Film Review
Director Sidney Lumet made his stunning big screen debut with this
superbly crafted adaptation of Reginald Rose's 1954 television
play. By the time he made
12
Angry Men, Lumet had almost a decade of work in television under
his belt, before which he had cut his teeth directing plays in
off-Broadway theatres. Lumet was by no means a novice but a
seasoned hand when he entered a film studio for the first time and
started work on what would be a landmark piece of cinema. The
film may not have been a commercial success but it was well-received by
the critics and it won the Golden Bear at the Berlin Film Festival in
1957.
The main innovation of
12 Angry Men
is that it takes place in real time, in one location. Virtually
all of the action is situated in one small set (the jury room), with
only a few cut away scenes (one in the courtroom, two in the men's
washroom). Shooting an entire feature film in such a confined
space presented great technical and artistic challenges, but Lumet's
biggest concern was how to keep it visually interesting so that the
audience would not get bored. This he achieved by taking
shots from virtually every conceivable position and angle in the jury
room, and by adjusting the length of the shots to match the natural
rhythm of the narrative.
Lumet combined filmmaking techniques with those which were widely
employed in television at the time. He rehearsed the cast outside
the studio for two weeks, rather than follow the more usual practice of
rehearsing a scene or part of a scene directly before it is shot.
This allowed Lumet to complete his shoot within twenty days and achieve
a greater sense of realism. Lumet also employs a mixture of
photographic and editing techniques to achieve a desired aim. For
example, he uses unbroken long takes, of the kind that would have been
commonplace in TV dramas, to establish the confined nature of the
setting, and rapid cutting of close-up shots to build tension.
Lumet is well-served by his director of photography, Boris Kaufmann,
who famously began his career in France, working for the legendary
filmmaker Jean Vigo on such films as
Zéro
de conduite (1933) and
L'Atalante (1934). Most
of the cast were experienced television actors who were used to working
in the extremely pressurised world of TV drama, and could therefore be
replied upon to give the kind of intense, focused performance that
Lumet was depending on.
12 Angry Men was the first and
only film to be produced by Henry Fonda (who also played the leading
role in the film). Although Fonda was particularly proud of his
work on this film, it failed to make a profit (mainly because the
film's distributors were overly optimistic about its appeal to a
mainstream audience). Certainly, this is one of the high points
of Fonda's career as an actor, even he is part of an ensemble, one of
twelve fine actors who each turns in a highly creditable
performance. The humanity and moral authority that gushes from
Fonda's portrayal of an upstanding American citizen makes an effective
contrast with Lee J. Cobb's loud-mouthed string-'em-up bigot. The
screenplay also deserves praise for its taut narrative and
psychological depth. Notice how clearly it delineates the twelve
jury men, each of whom is revealed to be a highly complex and
believable individual once the surface impressions are shattered.
Although this film is somewhat dated by the attitudes it presents, it
remains a compelling and highly effective piece of cinema. It is
also an extremely disturbing film since it shows up the fundamental
weakness of the jury system, which is that it only works if the jurors
are prepared to leave their prejudices outside the courthouse.
Whilst the film's conclusion appears to be a vindication of trial by
jury, you can't help feeling that it is, all the same, a pretty ropey
system. If Fonda's character had had a bad attack of migraine or
if Cobb's had been slightly more pugnacious an innocent man could well
have been roasted. If anything, the film offers up a pretty
effective argument for the abolition of the death penalty.
An imperfect judicial system that can put the wrong people in jail
is one thing, but an imperfect judicial system
that can allow the state to murder innocent people surely cannot be tolerated
by any civilised society.
© James Travers 2010
The above content is owned by frenchfilms.org and must not be copied.
Film Synopsis
In a New York court room, a lengthy murder trial is nearing its
conclusion. Once the judge has delivered his closing
statements, the twelve members of the jury are led away to the jury
room. Here, they must decide whether the defendant, a young
Puerto Rican man, is guilty or innocent of the charge of stabbing his
father to death. The eyewitness testimony against the defendant
is damning, so most of the jurors are confident of his guilt.
When an initial vote is taken, eleven of the twelve men call for a
guilty verdict. Only one refuses to go with the flow. The
one dissenter admits he is uncertain as to whether the defendant is
guilty or innocent, but he insists that, as the man will be executed if
found guilty, the jurors have a moral duty to examine the facts more
closely before casting judgement. Whilst some members of the jury
are amenable to this, others are adamant this is a waste of time, so
convinced are they of the defendant's guilt. But when the
dissenter points out certain inconsistencies in the evidence, the
prosecution's case slowly begins to crumble...
© James Travers
The above content is owned by frenchfilms.org and must not be copied.