) does not take place in a courtroom. It views the particular case and the system of justice through the prism ofjury deliberations. The film explains practical explications of legal concepts basic to the American system of justice, and their effect on a particular trial and defendant. Those include thepresumption of innocence,burden of proof, and the requirement of proofbeyond a reasonable doubt.[3]

The trial inM (1931) does not take place in a legal courtroom; rather, crime syndicate leaders along with the city's underground hold proceedings in a warehouse. Despite the lack of legal trappings, "it is one of the most effective trials ever filmed, questioning our notions of justice and revenge,mob rule and order, power and responsibility." Wearing long leather coats instead of robes, criminals become judges. The murderer is cast as the victim, while the forces of law and order must rely on luck.Peter Lorre strikingly raises the issue of his culpability due to alleged insanity, and the imposition of ultimate retributive justice is depicted as being unsatisfying for society and the survivors of the murdered victims.[3]

Courtroom films are typicallydramas, but there have been severalcomedy films centering around trials, includingAdam's Rib,My Cousin Vinny, andLegally Blonde.

Military trial films

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Themilitary trial film is a subtype of the trial genre that focuses on military trials (i.e.,court-martial).[1][2]

They typically include conflicting questions of loyalty, command responsibility, ethical rules and rules of engagement, obedience to superior authority, politics and class conflict.War and trials are good foils for one another. The struggles are perennial and engaging. A partial list includes:

TitleRelease yearDescription
The Caine Mutiny[5]1954climaxes in a strongly contested court martial, and a particularly dynamiccross-examination, in whichCaptain Queeg (Humphrey Bogart) acts out one of film's most dramatic meltdowns.[6] The film was nominated for 7Academy Awards.
Paths of Glory1957black and white depiction of a corruptWorld War I French court martial leading to a firing squad, and a 'futility of war' conclusion. It was directed byStanley Kubrick, starringKirk Douglas as the failed defense attorney.
Town Without Pity1961Dimitri Tiomkin andNed Washington were nominated for anAcademy Award for the theme song, "Town Without Pity", which was sung byGene Pitney.
King and Country1964In the trenches in France duringWorld War I, a British captain (Dirk Bogarde) has to defend ashell-shocked private (Tom Courtenay), who is charged with desertion. The film was directed byJoseph Losey.
Breaker Morant1980a court martial ofAustralian soldiers, includingHarry 'Breaker' Morant, by their British commanders in the aftermath of theBoer War inSouth Africa. The film details the tribulations of the defense counsel and the defendants, as they try to throw a wrench into the administrative gears ofMorant's court martial. Anticipating theNuremberg trials and the defense of "superior orders", the soldiers' main defense is that they were doing their duty as they understood it, and following orders and policy from above. Nevertheless, this "kangaroo court" moves to its inevitable conclusion.[7] The film was nominated for an Academy Award.
A Few Good Men1992released after the ABA's list was compiled, the film contains the famous "You can't handle the truth" exchange.[8] The film was adapted from a Broadway play written byAaron Sorkin (who also wrote the screenplay), and acted byTom Cruise,Demi Moore andJack Nicholson.
Rules of Engagement2000Marine Colonel Terry Childers (Samuel L. Jackson) is brought to court-martial on charges of disobeying therules of engagement in a military incident at an American embassy inYemen, with flashbacks toVietnam.
Shaurya2008aHindi-language film based on the backdrop of theKashmir conflict, and directed by Samar Khan starringRahul Bose andKay Kay Menon in lead roles.
Melvilasom2011aMalayalam-language film based on Soorya Krishna Moorthy's stage play of the same name, which itself was based on the playCourt Martial bySwadesh Deepak.
American Traitor: The Trial of Axis Sally2021It is based on the life ofMildred Gillars, an American singer and actor who during World War II broadcast Nazi propaganda to US troops and their families back home.

Religious trial films

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Historical trial films

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Historical trial films are noted for frequently taking dramatic liberties with historical accounts for the purposes of simplifying the storyline, exaggerating dramatic effects, or pressing a point with the audience.

