The 9th among the 12 Juror's is an old Man whose matured & impressive memory, the role played by Jack Warden decides to change his vote, because of the sane reasoning as put forth by the 7th Juror, played by Henry Fonda in support of the accused as not-guilty. Juror 9 changed his vote in favor of Juror 7 because of his stand which would put an 18 year old boy on Death Row by an unanimous decision of the 12 Jurors if voted guilty.
Therefore as a worldly-wise & keen observer of the proceedings in the Court, he weighs the pros & cons, deciding to vote in support of the accuse as not guilty, turning the vote count to 2 not-guilty against the majority 10 Jurors voting him guilty. There are several remakes, but the story & the characters r the same but with different actors. My Answer is based on Sidney Lumet's directorial debut with "12Angry Men" released in 1957. This Courtroom drama was adapted from a teleplay of the same name by Reginald Rose who co-produced and wrote the screenplay for the movie.
juror number two,eight ,five,nine,eleven and six.
becuase he stood alone
Reasonable Doubt
Because the boy arrived home after the incident, which people wouldn’t normally do in that situation
The different characters of 12 Angry men come from various backgrounds, but 11 of the 12 are initially convinced of the accused's guilt. The 12th juror works to set aside each jurors prejudices and fallacies to assure that justice does prevail.
He has a difficult relationship with his own son. he is a bully trying to pick a part the weakest juror that being juror number 2
They become enemies since the juror number three disagrees with number eights evidence. Most jurors believe supported evidence by juror number eight as for number three suggests to stick to the facts, and forms an nemisis relationship.
Juror #1o agrees with juror #12 and changes his vote to Not Guilty without any hoopla attached. You may have the number wrong for the juror you are attributing the quote to.
12 Angry Men was released on 04/13/1957.
The protagonist in "12 Angry Men" is Juror 8, played by Henry Fonda, who is the dissenting juror seeking to convince the others of reasonable doubt. The antagonist could be considered as Juror 3, played by Lee J. Cobb, who at first strongly believes in the defendant's guilt and serves as the main opposing force to Juror 8's arguments.
Approximately 75, depending on the version.
The 12th juror in the play 12 Angry Men originally believes that the boy is guilty. He later changes his vote to not guilty following the deliberation.
5 and 8
He had baseball tickets.
Juror #3 because he stands with his opinion of "Guilty" the longest.
There are many logical fallacies in 12 Angry Men. An example is false analogy. This was when a juror claims someone must have made their story up for attention as they would have if they were as lonely as them.
The different characters of 12 Angry men come from various backgrounds, but 11 of the 12 are initially convinced of the accused's guilt. The 12th juror works to set aside each jurors prejudices and fallacies to assure that justice does prevail.
He has a difficult relationship with his own son. he is a bully trying to pick a part the weakest juror that being juror number 2
In the 1957 version, he is played by Robert Webber. In the 1997 television production, he is played by William Petersen.
They become enemies since the juror number three disagrees with number eights evidence. Most jurors believe supported evidence by juror number eight as for number three suggests to stick to the facts, and forms an nemisis relationship.
The cast of 12 Angry Viewers - 1997 includes: Kathleen Brower as Juror (1997) Wilson Cleveland as Juror Carson Daly as himself Christina Flood as Juror Jake Fogelnest as Himself - Host Christopher Francis as Himself - Panel Member Lisa Harvin as Juror (1997) Lauren Irzarry as Juror Eileen Kovener as Juror Ananda Lewis as Herself - Host Vaughn Lowery as Juror Tim McArthur as Juror Jessica Pimentel as Juror (1997)