Streaming 12 Angry Men Online
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Streaming 12 Angry Men Online.
Movie Title: 12 Angry Men 12 Angry Men is available for streaming or downloading. |
1 amazing script
12 talented actors
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lots of emotion
1 very simple set
no special effects
Produce under first-rate direction. Serves millions.
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Seriously, this film is a masterpiece. A jury has to determine a seemingly launch and shut case of a young man (who, as with most of the jurors, remains nameless throughout the film) who has been accused of murdering his father in a fit of infuriate. The evidence couldn’t be clearer that this guy did it. Slay weapon, motive, eyewitness testimony all in dwelling.
One juror (Fonda) however, wants to talk the case out. He’s not 100% convinced that the guy is guilty. And so it begins. An emotional roller coaster follows as we learn about the jurors, their reasons for voting as they do and how (or if) they are forced to re-evaluate the evidence.
Part of the charm of this film is it’s starkness. 99% of the film takes situation in one room; the jury room, a simple area consisting of cramped more than a table, 12 chairs, some windows and a fan.
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The best portion, I hold, is the character development of the jurors. When the movie begins, they are honest 12 anonymous characters. Even though none of the jurors are named in the movie (two are in the very last scene, after the case is over) by the time the movie is over, you feel as if you know and understand every one of them.
Truly a noteworthy film and well worth repeated viewings.
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Having recently had a jury duty experience that was equally as contentious as the one depicted in “Twelve Wrathful Men,” I found this film though-provoking, and one that maintains its interest because of the taut, well written script (by Reginald Rose, based on his play for TV), and some of the finest character actors of mid-20th century cinema, and though Henry Fonda was a broad star when this was made in 1957, he blends in to be section of what is essentially an ensemble acting part.
Practically the entire film is location in the single jury room, on a hot and humid day, with these twelve incredibly diverse men, and shows how their backgrounds color how they approach at their conclusions. Truth is very elusive in this case, and it’s a matter of questioning if there is “reasonable doubt.”
There are many things that point out how times have changed in 50 years; it has been decades since a jury would be chosen that would only consist of white men, and a few years since a table fat of ashtrays with cigarette butts would be allowed, but the basic truths remain the same, and if one places twelve strangers to arrive to a verdict in a difficult case, tempers are going to flare. The hot head in this film is Juror # 3, Lee J. Cobb, who sees the events through the lens of his relationship with his son, and he gives a fiery performance, but each actor has a lot to contribute to the success of this film.
This was the first feature film in Sidney Lumet’s long career, and he was nominated for a Best Director Oscar; the film was also nominated for Best Represent and Best Adapted Screenplay, but lost in all three categories to David Lean’s “Bridge on the River Kwai.” Lumet was to work with Fonda again in ’64 with the riveting chilly war thriller (and my popular Lumet film) “Fail-Safe,” which also had in its cast Juror # 6, Ed Binns.
Total running time is 96 minutes.
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