VALUTAZIONE IMDb
7,2/10
2022
LA TUA VALUTAZIONE
Aggiungi una trama nella tua linguaIn 3 1/2 Minutes, Ten Bullets, two lives intersected and were forever altered.In 3 1/2 Minutes, Ten Bullets, two lives intersected and were forever altered.In 3 1/2 Minutes, Ten Bullets, two lives intersected and were forever altered.
- Regia
- Sceneggiatura
- Star
- Premi
- 3 vittorie e 7 candidature totali
Michael David Dunn
- Self
- (as Michael Dunn)
Russell Healey
- Self - Circuit Court Judge
- (as Russell L. Healey)
Aliyah Harris
- Self - witness, Jordan Davis' girlfriend
- (as Aliyah Harris)
Jordan Russell Davis
- Self
- (filmato d'archivio)
- (as Jordan Davis)
Andrew Johnson Sr.
- Self - radio talk show host
- (as Andy Johnson)
Recensioni in evidenza
"3 1/2 Minutes Ten Bullets" (2015 release; 98 min.) is a documentary about the "loud music" incident at a Jacksonville gas station in 2012, where a middle-aged white guy ends up shooting at 4 male black teenagers in a car playing loud music, and killing one of them. Upon his arrest, he claims that he was "standing his ground", as defined under Florida law. But was he?
Couple of comments: this documentary tackles a super-interesting case from the legal perspective (disclaimer: I am a lawyer myself, although my practice is NOT in criminal law or doing court trials). The lawyer defending the shooter zeros in on it when he addresses the jury: "these are the elements of the Florida "stand your ground" law. You may or may not like that law, but that is irrelevant. Your duty is to apply the elements of that law." The amazing thing is that the jury does apply the law correctly in the end. What is not so amazing, and in fact is quite disappointing, is that this is not an "objective" documentary. It is pretty clear from the get-go where the documentary makers stand in their beliefs. This should've been a riveting documentary and while certain parts of it are (in particular the court scenes), it is not enough (for me, anyway).
I recently stumbled on this documentary while browsing the Documentary section of HBO On Demand. Glad I checked it out, even though as already mentioned, the documentary is not even-handed. But the legal case itself is worth checking out.
Couple of comments: this documentary tackles a super-interesting case from the legal perspective (disclaimer: I am a lawyer myself, although my practice is NOT in criminal law or doing court trials). The lawyer defending the shooter zeros in on it when he addresses the jury: "these are the elements of the Florida "stand your ground" law. You may or may not like that law, but that is irrelevant. Your duty is to apply the elements of that law." The amazing thing is that the jury does apply the law correctly in the end. What is not so amazing, and in fact is quite disappointing, is that this is not an "objective" documentary. It is pretty clear from the get-go where the documentary makers stand in their beliefs. This should've been a riveting documentary and while certain parts of it are (in particular the court scenes), it is not enough (for me, anyway).
I recently stumbled on this documentary while browsing the Documentary section of HBO On Demand. Glad I checked it out, even though as already mentioned, the documentary is not even-handed. But the legal case itself is worth checking out.
I gotta say, documentaries covering court cases I didn't know about get insanely suspenseful when it comes to reading the verdict.
On one hand, I feel like I'm intruding as a viewer by seeing the process unfold like this, but on the other hand, there are benefits to showing the way it works for the public at large, and in that instance, I think it does a solid job. Also: it tells its story within one movie, which I'll always say is better than a court case being stretched into another stupid miniseries that goes on five times longer than it needs to (OJ: Made in America is the exception, but it really does a lot more than just cover the infamous murder trial, and is more cinematic than the best of what Netflix has to offer in the genre to boot).
Watch this if you want further information about gun control in America, as well as the way race and the idea of self-defence can complicate an already emotional trial that the poor/super brave families and friends of the deceased must persevere through. Honestly, I felt sympathy at one point for the fiancée of the accused too- there's one pivotal scene featuring her that really changes a lot.
It's good, though heavy, and while it isn't fantastic in its editing and filmmaking and style, it does what it tries to do well. And again: 98 minutes >>>>>>>> eight 1-hour episodes on Netflix ANY DAY 😅
On one hand, I feel like I'm intruding as a viewer by seeing the process unfold like this, but on the other hand, there are benefits to showing the way it works for the public at large, and in that instance, I think it does a solid job. Also: it tells its story within one movie, which I'll always say is better than a court case being stretched into another stupid miniseries that goes on five times longer than it needs to (OJ: Made in America is the exception, but it really does a lot more than just cover the infamous murder trial, and is more cinematic than the best of what Netflix has to offer in the genre to boot).