Comedies

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  • Judge Priest, a 1934Will Rogers comedy directed byJohn Ford.
  • Roxie Hart, 1942 comedy directed byWilliam Wellman.
  • InMiracle on 34th Street (1947) Kris Kringle (Edmund Gwenn) has his sanity examined at a hearing. The film won 4 Academy Awards, with Gwenn winning for Best Actor in a Supporting Role. The film was also nominated for Best Picture.
  • Adam's Rib, a 1949 comedy directed byGeorge Cukor.
  • Divorce Italian Style, a 1961 comedy-drama film directed byPietro Germi.
  • Kibar Feyzo (1978) is a Turkish comedy drama film starringKemal Sunal,Şener Şen,Müjde Ar,Adile Naşit,İhsan Yüce,İlyas Salman andErdal Özyağcılar.[10]
  • From the Hip (1987) is a Comedy Drama starringJudd Nelson,Elizabeth Perkins,John Hurt, andRay Walston about a first year lawyer manipulating his way into trying a case much earlier in his career than is normal. Much of the humor took place in the first case, a simple assault case in which he garnered significant media attention and developed a high profile for himself and attention to his firm. The more dramatic second case was a murder case which tested the young attorney's ethics.
  • A Fish Called Wanda, a 1988 heist comedy film following a gang of diamond thieves who double-cross one another to recover stolen diamonds hidden by their jailed leader. In an effort to locate the diamonds, one of the thieves seduces the barrister defending the leader.
  • My Cousin Vinny, a 1992 comedy film about an inexperiencedpersonal injury lawyer who is hired to represent his cousin and the cousin's friend, who have been put on trial for a murder they did not commit.
  • Liar Liar, a 1997 American satirical fantasy comedy film starring Jim Carrey as a lawyer who built his entire career on lying but finds himself cursed to speak only the truth for a single day.
  • Legally Blonde, a 2001 American romantic comedy film about a sorority girl who attempts to win back her ex-boyfriend by following him to Harvard Law School, culminating in her defending a fellow sorority member on trial for murder.
  • Chicago, a 2002 satirical musical comedy film adapted from the1975 stage musical of the same name, centered on the fictional cause célèbre trial of a woman who killed her paramour.

Other examples

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  • A Passage to India, a 1984 film set in colonial India: a doctor is wrongly accused of a sexual assault by an English newcomer

See also

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References

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  1. ^abRafter, Nicole. 2001. "American Criminal Trial Films: An Overview of Their Development, 1930–2000".Journal of Law and Society 28(1):9–24.JSTOR 3657944.
  2. ^abcdefghij"American Film Institute, Court Room drama top ten". 2008. RetrievedAugust 16, 2015.
  3. ^abcd"Verone, Patric M. "The 12 Best Trial Movies" from theABA Journal. November 1989 reprinted inNebraska Law Journal".
  4. ^Chanen, Jill Schachner (August 1, 2012)."The Theater's 12 Greatest Courtroom Dramas".ABA Journal. RetrievedJuly 27, 2012.
  5. ^From the 1951Pulitzer Prize winning novelThe Caine Mutiny byHerman Wouk,ISBN 0-89577-414-3
  6. ^"Review noting Captain Queeg cross examination".
  7. ^"'Breaker' Morant, A film review by Christopher Null".
  8. ^Excerpt of cross examination inA Few Good Men.
  9. ^Pallister, David (19 October 1999)."An injustice that still reverberates".The Guardian. Retrieved12 July 2011.
  10. ^"Kemal Sunal all films" (in Turkish). RetrievedOctober 25, 2014.
  11. ^Variety film review; 16 November 1977, p. 21.
  12. ^"The Last Wave". Creative Spirits. Retrieved15 April 2013.
  13. ^"Apollo Guide Review "And Justice for All" by Norman Webster".
  14. ^Leib, Brenden (2018-01-31)."The Top Ten Trial Movies of All Time - Leib Knott Gaynor LLC".Leib Knott Gaynor. Retrieved2021-03-12.
  15. ^"Runaway Jury (2003) Film Review; Courtroom Confrontation With Lots of Star Power"The New York Times

Further reading

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External links

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