In 2024, Clint Eastwood released his latest film, Juror #2, and after watching it, audiences may be eager to find even more legal dramas, courtroom thrillers, and movies with morally gray protagonists. Released in October 2024, Juror #2 follows Justin, a man who is called away from his pregnant wife to serve jury duty. Despite his best attempts, he is ultimately chosen for the trial. However, the situation goes haywire when Justin realizes that the case he is trying may have more to do with him than he thought. In fact, he might be the killer.
Juror #2 harks back to the classic courtroom drama movie. There is mystery, deception, and tense discussions that will make audiences question their own ideas of justice. In particular, Juror #2's strength comes from the moral conundrum at the heart of the film. Justin must decide whether it is better for him to come forward as the murderer, which...
Juror #2 harks back to the classic courtroom drama movie. There is mystery, deception, and tense discussions that will make audiences question their own ideas of justice. In particular, Juror #2's strength comes from the moral conundrum at the heart of the film. Justin must decide whether it is better for him to come forward as the murderer, which...
- 1/9/2025
- by Megan Hemenway
- ScreenRant
"Why do you look so stressed?" Sky Cinema in the UK has revealed a trailer for Aisha, an emotional drama from Irish filmmaker Frank Berry. This is premiering soon at the London Film Festival after first showing at the Tribeca Film Festival earlier this year. While caught for years in Ireland's immigration system, Aisha Osagie develops a close friendship with former prisoner Conor Healy. This friendship soon looks to be short lived as Aisha's future in Ireland comes under threat. Letitia Wright (also seen in The Silent Twins and Wakanda Forever this year) stars as Aisha Osagie, with Josh O'Connor, Ruth McCabe, Emmet Byrne, Joanne Crawford, Geraldine McAlinden, Tara Flynn, Joseph Palmer, and Abdul Alshareef. I'm glad they make films like this because people really need to see how horrible most immigration systems are, and how they treat people so poorly, despite a belief it's the "right way". This looks like a very powerful film.
- 10/5/2022
- by Alex Billington
- firstshowing.net
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