- Language: English
- Subtitles: Spanish
- Aspect Ratio: 1.85:1
- Number of discs: 2
- Average Customer Review: 4.9 out of 5 stars See all reviews (31 customer reviews)
- ASIN: B000O77SPY
- Amazon Bestsellers Rank: #5,030 in DVD (See Top 100 in DVD)
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Most helpful customer reviews
4.0 out of 5 stars
One of Newman's best,
By
This review is from: The Verdict (DVD)
Although the pretext of this film, ie a washed up lawyer with a drinking problem, can be rather bleak and depressing at times during the course of this movie, it is one of my favourite Newman films, and really shows what a great actor he was. This is a triumphant film of the classic theme of the small man against the big system. I often feel that Paul Newman is one of cinemas most underrated actors, and this film shows how incredibly powerful and convincing he was as an actor.
5.0 out of 5 stars
A grand film of triumph over failure,
By A Customer
This review is from: The Verdict (DVD)
This film is one of the best in Paul Newman's stellar career, and he carries it convincingly with a spare, taut, no-frills performance. His Frank Galvin, an alcoholic has-been attorney with a bleak future is a defeated and pathetic figure, reduced to appearing at funeral homes during visitation hours to hustle business from bereaved family members. Even when long-time friend Mickey Morrissey [Jack Warden] hands Galvin a lucrative case on a silver platter, his star witness disappears to an unknown Caribbean island after having promised to testify against the hospital and Catholic Church for malpractice. Galvin's determination to see the case through is the first step to his recovery from the bottle and self-pity. The comatose woman's sister and brother-in-law who he represents in court have lost confidence in Galvin, he seems overmatched by the glib and polished Ed Concannon [James Mason] who represents the interests of the Church, and he has incurred the wrath of a biased, mean-spirited judge [Milo O'Shea]. To make matters worse, his girlfriend Laura [Charlotte Rampling] is little more than a Trojan horse in the Galvan camp and her true intentions come to light only after Mickey stumbles on the truth quite by chance. The movie was filmed under Boston's gray, overcast skies and has a gloomy forecast for Galvin in his quest for redemption and reward for a man who has been defeated by life but makes one last attempt to get off the deck and regain his self-respect and stature in his profession.
3.0 out of 5 stars
the film lets down the star,
By
This review is from: The Verdict (DVD)
THE VERDICT is one of Paul Newman's most celebrated performances. He plays a down-at-the-heels lawyer named Frank Galvin who lucks his way into a big case involving two doctors who have been horribly negligent, sending a young woman into a coma.Newman wonderfully gets at Galvin's desperation, and how he fights through an alcoholic haze. It's a thoughtfully worked out performance centered around Newman's wonderfully expressive eyes. Sadly, the rest of THE VERDICT could be taught in a Courtroom Movie Cliche 101 class. The lone lawyer vs the big firm (led by James Mason), altered documents, surprise witnesses, shenanigans by the hospital, it's all here. Even though I enjoyed the acting and the Boston atmosphere, I saw a lot of the plot coming. The cast includes Jack Warden as Newman's only friend, Joe Seneca, Lindsay Crouse, Wesley Addy, and a chilly Charlotte Rampling as a mysterious woman who crosses Newman's path. The commentary by director Sidney Lumet is of the "everybody was great/this is where we shot" variety.
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