A Time to Kill
Carl Lee Hailey
(Samuel L. Jackson) takes the law into his own hands after the legal
system fails to adequately punish the men who brutally raped and beat
his daughter, leaving her for dead. Normally, a distraught father could
count on some judicial sympathy in those circumstances. Unfortunately,
Carl and his daughter are black, and the assailants are white, and all
the events take place in the South. Indeed, so inflammatory is the
situation, that the local KKK (led by Kiefer Sutherland) becomes
popular again. When Hailey chooses novice lawyer Jake Brigance (Matthew
McConaughey) to handle his defense, it begins to look like a certainty
that Carl will hang, and Jake's career (and perhaps his life) will come
to a premature end. Despite the efforts of the NAACP and local black
leaders to persuade Carl to choose some of their high-powered legal
help, he remains loyal to Jake, who had helped his brother with a legal
problem before the story begins. Jake eventually takes this case
seriously enough to seek help from his old law-school professor (Donald
Sutherland). When death threats force his family to leave town, Jake
even accepts the help of pushy young know-it-all lawyer Ellen Roark
(Sandra Bullock).
The Chamber
Based on a novel by John Grisham, this
drama deals with a man trying to come to terms with his family and
their ugly secrets. Adam Hall (Chris O'Donnell) is a successful
attorney based in Chicago who travels to Mississippi to look into the
case of Sam Cayhall (Gene Hackman). An outspoken racist and member of
the Ku Klux Klan, Cayhall was convicted in the early '60s of the murder
of a Jewish civil rights lawyer and his children. Pending a last-minute
appeal, it looks as if Cayhall will finally go to the electric chair,
and Adam has arrived to see what he can do. It hardly seems like the
sort of case Adam would normally be involved with, until we discover
Adam's secret: he is actually Cayhall's grandson, and despite his
misgivings about the man's racist views, he wants to see if he can
spare his life. Cayhall, however, has little use for Adam and even less
regard for his legal skills. As Adam spends time with his Aunt Lee
(Faye Dunaway), who witnessed Cayhall's execution of a black man years
ago, he gets a more complete and disturbing picture of Cayhall's race
hatred and the terrible toll it has taken on his family and the
community.
Christmas With the Kranks
The Kranks, Luther (Time Allen) and
Nora (Jamie Lee Curtis), are
renowned for their lavish Christmas Eve parties and ostentatious
decorations. But since their only child, Blair (Julie Gonzalo), is
spending the holiday in Peru with the Peace Corps, the Kranks decide to
skip Christmas for a year and go on a Caribbean cruise instead -- a
decision that horrifies the neighbors, who resent this affront to their
cherished tradition. Vic Frohmeyer (Dan Aykroyd) assumes responsibility
for shaming the Kranks into staying home and throwing the party as
expected -- and that's where things begin to get
testy.
The Client
A sterling cast headed by
Oscar-nominated Susan Sarandon makes this slick thriller one of the
better adaptations of a John Grisham bestseller. Mark Sway (Brad
Renfro) witnesses the suicide of a Mafia lawyer, who confesses that the
Mob was behind the murder of a U.S. senator. Mark's brother is
traumatized into a coma by the incident; gangster Barry Muldano
(Anthony LaPaglia) is soon on Mark's trail, and in desperation, he
arrives at the office of recovering alcoholic lawyer Reggie Love
(Sarandon). With the Mob after them, and a ruthless federal attorney
(Tommy Lee Jones) trying to force Mark to reveal what he knows, Love
battles to guarantee the safety of her client and his family. The
relationship between Reggie Love and Mark Sway is the center of the
film, adding considerable character development to plot's routine
elements.
The Firm
A fast-paced 1993 film--directed by
Sydney Pollack (Out of Africa)--offers up the dilemma of a young lawyer
whose life is turned upside down when he takes a job at a Southern law
firm owned by the mob. Mitch McDeere (Tom Cruise), having just
graduated from Harvard Law, is besieged with offers but takes a job,
too good to be true, with a small Memphis firm. He and his wife, Abby
(Jeanne Tripplehorn), are sucked in by the seemingly close-knit,
collegial nature of the firm's partners and the expensive perks that
come with the job. His mentor, Avery (Gene Hackman), teaches him the
ropes, but Mitch and Abby begin to sense there's something wrong with
this idyllic life. When a couple of associates turn up dead, Mitch
begins to investigate the history of the firm; and when the FBI asks
him to spy on the firm for them, Mitch realizes his life will never be
the same and that, if discovered, he, his wife, and his long-lost
brother will be in mortal danger. Mitch must use all his talents as a
lawyer to outsmart the firm, the FBI, and the mob in order to reclaim
control over his life.
