MovieChat Forums > 12 Angry Men (1957) Discussion > Thank God for people like Henry Fonda's ...

Thank God for people like Henry Fonda's character


First off, I adore this film. Just saw it for the first time tonight and loved every second of it. Certain parts gave me chills, and I like how each character thought and interacted with one another. But I would like to point out how Juror 8 struck a chord with me. He does not automatically jump to conclusions and is very soft. You can tell he is a gentle man and is gentle with his kids. He thinks rationally. It was such a stark contrast with him and Juror 3 when he was talking about breaking his kid in two if it took him to learn how to be a man. It might have been just me but Juror 8 had this look of both pity and calm disgust in his eyes. I really loved Henry Fonda in this film. Also Juror 9. He also seemed like a warm, rational man.

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Juror 8 was the sort of man who wanted to discuss the case and not just decide in 5 minutes. He knew that if they voted guilty, he'd go to death row, not just jail, so he wanted to make it absolutely sure about the guilt of this boy. He never says the boy is not guilty and isn't afraid to admit that maybe he is wrong about this, unlike 3, who basically wanted to see the boy die because he felt that kid was like his own-rotten.

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What? Are you serious?

Juror #8 is the kind of sneaky character with a hidden agenda who convinces everyone to let a guilty man go free. He thinks its a contest, just like Juror #3.

Look at the gleam of triumph when he convinces Juror #9 to vote with him or when he triumphs over Juror #3.

The most honest moment, and hat's off to Fonda for showing this (he was the Producer) is when E.G.Marshall (Juror #4) talks about how a hit "might have been one, too many...everyone has their breaking point". Pan to Juror #8 who looks at E.G. with pain and hatred..oooh this guy is the enemy.

Juror #4 was the real hero. He was solely guided by the facts and the evidence. Unlike Juror #8 or Juror #3.

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 I love satire.

Seize the moment, 'cause tomorrow you might be dead.

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No, you love being an idiot.

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And you are juror 7 and 10 combined (a crazy nut). He wasn't trying to let a guilty man go free, he wanted to discuss the case and in so, was just able to get the jurors to see there was some doubt. He actually put up with a lot of insults in the film.
Examples:
1. He's called a golden voiced preacher.
2. He has a collection box.
3. If he was sitting ringside at the Dempsey-Firpo fight, he'd be trying to tell them Firpo won.
4. He has a bleeding heart.

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Fonda's character is IMO one of the biggest hypocrites ever to be seen on a movie screen. Chiefly because he presents himself as the man who is without sin who has the right to cast all stones and never be held accountable for his own actions that make him arguably just as bad as his fellow jurors that he condemns. This is not to say that many of the jurors don't deserve to be condemned because many of them do. But if they are to be judged so too must Fonda and here are the things he is guilty of:

1-Fonda commits the most unpardonable of sins that any juror is capable of committing. He has decided to investigate the case outside the courtroom, and he has also chosen to introduce "evidence" that was not part of the trial to influence the proceedings in the form of the second knife. The second knife was not part of the trial proceedings and Fonda has no way of knowing if this wasn't a type of knife that could only have been sold in great quantity *after* the crime (Fonda I doubt was able to check that point). This is a tainted item that should have resulted in one of the other jurors calling in the baliff and notifying the judge of what Fonda did, whereupon Fonda would be removed and replaced with an alternate or else a mistrial would have been declared. At the very least, what Fonda did is not legitimate grounds for swinging a jury to a not-guilty verdict.

2-The manner in which Fonda impeaches the witness based on glasses she wasn't wearing. Perhaps the reason the defense counsel never brought it up is because he *knew* the woman wore sunglasses or was farsighted and thus if he tried to he'd be destroyed and his client would look all the more guilty. Here Fonda was getting the jury to consider "facts not in evidence" and speculative ones at that for which there was no basis for the jury to consider. Now *maybe* if we had seen them ask for the transcript to clarify if this was brought up during testimony and if they discussed it in more depth I could buy it but Marshall's change of heart on this point struck me as uncredible on all levels.

Just think of how much better the drama would have been had the spotlight been turned on Fonda's character showing how he's ultimately no better than any of the others in the room. Is he resorting to this corruption of the process based on his own prejudice against the fact that this is a death penalty case? Is he deciding that because he personally thinks the defendant had a bad lawyer, he should act as a defense counsel instead of a juror? These are questions as relevant as the ones raised that show the others in a bad light and when they aren't answered it leaves me with a bad taste in my mouth. The proper outcome of this story should have been a mistrial because this is not a true or fair indication of what the term "reasonable doubt" is supposed to mean.

This is not I would note a simple case of a "conservative" railing against a "liberal" interpretation of the law. Even Justice Sotomayor, in praising the film as an inspiration for her entering the law acknowledged that Fonda's actions would indeed have resulted in a mistrial in a real life situation. And a mistrial IMO would have sent the best message. Let 12 men better than these start over anew and judge the defendant's guilt or innocence with the cleanest possible slate.

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I agree. Fonda is doing lots of speculating in the jury room. For instance the old man witness testified it took him 15 seconds to get to the door. Most of us realize that estimating time during an emotional event is a rough guess at best. But if someone testifies "I saw the boy run by my door after hearing the body fall" then that is not an estimate. Testifying "I heard him say 'I'm going to kill you'" is a strong statement of fact. Trying to guess that the train noise would drown out the voice is very speculative without a lot more investigation at the scene. But that is not the jury's job.

