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pponyvt57fu7985 is a code
Juror #8 -played by Henry Fonda in the 1957 black-and-white version directed by Sidney Lumet- manages to persuade all 11 other jurors to find the defendant not guilty. And they leave the courthouse.
He is mad because ponyboy came home at 2 am. when he is to be home at 12 am. He expresses hos angry by slapping him. Then ponyboy left and tryed to ran away from home with johnny. He decided not to and went home.
He believed that when they left for the rumble that they could possibly get really hurt.
Juror Number Ten (played by Ed Begley) is garage owner who simmers with anger, bitterness and racist bigotry and needs the support of others to reinforce his stance. He is nasty, repellent, intolerant, reactionary and accusative. This character segregates the world into 'Us' and 'Them' categories.
twelve
Twelve
The climax is when juror #9 explains to the rest that the woman across the street couldn't have seen the crime just casually looking out her window from bed without her glasses. (cuz no one wears their glasses to bed.) Previously, juror #4 said that her testimony was good evidence, but after #9 disproves this, only #3 is left voting guilty. This is the climax because at the beginning of the play, all but one (#8) of the jurors vote guilty. But at this point, all but one vote not guilty (#3).
Best left to a trained gunsmith
The Udder Angry Travelers Off left after a hunting dispute over freshly killed animals.
in roman numerals
24
twelve I think
THAT-ALEX-LEFT-WOWS
The Udder-Angry Travelers Off left after a hunting dispute over the remains of freshly killed antelopes.
Twelve men is the name of the one rider. Nope !!! You are wrong !!! There was a man named EACH you idiot !!!
After they voted it was 11:1 in favor of guilty. This causes a huge scene with the jurors. The lonely man that was the only one to say he was for not guilty explained to the other jurors that he just wasn’t sure if he was guilty or not guilty.