Watch this if you want further information about gun control in America, as well as the way race and the idea of self-defence can complicate an already emotional trial that the poor/super brave families and friends of the deceased must persevere through. Honestly, I felt sympathy at one point for the fiancée of the accused too- there's one pivotal scene featuring her that really changes a lot.
It's good, though heavy, and while it isn't fantastic in its editing and filmmaking and style, it does what it tries to do well. And again: 98 minutes >>>>>>>> eight 1-hour episodes on Netflix ANY DAY 😅
It is hard to review a documentary based around the killing of an individual. Considering film is almost always a form of entertainment it is hard to imagine being entertained by something as grim as this.
With that said, this is a great documentary, it shows both sides equally and allows the viewer to form their own opinions on the incident that the film is based on. Too many documentaries are biased or create their own 'facts' when dealing with their subject matter. This was different. Go watch it!
It is everything a documentary should be, an unbiased view at the world recorded through the camera that leaves the viewer with their own thoughts and ideas that are not the directors thoughts or ideas but original concepts that we have adopted through watching an honest piece of film making.
With that said, this is a great documentary, it shows both sides equally and allows the viewer to form their own opinions on the incident that the film is based on. Too many documentaries are biased or create their own 'facts' when dealing with their subject matter. This was different. Go watch it!
It is everything a documentary should be, an unbiased view at the world recorded through the camera that leaves the viewer with their own thoughts and ideas that are not the directors thoughts or ideas but original concepts that we have adopted through watching an honest piece of film making.
Good documentary about the killing of an African-American teenager in Florida the impact of the case and the trial of the perpetrator. Through good editing and subtle presentation of the court case, the film is able to show how "stand your ground" laws mud the waters even more instead of helping the justice system. The film does a good job of raising -and answering- important questions about human morality, cultural differences and perception, and the justice system. A few facts of the case were left out and you might feel that there's something missing in order to makes this a truly great docu, but overall it's still a well made and important film.
The day after Thanksgiving 2012, four male African-American teenagers in Florida pull into a gas station for cigarettes and gum, but a 47-year-old white man in the car parked next to them outside objects to their loud music. Michael Dunn later says in his testimony that he thought one of the boys, Jordan Davis, had a firearm and he perceived a threat on his life, resulting in a shooting that left 17-year-old Davis dead. Most likely, what really set Dunn off was the disrespect shown from a teenager towards a middle-aged man...a generation-gap problem that has existed since the dawn of civilization. The director of this emotional documentary, Marc Silver, takes the racial aspect of the case and builds and edits his film around it. We see Jordan's parents grieving his loss, we see his mother praying and worshipping and setting up a tiny cross in the sand on the beach, but hardly any time is spent on Dunn's fiancée (who comes across as an honest, interesting woman in court)--we don't even get her reactions after the verdicts are read. Silver wants to keeps a stirred pot boiling, and he isn't fascinated enough in the case as a whole to be completely objective (he's convicted Dunn already). The verdicts in both trials (this a result of a mistrial called on one of the counts, which was then retried off-camera) are fair, based on the actions of a man who was demanding respect by force. Dunn's motivations in that split-second when he took out his gun aren't probed in depth; Silver wants to reveal Dunn as a liar (which is true) and as a man with racist attitudes (which is debatable). When you come out of a documentary with more questions than answers, perhaps the film hasn't done a succinct enough job examining the central situation. We understand that Jordan's family is devastated, that he was a solid young man just out for a good time with his buddies (each shown to be completely innocent of malice). The trial judge says, "There are no winners or losers here," though, sadly, I don't think anyone heard him. **1/2 from ****
Lo sapevi?
- Colonne sonoreWe Gotta Pray
Written by Alicia Keys
Published by EMI April Music Inc. & Lellow Productions
Performed by Alicia Keys
Courtesy of RCA Records
By Arrangement with Sony Music Entertainment
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Dettagli
- Data di uscita
- Paese di origine
- Siti ufficiali
- Lingua
- Celebre anche come
- 3 1/2 Minutes, 10 Bullets
- Aziende produttrici
- Vedi altri crediti dell’azienda su IMDbPro
Botteghino
- Lordo Stati Uniti e Canada
- 30.407 USD
- Fine settimana di apertura Stati Uniti e Canada
- 2238 USD
- 21 giu 2015
- Lordo in tutto il mondo
- 39.263 USD
- Tempo di esecuzione
- 1h 38min(98 min)
- Colore
- Proporzioni
- 1.78 : 1
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