Do you know any of these movies well enough to tell me if they have a good opening / closing arguments in the courtroom? (I know Few Good Men, My Cousin Vinny, and others-- but they are rated R and I can't show even a clip from an R movie in class. )
The Rainmaker (recent one)
Philadelphia (Tom Hanks)
Runaway Jury (John Cusack)
My Sister?s Keeper
Civil Action (Travolta)
License to Kill (Denzel)
Legally Blonde
Liar, Liar (Jim Carey)
Trial and Error
Jury Duty (Pauly Shore?)
Re: teaching / pop culture help
https://www.associatedcontent.com/article/5719960/best_movies_to_watchpart_ii_courtroom.html?cat=40
Looks like they suggest Philadelphia, The Client, A Civil Action, High Crimes, and American Violet (for PG-13).
I have seen none of the above other than Legally Blonde. I don't know what that says about me.
Was Primal Fear rated R?
A Time to Kill? Might be too much for a younger audience, but I haven't seen it in a while. Good movie.
Edit: Nevermind, it's R.
Legally Blonde has the whole Perry Mason "a-ha" scene, but I don't think its a closing argument.
motherfuckings R. I would give a kidney in order to show this after I teach To Kill a Mockingbird.
"Chuck is just a friend."
"Youbitch!"
lol.
What grade are you teaching? My highschool history teacher played Schindler's List in our class (seniors) sex and all.
Try these:
Compulsion
Inherit the Wind
Both are from the 50s and are therefore ok for school viewing.
Incidentally, both are based on Clarence Darrow cases.
So there you go.
Unable to even.
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You don't understand the appeal of Benedict Cumberbatch / think he's fug / don't know who he is? WATCH SHERLOCK. Until you do, your negative opinion of him will not be taken seriously.
high school, but R is totally, strictly, utterly forbidden.
It doesn't matter what grade, it matters what the school policy is.
Yes! This was a good one, also a highschool history staple.
Unable to even.
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You don't understand the appeal of Benedict Cumberbatch / think he's fug / don't know who he is? WATCH SHERLOCK. Until you do, your negative opinion of him will not be taken seriously.
True. I was just using that as an example of my experience.
https://www.imdb.com/find?s=all&q=Courtroom+dramas
HTH.
Great minds think alike, but I teach Inherit later, so I don't want to double up curriculum. The year will be starting with 12 Angry Men and persuasive writing (emphasizing introductions and conclusions as the kids know all about evidence and structure but SUCK at writing informed and eloquent intros). So I wanted to tie court with persuasion/intro writing / real life uses for it, but I can't steal the thunder from Inherit, see?
Thank you, my beauties! Really, thanks for the input and the links!
Gotcha. Hmmm...I would still consider Compulsion, though. It's really a great film and a perfect example of how great an actor Dean Stockwell really is. Totally unsung actor, IMHO.
Oh wait hold up. How bout To Kill A Mockingbird?
Unable to even.
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You don't understand the appeal of Benedict Cumberbatch / think he's fug / don't know who he is? WATCH SHERLOCK. Until you do, your negative opinion of him will not be taken seriously.
Movie cut the opening and closing arguments. AsshoIes.
Curses!
Unable to even.
********************
You don't understand the appeal of Benedict Cumberbatch / think he's fug / don't know who he is? WATCH SHERLOCK. Until you do, your negative opinion of him will not be taken seriously.
Yeah, you know it's considered one of the AFI's top 100 of all time, right? But I think it is such an inferior movie, I really do.
I think it only earned its reputation because people didn't read (like they still don't read), so the movie reached out to the public as opposed to the book, kwim? That's why it's considered a great film, IMO.
::shrug::
I think it's a great movie because Gregory Peck is the shiits and Robert Duvall was properly creepy-lovable as Boo Radley.
It's a great movie in terms of movies. It's not the best adaptation of a book but it's eons better than, say, The Scarlet Letter with Demi Moore. I cried a little that Gary Oldman had his name and acting chops tarnished by that movie.
I guess I still hold out faith that people will read the book after they've seen the movie.
I'm naive like that.
Unable to even.
********************
You don't understand the appeal of Benedict Cumberbatch / think he's fug / don't know who he is? WATCH SHERLOCK. Until you do, your negative opinion of him will not be taken seriously.
Really? I confess I've never watched it! Can you think of any particulars to direct me to?
xoxo.
then do not watch this. it makes the scarlet letter look like citizen kane.
What is wrong with people on this board? First yankee hasn't seen Office Space and you haven't seen Law and Order?
GAH!
Get the first season of the original series. Watch the episodes entitled:
Subterranean Homeboy Blues
The Torrents of Greed (parts 1 and 2)
Prescription for Death
Ben Stone had some of the greatest opening arguments in the series, but Jack McCoy had some of the best closing arguments. The ones listed above were Stone. I can't think of any specific McCoy ones off the top of my head.
Unable to even.
********************
You don't understand the appeal of Benedict Cumberbatch / think he's fug / don't know who he is? WATCH SHERLOCK. Until you do, your negative opinion of him will not be taken seriously.
lol at the Scarlet Letter. wtf with the yellow bird scenes thrown in with the lovemaking scenes?
Scarlet Letter (book) truly is one of my favorite "classics."
The yellow bird thing is probably a throwback to the Crucible, which is sort of simultaneous with SL in terms of setting (in Crucible, the "bewitched" girls pretend to see a bird getting ready to attack them when Mary Warren calls them liars in court)-- but wtf nonetheless?!
Now that I know you are a literary fan as well as a movie fan, we can talk lots!
I can't speak about adults reading, only kids. And teens by and large hate to read.
Y'all kickass.
I really just tried to block that movie out of my memory. I hadn't read the scarlett letter when I saw it, but I knew enough about the book to realize Nathaniel Hawthorne wouldn't have written this garbage.
I'm grasping at straws here, but do you know of any paper or something that outlines the political and social meaning behind The Hunchback of Notre Dame? (Kind of like The Wizard of Oz is an allegory of US politics in the 1890s.)
Unable to even.
********************
You don't understand the appeal of Benedict Cumberbatch / think he's fug / don't know who he is? WATCH SHERLOCK. Until you do, your negative opinion of him will not be taken seriously.
BUT, I checked youtube for "law & order closing argument" and got this:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=_-kh7GKSQ-c
I can't hear it on my work computer so this could be a lame one, but BONUS: there are lots of "closing argument" videos on the right-hand side of the screen.
That's not a lame one. Nullification is an awesome episode.
Unable to even.
********************
You don't understand the appeal of Benedict Cumberbatch / think he's fug / don't know who he is? WATCH SHERLOCK. Until you do, your negative opinion of him will not be taken seriously.
Seriously, how have you never seen Law and Order? Really?
In case you have some students who really get interested in persuasive arguments, the recordings of some of the big Supreme court decisions could be interesting. https://www.amazon.com/May-Please-Court-Significant-Arguments/dp/1595580905
Also, I don't remember To Kill A Mockingbird cutting the closing argument.
https://www.americanrhetoric.com/MovieSpeeches/moviespeechtokillamockingbird.html
say whaaat?
Philadelphia is incredible.
I haven't watched it in forever, but we watched Amistad when I was senior, and it was great.
I haven't seen the movie, but i'm a court reporter and i can tell you attorneys ALWAYS reference it in real-life closing arguments, 12 Angry Men. it's an old movie and the movie takes place in the jury room after the closing arguments. i don't know what it was rated, but here's the wiki:
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/12_Angry_Men_(1957_film)