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The Hurricane

 
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The Hurricane

  • Director: Norman Jewison
  • AMG Rating: starstarstar
  • Genre: Drama
  • Movie Type: Message Movie, Courtroom Drama
  • Themes: Social Injustice, Miscarriage of Justice, Race Relations
  • Main Cast: Denzel Washington, Vicellous Shannon, Deborah Kara Unger, Liev Schreiber, John Hannah
  • Release Year: 1999
  • Country: US
  • Run Time: 146 minutes
  • MPAA Rating: R

Plot

In 1966, Rubin "Hurricane" Carter was a top-ranked middleweight boxer whom many fight fans expected to become world champion. When three people were shot to death in a bar in Paterson, New Jersey, Carter and his friend John Artis, driving home from another club in Paterson, were stopped and questioned by police. Although the police asserted that Carter and Artis "were never suspects," a man named Alfred Bello, himself a suspect in the killings, claimed that Carter and Artis were present at the time of the murders. On the basis of Bello's testimony, Carter and Artis were convicted of murder, and Carter was given three consecutive life sentences. Throughout the trial, Carter proclaimed his innocence, saying that his African-American race and work as a civil rights activist were the real reasons for his conviction. In 1974, Bello and Arthur Bradley, who also claimed that Carter was present at the scene of the crimes, recanted their testimony, but Carter and Artis were reconvicted. In the early 1980s, Brooklyn teenager Lesra Martin worked with a trio of Canadian activists to push the State of New Jersey to reinvestigate Carter's case; in 1985, a Federal District Court ruled that the prosecution in Carter's second trial committed "grave constitutional violations" and that his conviction was based on racism rather than facts. Carter was finally freed, and he summed up his story by saying, "Hate got me into this place, love got me out." The Hurricane is based on Carter's incredible true story and stars Denzel Washington as Carter, Vicellous Shannon as Lesra Martin, and John Hannah, Liev Schreiber and Deborah Unger as the Canadian activists. Veteran filmmaker Norman Jewison directed. ~ Mark Deming, All Movie Guide

Review

The true-life story of an up-and-coming boxer convicted of a bloody crime he probably didn't commit, this drama has more heart than the stereotypical prison drama because it's cleverly told from a unique perspective: that of an inspired youth attempting to get his jailed hero freed. The script by Dan Gordon, who successfully mapped unjustly imprisoned territory once before with Murder in the First (1995), is a top-notch affair that keeps the pace moving -- an admirable bit of work considering the film's rather dour subject matter. Denzel Washington is a mask of pride and barely contained rage in a role that will likely stand as a career highlight for the intense actor and his left-leaning, socially conscious director Norman Jewison. While playing at times like a narrative goulash into which a little bit of every drama genre is thrown (including sports, courtroom, ghetto, and prison), The Hurricane is a moving, powerful story that's stylishly told on every level: visually, emotionally, and intellectually. ~ Karl Williams, All Movie Guide

Cast

Dan Hedaya - Della Pesca; Debbi Morgan - Mae Thelma Carter; Clancy Brown - Lt. Jimmy Williams; David Paymer - Myron Bedlock; Harris Yulin - Leon Friedman; Rod Steiger - Judge Sarokin; Garland Whitt - John Artis

Credit

Dennis Davenport - Art Director, Avy Kaufman - Casting, Michael Jewison - Co-producer, Jon Jashni - Co-producer, Suzann Ellis - Co-producer, Aggie Guerard Rodgers - Costume Designer, J.J. Authors - First Assistant Director, Norman Jewison - Director, Stephen E. Rivkin - Editor, Marc Abraham - Executive Producer, Tom Rosenberg - Executive Producer, Irving Azoff - Executive Producer, Rudy Langlais - Executive Producer, William Teitler - Executive Producer, Thomas A. Bliss - Executive Producer, Stephen E. Rivkin - Line Producer, Christopher Young - Composer (Music Score), G. Marq Roswell - Musical Direction/Supervision, Philip Rosenberg - Production Designer, Roger Deakins - Cinematographer, Armyan Bernstein - Producer, Norman Jewison - Producer, John Ketcham - Producer, Gordon Sim - Set Designer, Bruce Carwardine - Sound/Sound Designer, Armyan Bernstein - Screenwriter, Dan Gordon - Screenwriter, Terry Swinton - Book Author, Rubin "Hurricane" Carter - Book Author, Sam Chaiton - Book Author

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Gideon's Trumpet; The Great White Hope; Hunt the Man Down; Malcolm X; A Soldier's Story; Justice Denied; The Shawshank Redemption; The Eel; Slam; The Green Mile; Redemption; The Ambush Murders; Guilt by Association
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Wikipedia: The Hurricane (1999 film)
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The Hurricane

