Ajouter une intrigue dans votre langueMallory defends the nephew of a businessman arrested for taking his car. The boy kills an inmate for trying to sexually abuse him. Mallory must defend the boy, while fighting a corrupt DA's ... Tout lireMallory defends the nephew of a businessman arrested for taking his car. The boy kills an inmate for trying to sexually abuse him. Mallory must defend the boy, while fighting a corrupt DA's office who want him to lose the case.Mallory defends the nephew of a businessman arrested for taking his car. The boy kills an inmate for trying to sexually abuse him. Mallory must defend the boy, while fighting a corrupt DA's office who want him to lose the case.
- Réalisation
- Scénario
- Casting principal
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Victor Mohica
- Tony Garcia
- (as Vic Mohica)
William Lucking
- Georgie
- (as Bill Lucking)
Alex Courtney
- Richardson
- (as Alexander Courtney)
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I do recall seeing this made for TV pilot. The pilot didn't carry, thus Raymond burr is fated to remain Perry Mason for all eternity, the crowd pleasing lawyer show of the early 1960s.
what probably turned many off on this pilot was its measure of realism where judges tell lawyers not vice-versa and threaten them "you'll never come back to my part..." i recall as i watched this thinking: "how dare that oaf of a judge say such a thing to the great perry mason..."
But Burr's character does stand his ground properly within the courtly bounds of the procedures imposed by the court rules and etiquette. I doubt many understood how Burr's character stood up.
In playing the lead in the long-running Perry Mason series, Raymond Burr typecast himself so effectively and permanently such that it was impossible to play another lawyer save the incredible perry mason.
what probably turned many off on this pilot was its measure of realism where judges tell lawyers not vice-versa and threaten them "you'll never come back to my part..." i recall as i watched this thinking: "how dare that oaf of a judge say such a thing to the great perry mason..."
But Burr's character does stand his ground properly within the courtly bounds of the procedures imposed by the court rules and etiquette. I doubt many understood how Burr's character stood up.
In playing the lead in the long-running Perry Mason series, Raymond Burr typecast himself so effectively and permanently such that it was impossible to play another lawyer save the incredible perry mason.
... but because of the actor he was at the time. Hamil plays Joe Celi, a teenage boy who borrows his uncle's sporty new car without that uncle's permission. The uncle decides to teach Joe a lesson and have him arrested like any common criminal. The problem is he ISN'T a common criminal, but he's put in a county jail full of them. So a tough guy decides to pay a debt by trading Joe's sexual favors for the debt. When Joe won't go on the prearranged "date" he is forced to defend himself ending in the death of the demanding inmate. Now a lesson in consequences has just turned into a homicide charge.
Raymond Burr plays defense attorney Mallory who is employed, ironically, by the uncle who set these tragic circumstances into motion in the first place. Don't think that Burr doesn't point that out to the uncle either. I remember this film because it was one of the first to deal realistically with prison rape and what happens when a middle class young man is housed with hardened predators. And, of course, I remember it for being a part Mark Hamil played just a year before he became Luke Skywalker in Star Wars. Recommended if you can ever find it.
Raymond Burr plays defense attorney Mallory who is employed, ironically, by the uncle who set these tragic circumstances into motion in the first place. Don't think that Burr doesn't point that out to the uncle either. I remember this film because it was one of the first to deal realistically with prison rape and what happens when a middle class young man is housed with hardened predators. And, of course, I remember it for being a part Mark Hamil played just a year before he became Luke Skywalker in Star Wars. Recommended if you can ever find it.
Le saviez-vous
- AnecdotesThe movie of the week was inspired by a true story. Writer Tom Greene was discussing story ideas with a prominent Beverly Hills attorney who told him about a case he had just been involved in when one of his clients, a famous Los Angeles entrepreneur and owner of a LA based basketball team who had his nephew arrested for Grand Theft Auto, when the nephew got into an argument with him and took his expensive car out for a joy ride without asking permission. The nephew was arrested, and the entrepreneur wanted him to stay in the LA County Jail for a few days to "teach him a lesson". This attorney pleaded with his client to bail him out, since at the time the LA County Jail was a hell-hole, and not the place for a young man like his pampered nephew to spend even one second in. He finally convinced him to bail the boy out after 24 hours, however they discovered he was now remanded to maximum security since the night before he had killed an inmate who he claimed had tried to sexually attack him. The lawyer then had to defend the boy, who went in for a GTA, and now was charged with first degree murder. Much of the intrigue and misconduct by the DA's office as portrayed in the story were also based on actually events during the trial.
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Détails
- Date de sortie
- Pays d’origine
- Langue
- Aussi connu sous le nom de
- Der Pflichtverteidiger
- Lieux de tournage
- Sociétés de production
- Voir plus de crédits d'entreprise sur IMDbPro
- Durée2 heures
- Mixage
- Rapport de forme
- 1.33 : 1
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