Sunday 18 October 2020

THE TRIAL OF THE CHICAGO 7 (ENGLISH) (2020)

For his second directorial, writer-director Aaron Sorkin (A Few Good Men, The Social Network and many more notable screenwriting credits) has marshalled an ensemble cast for an engaging courtroom drama. The movie chronicles an infamous trial from the late 1960s when the Nixon administration and its new Attorney General prosecuted eight persons belonging to different anti-Vietnam war and civil rights groups on charges of conspiracy for causing bloody riots in Chicago during the Democratic National convention in 1968. 

While it is purportedly recreation of a dark episode in the history of American democracy, it brings into stark relief on how it continues to represent the present days. The timing is curious as the chaos and paranoia that were prevalent then find an eerie resonance today as a highly polarized America heads into what promises to be a momentous, messy and one of its most divisive elections.

The writing is superlative as Sorkin dives into the thick of action from the word go and energizes the narrative with his trademark sharp cuts, electric exchanges between a bunch of memorable characters that we would love / loathe in equal vigour. He dials up the rhetoric, keeps the proceedings gripping by crisply inter-cutting the courtroom scenes with scenes from the fateful day of the riots to sustain the suspense. The unfolding drama is layered as it captures the multiple competing cross currents of war and peace, democracy and disorder, racism, calls for rebellion and righteous opposition in the face of unrelenting force of powers that be.

              

The stellar cast that includes top-of-the-shelf talents including Michael Keaton‌, Joseph Gordon Leavitt, Sacha Baron Cohen, Mark Rylance, Eddie Redmayne, Frank Langella and Yahya Abdul Matteen II and the performances are terrific across the board as they sink their teeth into these colourful characters that shine brilliantly even in crowded scenes.  

This might be a story from another era of stormy unrest on how corrupt and unbridled state power aided by complicit pliant institutions could corrode a democracy by choking the fundamental right of citizens to express dissent. Yet, almost half a century later, it presents a grim reflection of our own times as this movie underlines for us. As liberal democracy finds itself  dire straits, not just in America, but in several countries across the world, it is curious case of history repeating itself. Is it a tragedy or farce...? That is a zillion dollar question abegging an answer. 

And...  The whole world is watching.

A RIVETING WATCH !!

RATING - 3.5/5

1 comment:

  1. Timely review.. rather timely release..would watch thanks to yr riveting review

    ReplyDelete

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