Plots(1)

John Grisham's bestseller 'A Time To Kill' hits the screen with incendiary force, directed by Joel Schumacher. Sandra Bullock, Samuel L. Jackson, Matthew McConaughey and Kevin Spacey portray the principals in a murder trial that brings a small Mississippi town's racial tensions to the flashpoint. Amid a frenzy of activist marches, Klan terror, media clamour and brutal riots, an unseasoned but idealistic young attorney mounts a stirring courtroom battle for justice. (Roadshow Entertainment)

(more)

Videos (1)

Trailer

Reviews (9)

kaylin 

all reviews of this user

English It's a good movie and a strong case with great acting performances, although I still don't understand how it's possible to kill two people and walk out of the courtroom innocent, respectively without punishment. However, it rather made me reflect on the shape of justice, at least in the American system, where it's not about justice itself, but simply about the case, popularity, good reputation... I don't know, just about anything except justice. How should one actually perceive it? ()

D.Moore 

all reviews of this user

English Average, average, and more average. On the one hand, the great Samuel L. Jackson, the admirable "shark" Kevin Spacey, excellent (all of them) chilling scenes with the Ku Klux Klan and Goldenthal's chilling music along with them, but on the other hand we get Matthew McConaughey, who is not very believable, the completely unnecessary Sandra Bullock character (even more unnecessary than in the book), several downright ridiculous moments (the bomb, the shooting of the soldier...) and that sickeningly saccharine ending... Two and a half stars. ()

Ads

Malarkey 

all reviews of this user

English Joel Schumacher is a master of either strongly conflicting dramas or absolutely strange fantasies and anything else that is... weird. This means that one day, he shoots an absolutely amazing movie based on real-life events, but once he gets to a rather improbable and often fantastic story, he’s hopeless. Luckily, A Time To Kill is the first one of the two. What’s more, it’s based on a book, so it really can grab your attention for its lengthy 149 minutes. But that’s not only thanks to the director; Matthew McConaughey usurped a substantial part of the movie for himself. You could even say that it is literally his movie – even despite the fact that it’s basically his very first lead role that dazzled Hollywood. Hats off! I kind of feel like lawyer roles in movies predominantly about black people and racism somehow befit him. It’s not just a coincidence, right? ()

Remedy 

all reviews of this user

English Undoubtedly one of Joel Schumacher's best films, although it's fair to say that with John Grisham source material and a very good script by Akiva Goldsman, it couldn't have turned out any other way. A Time to Kill is a brilliant courtroom drama that manages to remarkably link the most serious individual crimes with the toxic and unrelenting interracial hatred in Mississippi and moreover put everything into the proper context. The sumptuous cast, ranging from the passionate (which is slightly unfair in the context of the plot, but I didn't mean it that way at first) idealist Matthew McConaughey to the endearingly proper Sandra Bullock to the slimy and implacable Kevin Spacey, is simply divine. They're all divine here though, including Samuel L. Jackson and Donald Sutherland. One of the top courtroom movies with an extremely evocative closing speech by a then twenty-seven year old Matthew McConaughey, for whom this was actually the first really major and character role in the true sense of the word. ()

Othello 

all reviews of this user

English That's the beauty of those 90s movies, you get to watch a scene where a lawyer played by Kevin Spacey sinks a witness based on his 30-year-old rape accusation that took place on 9/11. At least there's some joy in this overwrought mess according to hypocrite-in-chief John Grisham. We can only envy the man's ability to calmly fight the death penalty furiously with his left hand and peck out a novel that defends it through enormous hyperbole, sadistic descriptions of crime, and appeals to the racial frictions of the American South with his right. The film treatment then doesn't problematize the novel at all, and on the contrary is almost completely faithful to it, with occasional bursts of Goldsman’s screenwriting flubs (the lawyer protagonist and his righteous fisticuffs, disastrous characterization scenes). McConaughey trying to play himself to death here at least recalls a time when he was a truly insufferable piece of slime. ()

Gallery (26)