The kid was found not guilty by the jury. The entire play/movie was a sociological allegorical study of character, morals, ethics, and philosophy. At the end all the jurors were dismissed, each having learned something about themselves. A GREAT PLAY.
After the Preliminary vote, the results were:
Eleven voting in favor of Guilty and one hold-out (Juror #8) for Not Guilty.
A verdict of Not Guilty.
The law is accurate in the movie Twelve Angry Men as it relates to finding a Defendant "Guilty beyond reasonable doubt."
In the film, 'Twelve Angry Men,' the accused's alibi for his whereabouts at the time of the murder was that he was at a movie theater, watching a double feature. Belief in his alibi was challenged when he could not remember the name of either of the films.
rain was symbolic of growing tension
John Williams' first official movie he scored the music for was Daddy-O (1959).
Jack Black's first movie was "Our shining moment." It was a made for tv movie.
The law is accurate in the movie Twelve Angry Men as it relates to finding a Defendant "Guilty beyond reasonable doubt."
Juror #8 (played by Henry Fonda).
it just have tweht sjsjakjs
it is
Rio the movie because the angry birds version is a "copy" of the movie.
To sit in deliberation with other members of the jury.
Well the first Angry Birds was not actually based on a movie but Angry Birds Rio was based on the movie Rio.
Juror #7 had tickets to see the Yankees play Cleveland.
The most important strength portrayed by the jury in Twelve Angry Men was 'determination' regardless of any justifiable (or unjustifiable) logic each individual attached to the term.The group was determined to complete the deliberations as directed by the Judge in the case.
An excellent example is one entitled "Twelve Angry Men."It was also done as a black and white movie featuring an all-star cast.
Some differences between the play and the movie are that in the movie, there is a scene in the very beginning in the courtroom, and in the middle, a scene in the bathroom. I can't remember exactly, but in one of them, the boy is 19 years old, and in the other, he's 18 years old. In the movie, one of the jurors want to leave because he has tickets to a ball game, and in the play, he has theater tickets. I know there are some more, but it's been a while since I read/ watched this! Hope I helped! :)
Juror #5's character (played by Jack Klugman) had experience with switchblade knife-fights in his childhood neighborhood.