12 Angry Men
Henry Fonda: Producer
Boris Kaufman: Cinematographer
Carl Lerner: Editor
George Justin: Producer
Reginald Rose: Producer
Reginald Rose: Writer
MGM (Video DVD)
| List Price: |
$14.98 |
| Amazon Price: |
$10.49 |
| Lowest New Price: |
$7.13 |
| Lowest Used Price: |
$6.74 |
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30 |
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19 |
DVD Details:
- Starring: Henry Fonda, Lee J. Cobb, Martin Balsam, John Fiedler, E.G. Marshall
- Director: Sidney Lumet
- Format: Black White, Closed-captioned, DVD-Video, Letterboxed, Subtitled, Widescreen, NTSC
- Rated: NR (Not Rated)
- Studio: MGM (Video DVD)
- Theatrical Release Date: Dec 03, 2008
- DVD Release Date: Mar 06, 2001
- Run Time: 96 minutes
- ASIN: B000056HEC
- UPC: 027616859006
- Sales Rank: 1707
Amazon Customer Reviews:
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2 of 2 people found the following review helpful:
    Enter the jury room and hold on to your values, 2008-10-07
Henry Fonda stars with Lee J. Cobb, E. G. Marshall and a nine other fine character actors in this classic courtroom drama from 1957. Despite the black-and-white filming and dated costume and props, this story still packs a terrific punch, mainly due to terrific writing and careful attention to dramatic unities of time, place and action. The story itself has an elegant simplicity to it: a young man is on trial for the murder of his father, and as the film opens we see the jury (12 white men of various distinctive types) being ushered into the jury room to decide his fate. Eleven of these men are outraged by the brutality of the crime and anxious to return a "guilty" verdict. Only one (Henry Fonda) questions the defendant's guilt. Using various debating techniques, Fonda reveals his doubts about the various pieces of evidence offered by the prosecution, and gradually begins to put "reasonable doubt" into the minds of his fellow jurors.
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br /The conflict in this film (which is pretty much a recording of a stage drama) is between the jurors, not between the alleged murderer and his father, so there's no action in this film beyond 12 angry men heatedly arguing the case. Some viewers may be turned off by the story's preachiness - admittedly the film is pretty heavy-handed in its liberal bias - but it's still a powerful and soul-stirring evocation of one of Americans' crucial human rights: the trial by jury. Our judicial system may not be perfect, but this film certainly is. A must for high school civics class, and a stunning rebuttal to those who doubt that one man can make a difference in this world.
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