Runaway Jury

Written by Michelle Mauriere
Published November 01, 2003

Runaway Jury was excellent. I hoped it would be, but you never know with suspense. I was a little confused at times on what side they were, whether pro or against the weapon industry, but after a while I got it. I think the story-telling was very smart. The characters are great. The acting was great. Sometimes everything seems too coincidental, and I thought these things couldn't really be planned like this in real life. But it's only a movie. Even if you maybe sometimes wished someone could copy this case in real life.

My rating: 9/10

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TRAILERS from IMDb

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SYNOPSIS from Rotten Tomatoes

Trials are too important to be decided by juries.
From master storyteller John Grisham ("The Firm," "The Pelican Brief") comes RUNAWAY JURY, a suspense-thriller about a high-priced and ruthless jury "consultant" (Gene Hackman) who will stop at nothing to secure a verdict on an explosive trial. With lives and millions of dollars at stake, the fixer wages a deadly battle with a jury member (John Cusack), a mysterious woman (Rachel Weisz) and an honest lawyer (Dustin Hoffman). The film marks the first pairing of screen legends Gene Hackman and Dustin Hoffman.

When a young widow in New Orleans brings a civil suit against the powerful corporate consortium she holds responsible for her husband's murder, she sets in motion a multi-million dollar case. But it's a suit that may be won even before it begins - based solely on the selection, manipulation and, ultimately, the attempted "theft" of the jury.

Representing the widow is Wendall Rohr (Hoffman), a courtly Southern lawyer with a moral center and a heartfelt passion for the case he's presenting. His opponent is ostensibly the attorney representing the corporation. But in reality, defense counsel is only the front man for Rankin Fitch (Hackman), a brilliant and ruthless jury consultant.

At a high tech command center set up in an old French Quarter warehouse, Fitch and his team work on the surveillance and assessment of potential jurors. He will know everything about their lives, and strategically manipulate the jury selection process. The only acceptable result is the perfect jury to vote in favor of his client.

Fitch and Rohr soon realize they're not the only ones out to win the jury. One of the jurors, Nick Easter (Cusack), seems to have his own plan for swaying the panel. And a mysterious woman known only as Marlee (Weisz) contacts both Rohr and Fitch telling them the jury's for sale to either of them - and that the verdict won't come cheap.

While the case is argued in court, a dangerous cat and mouse game begins to play out in New Orleans' French Quarter. Rohr's morality put to the test, and Fitch is poised to cross the line from selecting a jury to stealing it - no matter who gets hurt in the process.

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Runaway Jury
Published: November 01, 2003
Type:
Section: Video
Filed Under: Video: Drama, Video: Suspense and Mystery
Writer: Michelle Mauriere
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Comments

#1 — November 4, 2003 @ 11:42AM — The Theory

I'm really nervous about this movie. I'll see it when it comes out on video, I guess, but won't plunk down $7.75 for it.

I was really excited, because I love the book to death, until I found out they changed the entire direction of the story by suing gun makers instead of Cigarette companies.

#2 — November 4, 2003 @ 12:19PM — Dew [URL]

Theory the movie really is good. I went on a whim because I had nothing better to do. I came out of this movie refreshed. It was a nice twist and the movie played out well. I had not read the book so I did not know what to expect. Maybe you could check out the matinee, aren't they cheaper?

#3 — November 4, 2003 @ 12:36PM — Michelle [URL]

i don't know why they switched from tobacco to weapons, but i thought it did make more sense to focuson weapons in times like these, because tobacco is not that kind of a huge issue currently, but weapons and laws allowing owning and the use of weapons are a problem that's been heavily discussed. i could imagine that was the reason why they thought turning it into a weapon discussion would attract more people and also make more people think.

and about paying money for the movie - i mostly don't think the latest releases are worth their money, but i think Runaway Jury

is worth it.

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