MOVIES: Juror #2 – Justice for Clint Eastwood

Spoilers

Juror #2 is the film that WB do not want you to see. Airing more times in Hemel Hempstead alone than in the vast majority of the United States; its international release has done tremendously well by all accounts, packed out screenings as a result of the suppression by WB, which in itself is a marketing tool. Had this film come out in say, 2003; at the height of the Eastwood director resurgence, it would have probably been nominated for a best picture and made hundreds of millions. But this is not 2003 anymore; the landscape has changed. The one constant is Eastwood – consistently making workmanlike procedurals of an ode to a byegone era.

Feeling like it’s been ripped straight out of the 1990s, Juror #2 introduces us to a likeable, but recovering alcoholic and family man, Justin Kemp, who is assigned to a case where he knows more than he’s letting on. A woman was seemingly murdered by her abusive husband after their latest fight at a bar he was also at that night. On the way home, Justin thinks he hit a deer in the pouring rain. Yet as more evidence comes to light, he’s faced with a moral dilemma – did he kill the young woman? And at what cost comes his freedom? The life-long imprisonment of an innocent man?

Eastwood plays at morality, lies and guilt; and how it tears you apart – the lighting that shines on Hoult’s face which reveals all shows what’s maybe his best performance yet. Eastwood keeps you in suspense at every turn – the moral dilemma, the jury being originally all in on a simple case that becomes rapidly more complex, thanks in no small part to Justin’s own actions. Despite feeling like it could be a 90s legal thriller adapted from a John Grisham airport paperback novel ala The Firm, it is very current in its themes – a 2024 movie made in 1994. Toni Colette’s aspiring careerist is played as a deconstruction and we examine how the guilt of running for election at all costs influences her decision too; especially with the polls so tight. This isn’t new ground for Eastwood; he’s tackled it in Richard Jewell. There are multiple dilemmas at play here.

Juror #2’s visuals are ordinary – a far cry from Eastwood’s heyday, but he’s at his peak in allowing the actors to take centre stage. Filling supporting roles with excellent good-at-their-job guys like JK Simmons and Kiefer Sutherland; Simmons playing an ex cop taking on investigating the case himself despite being on the jury adds to a thriller perspective – Justin’s own guilt betrays his case when all he had to do was say nothing. But Eastwood is very good at letting you feel that guilt for him – the decision to make him a family man makes that fall even more tragic; his wife and young kid plays a key role in questioning – one family is torn apart, should another have been?

And it takes time to look at assumptions of guilt and address this in a manner most befitting of the character. I’ve never felt so guilty of a crime I didn’t commit before and that’s what this movie is all about, the sheer magic of it all – getting away at you, eating at your skin until you won’t let go – you’re practically screaming at him, confess, confess, yet the longer Juror #2 draws out the more frightening it becomes. We know Justin is guilty before it even happens: “you’re perfect”, his wife tells him early on – and he looks too good to be; a sinister “I know better than you” look betrays the darkness inside.

Eastwood draws influences from everywhere to paint a film that Kurosawa would be proud of – with Justin taking on the task of steering the jury away from declaring guilty without raising suspicion against himself – can he get the husband off the case and clear his own name? A tall order – rapidly complex and rapidly edge of your seat. If this were a Law and Order episode it would be regarded as the top five of the entire show; and its spinoffs.

At the end of the day – if this was considered too bad to be released wide; I’d hate to see what WB thought a good film would look like. It’s dad movie heaven.

Articles You May Like

Netflix Adds 12 Horror, Sci-fi, Animated and Drama Film Shorts From Around The World
Christina Haack Makes Pointed Dig At Ex, ‘Some Good Men Left’
10 Worst ‘Love Is Blind’ Breakups, Ranked
New ‘Wednesday’ Companion Book To Release in May 2025 Ahead of Season 2
‘Yellowstone’ Goes off the Rails With Another Death & Kayce Threat (RECAP)