The Gingerbread Man
When released in
1997, The Gingerbread Man was the only John Grisham movie that did not
use one of the popular novelist's bestsellers as its inspiration.
Rather, it's based on an original screenplay by Grisham that displays
the author's familiar flair for Southern characters and settings within
a labyrinthine plot propelled by his trademark narrative twists and
turns. Sporting a spot-on Georgian accent, Kenneth Branagh plays a
Savannah attorney who comes to the assistance of a troubled woman
(Embeth Davidtz) and finds himself enmeshed in a scenario involving the
woman's father (Robert Duvall) that grows increasingly complex and
dangerous, where nothing, of course, is really as it seems.
Mickey
John Grisham wrote the screenplay for
and produced the enjoyable Mickey, a family drama that
explores--typical of the bestselling author--seemingly unresolvable
conflicts between the personal and the ethical. Harry Connick Jr. plays
California attorney Tripp Spence, a widower whose recent bankruptcy has
come under scrutiny from the IRS. Admitting wrongdoing to his son,
Derrick (Shawn Salinas), Tripp vows to avoid jail, and the two head for
Las Vegas under assumed identities. Rather than stay out of sight,
however, Tripp talks the manager (Mike Starr) of a first-rate Little
League team into drafting Derrick, a 13-year-old, talented pitcher who
claims to be younger. Soon Derrick is attracting national attention,
precisely what Tripp doesn't want, yet he refuses to squelch his son's
brilliant ride to the top. Hugh Wilson (Guarding Tess) directed this
brisk, smart feature, which includes a generous amount of on-the-field
baseball action and an intriguing subplot about Cuban ball players.
The Pelican Brief
Embroiled in an
affair with Thomas Callahan (Sam Shephard), her alcoholic professor,
precocious 24-year-old Tulane University law student Darby Shaw (Julia
Roberts) writes up an insightful theory about the recent murder of two
Supreme Court justices, one of whom, Abraham Rosenberg (Hume Cronyn),
served as Callahan's mentor. When Callahan shares this so-called
"Pelican Brief" with buddy Gavin Verheek (John Heard), an FBI lawyer,
the document makes its way to White House flack Fletcher Coal (Tony
Goldwyn), who believes it could topple the current administration. When
Callahan is murdered and the President (Robert Culp) convinces the FBI
to hold off on investigating Darby's theory, the resourceful student
must go into hiding, stalked by relentless assassin Khamel (Stanley
Tucci). Her only hope of escaping Callahan's fate and proving her
theory lies in Washington investigative reporter Gray Grantham (Denzel
Washington), who's already had one confidential source back out of
sharing information about the assassinations.
The Rainmaker
Francis Ford Coppola
is both scripter and director of this drama adapted from the John
Grisham novel about broke, inexperienced Memphis law-school graduate
Rudy Baylor (Matt Damon), ready to take any job he can find. Signing on
with slimy Bruiser Stone (Mickey Rourke), he learns ambulance-chasing
tactics from Bruiser's legman Deck Schifflet (Danny DeVito) and meets
battered teen Kelly Riker (Claire Danes), abused by her husband (Andrew
Shue). Baylor has his own clients -- friendly Miss Birdie (Teresa
Wright), who has a large estate to dispose of, and desperate Dot Black
(Mary Kay Place), whose son Donnie Ray (Johnny Whitworth) has terminal
leukemia. Medical intervention could have spared his life, but the
Great Benefit Insurance Company denied coverage, preventing Donnie Ray
from getting a life-saving bone marrow transplant. Rudy finds a place
to live in the apartment behind Miss Birdie's house. Deck and Rudy
split from Bruiser to start their small firm. When they take on the
Blacks' case, they go up against the insurance company's high-priced
law firm and are continually thwarted by slick lawyer Leo F. Drummond
(Jon Voight).
Runaway Jury
Near-legendary tort
lawyer Wendell Rohr (Dustin Hoffman) is using a shooting death to sue
the gun manufacturer, in a test case with wide-ranging implications.
The defendant hires jury consultant Rankin Fitch (Gene Hackman) to make
sure that the jurors selected will be sympathetic to the gun lobby.
Fitch's shadowy campaign to influence the jury pool is upset by Nick
Easter (John Cusack), a "wild card" deliberator with an agenda all his
own. Easter gets himself on the jury and, as the foreman, tries to
influence the other jury members to vote a certain way. Meanwhile,
Easter's girlfriend, Marlee (Rachel Weisz), tries to swindle the
attorneys to pay millions of dollars to have the jury return a verdict
friendly to their clients.