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The Chamber

 
Movies:

The Chamber

  • Director: James Foley
  • AMG Rating: starstar
  • Genre: Crime
  • Movie Type: Family Drama, Courtroom Drama
  • Themes: Crisis of Conscience, Fathers and Sons, Race Relations
  • Main Cast: Chris O'Donnell, Gene Hackman, Faye Dunaway, Robert Prosky, Lela Rochon, Raymond J. Barry, Millie Perkins
  • Release Year: 1996
  • Country: US
  • Run Time: 111 minutes
  • MPAA Rating: R

Plot

Based on a novel by John Grisham, this drama deals with a man trying to come to terms with his family and their ugly secrets. Adam Hall (Chris O'Donnell) is a successful attorney based in Chicago who travels to Mississippi to look into the case of Sam Cayhall (Gene Hackman). An outspoken racist and member of the Ku Klux Klan, Cayhall was convicted in the early '60s of the murder of a Jewish civil rights lawyer and his children. Pending a last-minute appeal, it looks as if Cayhall will finally go to the electric chair, and Adam has arrived to see what he can do. It hardly seems like the sort of case Adam would normally be involved with, until we discover Adam's secret: he is actually Cayhall's grandson, and despite his misgivings about the man's racist views, he wants to see if he can spare his life. Cayhall, however, has little use for Adam and even less regard for his legal skills. As Adam spends time with his Aunt Lee (Faye Dunaway), who witnessed Cayhall's execution of a black man years ago, he gets a more complete and disturbing picture of Cayhall's race hatred and the terrible toll it has taken on his family and the community. The Chamber marked the acting debut of former baseball and football star Bo Jackson. ~ Mark Deming, All Movie Guide

Cast

Bo Jackson - Sgt. Packer; David Marshall Grant - Gov. McCallister; Nicholas Pryor

Credit

Mark Worthington - Art Director, Peter Montgomery - Associate Producer, Karen Snow - Associate Producer, Mali Finn - Casting, Tracy Tynan - Costume Designer, Denis L. Stewart - First Assistant Director, James Foley - Director, Mark Warner - Editor, David T. Friendly - Executive Producer, Ric Kidney - Executive Producer, Karen Kehela - Executive Producer, Carter Burwell - Songwriter, Ian Baker - Camera Operator, David Brisbin - Production Designer, John Davis - Producer, Brian Grazer - Producer, Ron Howard - Producer, Lisa Fischer - Set Designer, Jose Antonio Garcia - Sound/Sound Designer, William Goldman - Screenwriter, Chris Reese - Screenwriter, Al Laverde - Key Grip, J.J. George - Music Editor, John Grisham - Book Author

Similar Movies

Dead Man Walking; A Time to Kill; Ghosts of Mississippi; The Rainmaker; Runaway Jury
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The Chamber

The Chamber movie poster
Directed by James Foley
Produced by John Davis
Brian Grazer
Ron Howard
Written by Novel:
John Grisham
Screenplay:
William Goldman
Chris Reese
Starring Chris O'Donnell
Gene Hackman
Music by Carter Burwell
Cinematography Ian Baker
Editing by Mark Warner
Studio Imagine Entertainment
Davis Entertainment
Distributed by Universal Pictures
Release date(s) October 11, 1996
Running time 113 min.
Country USA
Language English

The Chamber is a 1996 drama/thriller film based on John Grisham's novel of the same name. The film was directed by James Foley and stars Gene Hackman and Chris O'Donnell.

Contents

Synopsis

Having survived the hatred and bigotry that was his Klansman grandfather Sam Cayhall's (Hackman) only legacy, young attorney Adam Hall (O'Donnell) seeks to appeal the old man's death sentence for the murder of two Jewish children 30 years before. Only 28 days before Cayhall is to be executed, Adam meets his grandfather for the first time in the Mississippi state prison which has held him since his conviction in 1980. The meeting is predictably tense when the educated, young Mr. "Hall" confronts his venom-spewing elder, Mr. "Cayhall" about the murders. The next day, headlines run proclaiming Adam the grandson who has come to the state to save his grandfather, the infamous Ku Klux Klan bomber.

While the old man's life lies in the balance, Adam's motivation in fighting this battle becomes clear as the story unfolds. He fights not only for his grandfather but also perhaps for himself. He has come to heal the wounds of his own father's suicide, to mitigate the secret shame he has always felt for having this man as a grandfather and to bring closure, one way or another, to the suffering the old man seems to have brought to everyone he has ever known.

Cast

Production history

Ron Howard was originally set to direct the film, but left the project to direct Ransom (1996). He stayed on as a producer on the film.[citation needed] Brad Pitt was committed to playing Adam Hall, but left the project when Howard left to direct Ransom.[citation needed]

William Goldman, who wrote the early drafts, described the project as a "total wipeout disaster" and never saw the finished movie.[1]

Filming locations

Scenes were filmed in the actual gas chamber at Parchman Penitentiary.[citation needed]

Reception

Critical reaction to The Chamber has been mixed to negative, with the film earning a rating of 17% on Rotten Tomatoes.[2] Roger Ebert gave the film two stars out of four, remarking: "In the early days of X-rated movies, they were always careful to include something of "redeeming social significance" to justify their erotic content. Watching The Chamber, I was reminded of that time. The attitudes about African Americans and Jews here represent the pornography of hate, and although the movie ends by punishing evil, I got the sinking feeling that, just as with the old sex films, by the time the ending came around, some members of the audience had already gotten what they bought their tickets for."[3] James Berardinelli also gave the film two stars out of four, saying: "Plot-wise, The Chamber is full of seeming irrelevancies. The movie should have been streamlined better; there's no need to try to include virtually every character from the book. ... The Chamber ... is mechanical and artificial, and tells you what to think."[4]

Grisham called the film a "disaster" and a "train wreck from the beginning." He added, "It could not have been handled worse by those involved, including me. I made a fundamental error when I sold the film rights before I finished writing the book. It was a dreadful movie. Gene Hackman was the only good thing in it."[5]

References

  1. ^ Goldman, William (2001) [2000]. Which Lie Did I Tell?: More Adventures in the Screen Trade. Vintage. p. 125. ISBN 0375403493. 
  2. ^ The Chamber reviews at Rotten Tomatoes
  3. ^ The Chamber review by Roger Ebert, Chicago Sun-Times, October 11, 1996
  4. ^ The Chamber review by James Berardinelli, ReelViews.net, 1996
  5. ^ "Grisham v. Grisham: John Grisham issues judgment on ALL his novels" Tina Jordan, Entertainment Weekly, Feb 13, 2004

External links


 
 

 

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