Either the old man was lying or telling the truth. Saying he "wanted to be important" is a pretty weak reason for impeaching a witness. This reminds me in a way of the OJ trial where the jury was swayed by unimportant facts and by liking OJ and disliking the prosecutor.

As a federal agent some of my cases went to juries. I only got one acquittal and that was a complicated fraud case. But I would hate for potential jurors to have just seen this movie and start wanting to find an excuse for acquittal when common sense dictates otherwise. If the case is not proven find the defendant not guilty, but go with testimony, not speculation.

And of course a basic jury instruction is "don't go to the scene yourself, don't do any investigation yourself, don't talk to any of the witnesses yourself. Just weight the facts and make a decision."

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After seeing all the comments on these boards, it probably would have been prudent if they had attached a disclaimer on the film acknowledging that the film takes dramatic license with how a real jury deliberation would go and that some of the statements and actions of the jurors would be unacceptable in a real trial.

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Better would've been if the movie didn't lie or manipulate in trying to make its point. As it is, the movie's point is utterly useless.

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Does Eric-62-2 have any friends? Maybe you would be better off making more friends and watching fewer movies.

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Everything Fonda and a few of the other jurors brought up were logical fallacies to the case the prosecution presented. Regardless if they were true to the legal process or not. And what is more important being true to the letter of the law or preventing a heinous injustice (executing a child) from taking place?

Fonda was the most intelligent and most importantly the WISEST of the 12.

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On a jury orientation session, someone asked what you do when one witness says the guy's guilty and another says he's innocent - you can't believe them both. The presenter said you do what you do in everyday life when presented with conflicting statements, you use your common sense life experience to decide who to believe.

So jurors are not expected to treat the entire testimony of a case as if it's factual. They have to filter the evidence through their life experience which is pretty much what these 12 do.

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Does wendellbakerwb have an intelligent point to make? Guess not, which is why he only had an idiotic cheap shot at his disposal to make. Someone wrote a post beatifying Henry Fonda's character. I merely presented a dissenting note.

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Two weeks from now, all the IMDb message boards will shut down. You can find the announcement posted near this message board. Eric-62-2 will no longer be able to make his rambling comments. They demonstrate his bad social skills. Maybe his upcoming loss will force him to "hit bottom," as Alcoholics Anonymous members say. When Eric-62-2 and other creepy commentators use bad social skills repeatedly, they are like alcoholics drinking.

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4 years ago wendell took his own life because he had no place he and his sock puppets could go to.

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Thank god for manipulative people who act like they're not prejudiced???

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Thank God for compassionate liberals like Fonda who speak up and out against conservative bigots like Juror #3

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Yeah, like I said, thank god for manipulative people who act like they're not prejudiced???

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Juror #8 was also a bigot, and so were the other jurors. Literally, so much of Juror #8's argument boiled down to claiming that the defendant should be cut some slack because "kids like him" come from bad backgrounds. This like when people try to sound compassionate for a murderer by claiming that he was mentally ill, while at the same time inferring that all mentally ill people are natural murders or that being mentally ill predisposes someone to commit murder.

In other words, it's just as much a racist, foregone conclusion to assume that kids from the defendant's background are predisposed to murder because they "have it rough." What about the vast number of kids from that background who had it rougher and didn't kill anybody? Like Jack Klugman's character, who came from that background? Why is one kid now representative of all of them?

Ditto, the rampant sexism and ageism. "Oh, that old guy, we need to doubt him because old people like him feel neglected and therefore make stuff up for the attention," or, "That middle-aged woman was trying desperately to look 20 years younger. Let's ignore her testimony, because marks on her nose proves that she wears glasses all the time but didn't wear them to court because she was self-conscious about her age."

Same difference.

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Look at the liberals attacking this movie, they want to pervert the course of justice and send anyone they want to prison without trials. Minababe24 has made it clear that he believes the kid is guilty, despite the enormity of evidence against this. He probably thinks of the kid as a Trump supporter (which he brought up in another thread) and this movie being about how the Capitol Protestors could get off despite him clearly thinking they deserve prison.

The facts of the case are simple:
We have two eye witnesses, one claims to have heard a boy shouting over the sound of a roaring elevated train, then claims to have slowly walked to the door to see the boy running down the stairs all the way from his bedroom.

Despite this obvious evidence, the defense didn't bother to bring it up. Why?

We have a so called "unique knife" that was found to be a dime a dozen. The prosecution insisted this was a unique knife, but the defense never bothered to check the neighborhood. Why?

And of course, there was the issue of the glasses (which for people who never actually saw the movie, was brought up because the juror who wears glasses took his off and started rubbing his nose, it was noted that the woman also was doing this... it was never about her wanting to look pretty). The simple issue is that the defense should have brought this up, if she was nearsighted or farsighted makes a major difference.

The reality is, most of this case is based on circumstantial evidence, without the two eye witnesses the prosecution has nothing... even if you accept the woman could see the boy murdering his pop from across the street and a window through an El train... her testimony disproved the old man's testimony...

The Jury isn't there for liberals to send whomever they give a bad defense to prison. The jury is there to question the evidence and find the shred of doubt.

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I really disliked Juror 8. I think the truth of his character was revealed at the beginning when he said something along of the lines that he didn't want to be the deciding vote to give this kid the death penalty. It wasn't because he was this great visionary that questioned things and saw the big picture, he also seemed to think the kid might be guilty, It was just against his moral compass to send some else to death.

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