Jurors In 12 Angry Men

624 Words2 Pages

The 1957 film, Twelve Angry Men, follows twelve male jurors that must come to a decision on the fate of an 18-year-old Latino male who has been accused of stabbing his father to death. In this first-degree murder trial if the teenager is found guilty, the verdict means the death sentence. As the deliberations begin, the movie quickly develops an outlook of the jurors' intricate qualities, prejudices and backgrounds. Juror 1, the foreman, who is a cordial high school football coach, conducts an introductory ballot and, without reluctance, eleven jurors vote for the defendant to be convicted. Juror 2, a shy and hesitating bank clerk, appears to be conserving his guilty verdict because he feels intimidated by the more opinionated jurors. Juror 3, a middle-aged businessman who is not close …show more content…

Juror 7, a fast-talking salesman, wants the jury to reach a decision quickly because he wishes to attend a baseball game that evening. Juror 8 (Mr. Davis), a complex and thoughtful architect, casts the only contrary vote, declaring that he has doubts about the case and wants to give the boy, who has had a challenging life in the ghetto, a fair hearing. Juror 9, an elderly and frail man to whom the jurors have paid little attention to points out the conflicts in the prosecution's version of events on the night of the murder, and he is especially convincing when he notes problems with the testimony of a prosecution witness who is also elderly. The same man, along with Mr. Davis, manages to sway Jurors 5 and 11 to their side, for a total of four “not guilty” verdicts. Consequently, Juror 3 harasses Juror 11, an Eastern European refugee, for changing his mind. Juror 10, about sixty years old and the owner of a garage, sternly affirms that Mr. Davis is a weak “bleeding heart” before beginning a rant against slum

Open Document