Conflicts in 12 Angry Men by George C. Scott

997 Words2 Pages

Conflicts: The conflict is when 12 jurors have to decide whether a boy is guilty or non-guilty based from evidence they took notes on from listening in court. The boy is convicted of murdering his father and has the probability of the death penalty. The 12 jurors go to the conference room to discuss it with one another they have a vote. The vote is to go around the room and each juror verbally states “guilty” or “non-guilty.” After the vote, 11 jurors vote guilty of charge, while a lone juror votes non-guilty which causes great conflict with the other 11 jury members. The lone juror (Juror #8) says that the boy’s life should not be decided on just a vote, he thinks it should be discussed about. So the lone juror states his case on why he voted non-guilty. As he continues to speak he asks to have a revote. So after they tally up the votes, the number of jurors voting guilty and non-guilty has changed from 11-1 to 10-2. This causes and outrage of the 10 guilty jury voters. So as the 12 jurors argue amongst one another, each juror stating what he thinks; they bring out key evidence from the courtroom and continue to discuss and argue. At the end of the discussion of what was to be believed gone on for several hours, there were no guiltier jury voters; they had all changed their votes to non-guilty after Juror #8 convinced each of them of the scenarios of why he thought the boy should be proven not guilty.
Negotiation Techniques: Each juror had their own techniques on discussing the situation of the murder, whether it was using the facts, the witness, motives, and etc. Some of them were very loud and powerful with how they would discuss the murder, other were just calm and polite with how they handled the discussion or how they handl...

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...Juror # 11 is foreign, a watchmaker, respectful, thinks about the whole murder discussion, takes his time with his side of the argument. Finally, Juror # 12, he doesn’t speak all that much. I catch him throughout the video listening a lot. He seems to be a respectful man, and well rounded.
Message Learned: I learned from this film that when there comes a time where you end up deciding whether a person lives or not, you should take time to discuss or think about your decision and why it’s the right decision to be made or if it’s the correct decision to be made. Also trying to get through something because you have to be somewhere is not a great decision. Furthermore, using harmful words or sayings will get you nowhere in an argument, but being able to back up what you have to say in a somewhat polite manner can really help a lot with people having to listen to you.

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