Archive for October, 2009

Mississippi Burning

Friday, October 30th, 2009

Mississippi Burning

By: Shimrit Hait

Rosenbaum warns about artistic depictions of historical atrocities.
He questions the traditional notion that those who don’t know history
are doomed to repeat it. After all, Holocaust education has clearly
not prevented the perpetration of genocide in Rwanada and Darfur.

But on a more simplistic level, depictions of atrocious historical
events help us to understand that which we might not otherwise be able
to. These depictions may help raise the knowledge we have of these
events from a subconscious to a conscious level.

The movie Mississippi Burning was by no means an accurate portrayal of
those horrific events of 1964. But still, for those of us who were
not alive in 1964, the movie enabled us to gain a greater
understanding of what occurred during that time. The movie depicted
the baseless hatred that existed and the dehumanization of the black
race. While race relations in the United States still have a long way
to go, we have certainly come along away from those times in rural
Mississippi. As someone who was fortunate enough not to have
experienced that time, I am grateful for works of art such as this,
which help me, ever so slightly, to understand what once was.

Legal Themes Dominate the Lineup at Fordham’s Annual Film Festival

Wednesday, October 21st, 2009

NEW YORK LAW JOURNAL
Noeleen G. Walder

Lights, Camera, Law.

Legal themes have long been a staple of the movies, a fascination with courtrooms and
lawyers highlighted by a film festival now under way at Fordham University School of Law.

This year’s event, the fourth for the school, showcases several films, including the dramas
“Anatomy of a Murder,” “Erin Brockovich,” “Mississippi Burning,” “The War of the Roses,”
“Sleepers” and a documentary, “Shouting Speech: Stories From the Edge of Free Speech.”

Attorneys and law school professors, filmmakers and authors have been enlisted for
post-screening discussions. The programs, which began Friday, are free and open to the
general public.

“So much of the way that we understand law is through popular culture,” Fordham dean
William Treanor said in an interview.

The festival sends a message that the law school “exists as a place of larger ideas,” said
Thane Rosenbaum, head of the school’s Forum on Law Culture & Society, which arranged
the programs.

On Saturday night, some 200 film buffs jammed the school’s McNally Amphitheatre to munch popcorn and watch
the 1959 classic “Anatomy of a Murder,” followed by a discussion with director and film historian Peter Bogdanovich.

Directed by Otto Preminger and nominated for seven Academy Awards, the film depicts the trial of a loutish Army
officer for the murder of an innkeeper who allegedly raped his wife.

The film—which is based on a novel written by a Michigan judge who based it on a case he tried as a defense
attorney—focuses on a shrewd advocate, Paul Biegler, who convinces a jury that the defendant acted out of an
“uncontrollable impulse” and thus is not guilty by reason of temporary insanity.

The 50-year-old film “played as well, if not better,” than when it was first released, Mr. Bogdanovich said after
the screening.

The “ambiguity” of “Anatomy of a Murder” is “really what makes it so modern,” Mr. Bogdanovich, wearing a signature
ascot in navy and blue, said in an interview before the screening.

“Nobody is what he seems to be, including Jimmy Stewart who comes off as a country lawyer,” but who is actually
“crafty and manipulative which he has to be,” the director explained.

Throughout the trial, Mr. Stewart, playing the part of a “humble,” small-town lawyer pitted against a big-city prosecu-
tor, depicted by George C. Scott, continually introduces and then retracts inflammatory or irrelevant testimony, which
the judge instructs the jury to disregard.

“Casting Jimmy Stewart in that part is perfect because he’s such an all-American trusting fellow. So when he’s du-
plicitous, you forgive him,” Mr. Bogdanovich said.

At the end, the viewer is left wondering whether Mr. Stewart’s client is truly innocent.

The “hip” score by Duke Ellington also allows the film to withstand the test of time, as does the fact that it was shot
entirely on location, which was “not a common practice” in 1958, Mr. Bogdanovich said.

Asked what he thinks of films today at the post-screening discussion, Mr. Bogdanovich, who said the golden age of
filmmaking ended in 1962, quipped, “Not much.”

“We’re in a period of decadence in the arts,” said Mr. Bogdanovich, who grew up in an intellectual, artistic family in
New York City. His father was a painter and pianist.

“Directors today don’t know what they want. They shoot everything and make a decision in the cutting room,” he said.

The director also lamented the shift from linear to fragmented narratives. It is “fashionable for people to tell stories
sideways and backwards. The poor audience is forgotten. I feel sorry for them,” Mr. Bogdanovich said.

The festival continues at 7 p.m. tonight with “The War of the Roses,” the 1989 depiction of a no-holds-barred divorce
case. Post-screening guests will be Warren Adler, the author of the novel on which the movie is based, and noted
New York divorce attorney Raoul Felder.

The festival concludes tomorrow night with “Sleepers,” a 1996 film about former juvenile detention school residents
who seek revenge against the guard who brutalized them.

Director Barry Levinson will appear to discuss his movie and Lorenzo Carcaterra, the author of the book on which
“Sleepers” is based. Rounding out the panel will be Brooklyn District Attorney Charles J. Hynes, who also is the
author of the novel “Triple Homicide.”

The festival is sponsored by HBO, The Double-R Foundation, TimeWarner, Lincolnshire Management, The Davis Firm
and Whole Foods. For more information, go to fordhamfilmfestival.org.

@|Noeleen G. Walder can be reached at nwalder@alm.com.