David Mamet has certainly written a lot better films than this one - it was only his second screenplay.
Once it became known that Galvin would be involved in this case, it was immediately clear that he would, against all odds, win it.
Which makes it a bit ironic that Mamet's script didn't reveal the jury's verdict. As I understand it, this is the only change that Lumet made.
Not that this film's only pleasures involve its plot, but I take exception to the criticism that The Verdict lacks "drama" because it follows the "formula".
The film is thirty years old. Sure, we'd seen courtroom dramas before, but we hadn't yet been deluged with so many cookie-cutter cinematic Grisham adapations/clones in which plucky legal underdogs make good. Not to mention those on TV.
Despite the outcome, this is a grim, tired little film, one that argues with every fibre of its being that Galvin is spent -- utterly damaged goods in every respect. And it's a great credit to Newman as an actor that this concept isn't laughable; I mean, he's Paul Friggin' Newman.
If I didn't enjoy every minute of it so thoroughly, I might even call The Verdict "dour". As the plot moves forward, he's blind-sided by several obstacles that manage to be (a) fairly believable and (b) seemingly insurmountable. His personal problems aren't superficial or passing. His opponents are holding all the cards.
AND he screws up. Repeatedly.
Effectively, he wins because of a fluke -- namely, that the jury had the opportunity to hear testimony that it shouldn't, but as human beings were unable to "unhear" it, despite the instructions of the judge. It's like the sun suddenly decided to shine on Frank Galvin for the first time in decades; we're entitled to enjoy his moment along with him.
But even there Lumet holds back. There's no soaring score, no reunion with the girl, no miracle for the client. We, like Jack Warden, are left simply chuckling, shaking our heads and making a fist in silent victory.
This is a theme that Mamet would return to in his adaptation of The Winslow Boy, in which another lawyer weeps because "right had been done...not justice -- easy to do justice; very hard to do right."
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