One of the side effects of pandemic life is that lots of us are consuming much more media than we did during other times in our lives. Lots of phone and Zoom calls now include a little bit of time to let our inner film critics come out and play together. Questions like \u201cWho has a good series to suggest?\u201d and \u201cAny movie recommendations to share?\u201d are a much more common part of conversations with others.<\/p>\n
I\u2019m someone who writes mostly creative non-fiction and, for the most part, my TV and movie preferences match up. Favorite Husband, on the other hand, usually prefers fiction and poetry \u2014 genres that aren\u2019t much on my radar screen these days.<\/p>\n
But early in quarantine, I found a documentary movie that captured his imagination. Since that time, documentary and \u201cbased on a true story\u201d have become a regular part of our media mix. \u00a0And while several of these may not be new releases or might not meet your definition of \u201clegal thriller,\u201d there are some thoughtful, powerful Constitutional and law enforcement issues in several of our choices.<\/p>\n
Long before Deep Throat croaked \u201cfollow the money,\u201d the Boston Globe included a column called \u201cSpotlight.\u201d It is the oldest continuously operating newspaper investigative journalism<\/a> unit in the United States. Growing up near Boston, my family got home delivery of two daily papers: The Herald and The Boston Globe. I always hoped to be first to snag The Globe In keeping with my journalism theme, The Post\u00a0is an American historical political thriller film produced and\u00a0<\/sup><\/sup>directed by Steven Spielberg<\/a>. It stars Meryl Streep as Katharine Graham<\/a>, the first female publisher of a major American newspaper, and Tom Hanks as Ben Bradlee<\/a>, the longtime executive editor of The<\/a> Washington<\/a> Post.<\/a><\/p>\n Set in 1971, the film depicts the story of attempts by Post journalists\u00a0to publish the infamous “Pentagon Papers,<\/a>” classified documents regarding the 20-year involvement of the United States government in the Vietnam War (1961\u20131975) and in French Indochina back to the 1940s and the end of World War II (1939\/1941\u20131945).<\/p>\n The Highwaymen is a 2019 American period crime drama movie written by John Fusco, <\/a>the writer behind Young Guns, Thunder Heart an many others. This film is the untold true story of legendary Texas Rangers Frank Hamer<\/a> and Maney Gault, played by Kevin Costner and Woody Harrelson\u00a0and their efforts to track down and\u00a0apprehend notorious criminals Bonnie Parker and Clyde Barrow<\/a> in the 1930s. Despite Bonnie and Clyde\u2019s gruesome murder sprees, they boasted a level of celebrity and popularity that I found difficult to absorb.<\/p>\n Perhaps it was a perception of their activities as Robin Hood-esque or the fact they were a couple that created such an extreme level of celebrity and romance. Be that as it may, in this movie, Costner and Harrelson turn in compelling performances.<\/p>\n In August 1968, Abbie Hoffman<\/a>, Jerry Rubin<\/a>, Tom Hayden<\/a>, Rennie Davis<\/a>, David Dellinger<\/a>, When the “Chicago 8” trial began, Bobby Seale claimed he had no lawyer to defend him since the one he had chosen, Charles Garry, was recovering from surgery.<\/a>\u00a0Seale demanded to defend himself until Garry could be present. Judge Hoffman ignored him, stating Seale was already represented by Kunstler. Seale replied that he had “fired” Kunstler, again invoking the right to defend himself however the judge refused to allow Seale to make an opening statement, cross-examine witnesses, or speak to the jury.<\/p>\n Denied his right to counsel, Bobby Seale began interrupting proceedings.\u00a0Finally, on October 29, Judge Hoffman ordered Seale chained to a chair with a gag in his mouth.For several days Seale appeared before the jury, bound and gagged, struggling to get free and making muffled sounds. Defense attorney Kunstler declared, “This is no longer a court of order, Your Honor, this is a medieval torture chamber.”<\/p>\n A few days later Judge Hoffman allowed Seale into court without restraints, warning him against further interruptions. Seale continued to disrupt the trial and Judge Hoffman declared a mistrial. This portion of the trial is one often studied in classes on the Constitution.<\/p>\n At the end of the trial for the remaining seven and despite Judge Hoffman’s instructions and objections, Hayden\u2019s closing statement named all 4,752 U.S. soldiers who had been killed in Vietnam since the beginning of the trial.<\/p>\n Waco is a six-episode TV movie series exploring the 51-day stand-off between the FBI<\/a>, ATF<\/a> and David Koresh<\/a>‘s\u00a0Branch Davidians<\/a>, in the spring of 1993 in Waco, Texas. Also known as the Waco Massacre, the event\u00a0culminated in a fire that killed 76 members of the religious cult. It investigates the tragedy before and during the standoff, from a variety of viewpoints.<\/p>\n The series\u00a0stars Michael Shannon, Taylor Kitsch<\/a>, Andrea Riseborough, Paul Sparks, Rory Culkin<\/a>, Shea Whigham<\/a>, Melissa Benoist, John Leguizamo<\/a>, Julia Garner<\/a>, and Glenn Fleshler who received a mixed response to their intense performance. While their performances were widely praised, but critics many expressed dislike of the show’s sympathetic approach to Branch Davidian leader David Koresh.<\/p>\n Ron Williamson sat on Oklahoma’s death row for 11 years for a crime he didn’t commit. He was eventually exonerated by DNA evidence and other materials introduced by the Innocence Project and was released from prison in 1999. This six part docuseries is based on John Grisham’s “The Innocent Man: Murder and Injustice in a Small Town.\u201d As of 2020, this was Grisham\u2019s only non-fiction offering.<\/p>\n
\nwas intrigued by the powerful Spotlight stories. Topics such as no-show public employees and elevated cancer rates in certain specific locations hooked my sense of fairness and desire to see justice served so a film about the Spotlight crew was a no-brainer for me. This compelling movie<\/a> deals with the story of the work that went into excavating the massive child sexual abuse scandal (and cover-up) within the local Catholic Archdiocese.<\/p>\nThe Post<\/h3>\n
The Highwaymen<\/h3>\n
The Trial of the Chicago 7<\/h3>\n
\nLee Weiner<\/a>, John Froines<\/a>, and Bobby Seale<\/a> made preparations to protest the Viet Nam war during Chicago\u2019s\u00a0Democratic National Convention. Five months later, all eight of them are arrested and charged with trying to incite a riot. John Mitchell, then Attorney General, appointed Tom Foran and Richard Schultz to prosecute, while all defendants except Seale were represented by William Kunstler<\/a> and Leonard Weinglass<\/a>.<\/p>\nWaco<\/h3>\n
The Innocent Man<\/h3>\n