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12 Angry Men

Decent Essays

Film Synopsis For this project I decided to watch 12 Angry Men, a story that focuses on a New York City jury's deliberations in an intense murder case. The movie is set in the 1950’s where a jury of twelve men is sent to deliberate in the first-degree murder trial of an eighteen-year-old from a bad area of town and it is hinted that his ethnicity is not white. If the jury were to decide a guilty verdict, it would mean an automatic death sentence for a child. When the jury begins discussing the trial, it appears to be an open-and-shut case: the defendant has an almost unbelievable alibi with no proof that he was not at the scene of the crime and not even being able to say what movie he had gone to see or what it had been about, a knife that …show more content…

Juror number 8 appears to be the most thoughtful and heroic of those around him, having lots of sympathy for the defendant in this case, he has to uphold his resolve and be willing to fight for the reasonable doubt in this case. Because of this, I believe that he has a strong open aspect to his personality, high level of agreeableness, as well as conscientiousness that provides him with the courage and empathy needed to fight for a young mans life. He doesn’t appear to have any abnormal psychology, because his role in the movie is to maintain a voice of reason while surrounded by people who need a little guidance. Juror number 3, in many ways, is the villain when compared Juror number 8. Juror number 3 is hot tempered and instantly voices his feelings about the simplicity of the case, and how discussion is unnecessary because the boy is obviously guilty. But, it is revealed that Juror number 3 has high prejudices towards this boy because of his problems with his own son. His neuroticism and being low on the scale of agreeableness and conscientiousness mixed with a possible anger or alcohol problem, provide the main conflict for the movie, a fight for what is right and what is wrong and is the last of the jurors to vote not guilty. Juror number 4 is a man of facts, a stock broker who is consistently urging the other jurors not to vote based on their emotions but on the evidence that was presented during the trial. His vote is only swayed when the last eye witness, who claims to have seen the murder, is discredited. His conscientiousness, in this case, is what kept him from seeing reason, even after all other “facts” were proven to be doubtful, he held his resolve until every single detail of the case were absolutely proven incorrect. Juror

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