TheHarry BinswangerLetter

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    • #98339 test
      | DIR.

      I enjoyed the movie “The Judge,” starring Robert Duvall and Robert Downey Jr.

      In brief: a judge estranged from his big-city-lawyer son is accused of murder, and his son ends up handling the case, exacerbating family tensions. The movie is dramatic, with several threads going at once, and the characters and actors are compelling. It delivers an especially thought-provoking look at familial bonds and ruptures, and a gripping portrayal of the final courtroom scene.

      I recommend it, but with caveats regarding overly-graphic scenes in bathrooms and bars that seem to be standard fare in today’s movies!

    • #106898 test
      | DIR.

      Yes. I enjoyed the movie too.

      Downey overcame a history of self destruction to become one of the most bankable stars in Hollywood.  There’s no limit of future projects for him to choose from.  Instead of making another mindless mass of audio-visual noise he chose to make a real film about real people facing real problems.

      Hank Palmer is a very successful defense attorney in Chicago and is openly held in contempt by the local prosecutors.  He was  to defend a client on the charge of corporate fraud when he receives a call on his I-phone notifying him that his mother has died.

      To return home for the funeral was a difficult task as he wasn’t on speaking terms with his father  As he explained to his young daughter.  “’He’s dead to me,’ is a figure of speech.”

      Hank manages to return home and speak to his father without snapping.  But as he was about to return home his father is charged with murder.  Seeing that his father’s counsel is not competent to defend him he steps in out of pride to perform the task.  Over the course of the investigation and trial the past acts of the characters are revealed and the reasons for their actions become clear. 

      And it becomes clear that the character of the alleged victim could only be properly described in the language of the gutter.  In short, he asked for it.

      This is clearly a film for people who enjoy the process of thought, and not a movie for the mindless audience.

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