Theatrical poster
Directed by Norman Jewison
Produced by Norman Jewison
Marc Abraham
Armyan Bernstein
Thomas Bliss
John Ketchem
Written by Book: The 16th Round
Rubin "The Hurricane" Carter
Book: Lazarus and the Hurricane
Sam Chaiton
Terry Swinton
Screenplay
Armyan Bernstein
Dan Gordon
Starring Denzel Washington
Music by Christopher Young
Cinematography Roger Deakins
Editing by Stephen E. Rivkin
Distributed by Universal Pictures
Beacon Communications
Release date(s) Limited release:
December 29, 1999
Wide release:
January 14, 2000
Running time 145 minutes
Country United States
Language English
Budget $50 million
Gross revenue $74 million

The Hurricane is a 1999 American biographical film directed by Norman Jewison, and starring Denzel Washington. The script was adapted by Armyan Bernstein and Dan Gordon from the books Lazarus and the Hurricane by Sam Chaiton and Terry Swinton and The 16th Round by Rubin "Hurricane" Carter.[1] The film tells the story of boxer Rubin "Hurricane" Carter, whose conviction for a Paterson, New Jersey triple murder was set aside after he had spent almost twenty years in prison.

The film received mainly positive reviews, but has been criticized for many inaccuracies by film critics and others, including the families of the murder victims and their supporters.

Contents

Cast

Background

Actor Denzel Washington and Rubin Carter worked closely in making the film. Washington said, "He went through pots and pots of coffee and packs of cigarettes. I'd drink a little coffee. It's interesting and challenging when the person is there, alive and in the room."[2]

Award winning director/producer Norman Jewison considers The Hurricane his best work.[3]

Former middleweight World Champion Joey Giardello sued the film's producers for libel over the depiction of his fight with Carter as a "racist fix." "This is a joke, [he told the New York Daily News] he never hit me that much in 15 rounds. Virtually every boxing expert then and now will tell you I won the fight." Referee Robert Polis who scored the fight 72–66 in Giardello's favor stated: "They portrayed Joey Giardello as an incompetent fighter. I thought it was ludicrous."[4]

Eventually, the case was settled out of court with the producers paying the retired champion a hefty sum and Jewison's agreement to make a statement on the DVD version that, "Giardello no doubt was a great fighter."[5]

Filming locations
Filming locations include: East Jersey State Prison, Trenton, New Jersey; Avenel, New Jersey; Paterson, New Jersey; Toronto, Ontario, Canada.

Critical reception

Roger Ebert, film critic for the Chicago Sun Times, liked the film and the acting, and wrote, "This is one of Denzel Washington's great performances, on a par with his work in Malcolm X...Washington as Hurricane Carter is spare, focused, filled with anger and pride...This is strong stuff, and I was amazed, after feeling some impatience in the earlier reaches of the film, to find myself so deeply absorbed in its second and third acts, until at the end I was blinking at tears. What affects me emotionally at the movies is never sadness, but goodness."

Regarding the "fictionalized" aspects of the film, Ebert discussed why that is often the case in films, he added, "Several people have told me dubiously that they heard the movie was 'fictionalized.' Well, of course it was. Those who seek the truth about a man from the film of his life might as well seek it from his loving grandmother. Most biopics, like most grandmothers, see the good in a man and demonize his enemies. They pass silently over his imprudent romances. In dramatizing his victories, they simplify them. And they provide the best roles to the most interesting characters. If they didn't, we wouldn't pay to see them." He added, "The Hurricane is not a documentary but a parable, in which two lives are saved by the power of the written word."[6]

Film critic Stephen Holden, writing for The New York Times, had mixed views of the film but did like the acting. He wrote, "In telling the story of Mr. Carter's protracted and ultimately successful fight for freedom and justice, The Hurricane rides to glory on an astonishing performance by Denzel Washington....That is to say, Mr. Washington leans into an otherwise schlocky movie and slams it out of the ballpark. If his Hurricane is an inspiring portrait of nobility, it is because the actor never conceals the demons of fury and despair gnawing beneath his character's forcefully articulate surface."

Holden was forthright about the veracity of the film, writing, "The film is so eager to stir us up that it thinks little of bending the facts for dramatic effect. Among its most egregious distortions is its depiction of Mr. Carter's 1964 middleweight title match with Joey Giardello. The movie (which has fine, naturalistic boxing sequences) inaccurately portrays the fight as lost by Carter solely because of the judges' racism.

The taking of such license, of course, adds an extra jolt of drama. But when these and other distortions and exaggerations are added up, it's worth wondering if that self-congratulatory glow the movie leaves us with has been gotten far too easily and at what cost."[7]

Currently, the film has an 85% "Fresh" rating at Rotten Tomatoes, based on 96 film reviews.[8]

Distribution

The premiere of the film was on September 17, 1999 at the Toronto Film Festival. It also was featured at the Berlin International Film Festival on February 17, 2000.

The film opened in wide release in the United States on December 29, 1999. The first week's gross was $384,640 (11 screens) and the total receipts for the run were $50,668,906. In its widest release the film was featured in 2,148 theaters. It closed the week of April 14, 2000. The motion picture was in circulation sixteen weeks.[9]

Controversy

The film was criticized for misrepresenting many of the facts of Carter's life and the case itself, as documented in both his criminal and military records, and police reports and court documentation. Such critics include: Herald-News reporter Cal Deal;[10] Larry Elder;[11] Thomas Clough; Barbara Burns, the daughter of victim Hazel Tanis; George Kimball of The Irish Times;[12] Milan Simonich of the Pittsburgh Post-Gazette; Lona Manning;[13] The New York Times reporter Robert Lipsyte;[14] Paul Mulshine of The Newark Star-Ledger; and Jack Newfield of the New York Post, who stated, "I knew Rubin Carter, attended his fights, covered his retrial and I didn't see much reality on the screen."[citation needed]

The New Yorker film critic David Denby called it: "False, evasive and factually very thin - a liberal fairytale."[15]

Various newspaper articles have suggested that the film's inaccuracy may well have cost Denzel Washington the Oscar.[16]

Soundtrack

The Hurricane Soundtrack
Soundtrack by Various Artists
Released MCA
Recorded 1999
Genre Soundtrack
Label MCA

A soundtrack inspired by the film was released on January 11, 2000 on the MCA label. The CD contains fourteen tracks including "Hurricane," by Bob Dylan, "Hard Times No One Knows", by Ray Charles, "In the Basement" by Etta James, "Isolation", by Meshell Ndegeocello, "Still I Rise", by Melky Sedeck, and others.[17]

A CD of the original motion picture instrumental score was released on February 15, 2000 on the MCA label. The CD contains fifteen tracks and was composed by Christopher Young. It also includes the song "So Amazing", by Boyz II Men.[18]

Awards

Wins

  • Berlin International Film Festival: Prize of the Guild of German rt House Cinemas, Norman Jewison; Silver Berlin Bear, Best Actor, Denzel Washington' 2000.
  • Black Reel Awards: Black Reel; Theatrical, Best Actor; Denzel Washington; 2000.
  • Golden Globes: Golden Globe; Best Performance by an Actor in a Motion Picture, Drama; Denzel Washington; 2000.
  • Image Awards: Image Award; Outstanding Actor in a Motion Picture, Denzel Washington; 2000.

Nominations

  • Academy Awards: Oscar; Best Actor in a Leading Role; Denzel Washington; 2000.
  • Berlin International Film Festival: Golden Berlin Bear, Norman Jewison; 2000.
  • Blockbuster Entertainment Awards: Blockbuster Entertainment Award, Favorite Actor, Drama, Denzel Washington; 2000.
  • Chicago Film Critics Association Awards: CFCA Award; Best Actor; Denzel Washington; 2000.
  • Golden Globes: Golden Globe; Best Director, Motion Picture, Norman Jewison; Best Motion Picture - Drama; 2000.
  • Image Awards: Image Award; Outstanding Actress in a Motion Picture Debbi Morgan, Outstanding Motion Picture; 2000.
  • Political Film Society: PFS Award; Democracy, Exposé, Human Rights; 2001

References

  1. ^ The Hurricane at the Internet Movie Database.
  2. ^ Jensen, Jorn Rossing. The Berlin International Film Festival, February 17, 2000.
  3. ^ Westbrook, Caroline. "We talk to movie legend Norman Jewison," Jewish.co.uk.
  4. ^ BBC News | ENTERTAINMENT | Boxer sues Hurricane's makers
  5. ^ Stephen Brunt. The Italian Stallions: Heroes Of Boxing's Glory Days Sport Classic Books. 2003 p213 ISBN 1894963032
  6. ^ "Ebert, Roger". The Hurricane. 2000-01-07. http://rogerebert.suntimes.com/apps/pbcs.dll/article?AID=/20000107/REVIEWS/1070302/1023. Retrieved 2007-11-20. 
  7. ^ Holden, Stephen. "Fighting The Demons Within", The New York Times, 29 December 1999. Last accessed: November 20, 2007.
  8. ^ The Hurricane at Rotten Tomatoes. Last accessed: June 12, 2008.
  9. ^ The Numbers box office data. Last accessed: December 14, 2007.
  10. ^ Deal, Cal. "The Hurricane" Misleads a Trusting Public.
  11. ^ ""Hurricane" warning". Jewish World Review article by Larry Elder. February 4 2000. http://www.jewishworldreview.com/cols/elder020400.asp. Retrieved 2006-10-23. 
  12. ^ Kimball, George. Truth is swept aside by Hurricane.
  13. ^ "TopTen Myths about..... Rubin Hurricane Carter and the Lafayette Grill Murders". The Lafayette Library, Lona Manning's collection of articles and legal documents about the Lafayette Grill murders. http://members.shaw.ca/cartermyths/. Retrieved 2006-10-23. 
  14. ^ [1]Once Again, Giardello Is in the Eye of the Storm
  15. ^ Patriot games | Sunday Herald, The | Find Articles at BNET
  16. ^ Rubin Hurricane Carter at African-Americans web site.
  17. ^ Amazon.com
  18. ^ Amazon.com.

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