A witness to a mob killing has second thoughts about testifying when he realizes his family might become a target.A witness to a mob killing has second thoughts about testifying when he realizes his family might become a target.A witness to a mob killing has second thoughts about testifying when he realizes his family might become a target.
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- Nominated for 1 Primetime Emmy
- 3 nominations total
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Restaurant owner Sam Paxton (Aidan Quinn) witnesses a mob hit in a crowded bar and is the only one to tell police he saw the killer. The news thrills U. S. Attorney James Falcon (Brian Dennehy), who is looking to use the witness to put away the Irish mob in NYC. However, Paxton soon finds himself up against both the threatening mob and locals that cherish a misguided "don't snitch on your community" ethic. This HBO movie reunites Dennehy with F/X (1986) director Robert Mandel and is quite good in showing the inner workings of both the prosecutor's office and the mob. Quinn is excellent in the lead and Dennehy is also great as the ruthless attorney who will stop at nothing to get his case. Both were nominated for Cable ACE awards. There is a great supporting cast including Stockard Channing as another lawyer (she was nominated for an Emmy for this), Laura Harrington as Paxton's suffering wife, Delroy Lindo as a detective, Ken Pogue as the bar owner, and Colm Meaney and Tobin Bell as a couple of Irish thugs. And, per Hollywood casting rules, since it is technically a mob picture Tony Sirico has a small role too.
6=G=
"Perfect Witness" is a typical journeyman HBO tv flick which tells of a small time restauranteur (Quinn) in NYC who witnesses a gangland hit, identifies the killer from mug shots but refuses to testify, and finds himself being squeezed by a US Attorney (Dennehy) and the mob with equal vigor. Overall the film is a mediocre telling of an interesting story with a hook at the end which is almost worth the wait. All drama with no action, romance, sex, or other trimmings, "Perfect Witness" makes for a flawed but okay watch for the needy channel surfer. (C+)
No clue about grand jury procedure, no clue how cops work, no clue about the department of justice, no clue about courtroom procedure. The writer should get acquainted with the workings of the witness protection program. Given the awful, completely unrealistic script, the actors did the best they could, especially Stockard Channing. The only reason I rated it so high was the excellent views of the mean streets of an urban area, and the excellent camera work. There have been so many excellent movies about witnesses to murder, criminal prosecution, and police work and the justice system. Go see any of them and skip this one.
This kept my interest for over halfway but then story began to get a little too depressing and the language got offensive and the whole thing just sort of collapsed. Near the end, I could care less what happened.
I am used to hearing actor Brian Dennehy's verbal blasphemy. He's one of the worst of all times in that regard, abusing the Lord's name in vain, but it was disappointing to see Aiden Quinn's character, "Sam Paxton," slowly deteriorate. He was likable most of the way, and then started to cop an attitude. What happened to Stockard Channing's character "Liz" also was disappointing.
Overall, too much of a downer to recommend.
I am used to hearing actor Brian Dennehy's verbal blasphemy. He's one of the worst of all times in that regard, abusing the Lord's name in vain, but it was disappointing to see Aiden Quinn's character, "Sam Paxton," slowly deteriorate. He was likable most of the way, and then started to cop an attitude. What happened to Stockard Channing's character "Liz" also was disappointing.
Overall, too much of a downer to recommend.
Aidan Quinn is always good and his films are always interesting, no matter what kind of role he plays. Here he is a very ordinary man, a common restaurateur down town in New York, who has the bad luck of happening to witness a cold blooded murder next to him. The murderer passes him on his way out and smiles towards him. That smile is the nightmare of the film and of Aidan Quinn's character. He has a wife and a small boy, whom he loves, they are a tender family, but as he is called to testify about the murder as the perfect witness, his family becomes threatened, and he refuses to testify to protect them. The district attorney has to find other ways to bring in the mob that keeps the neighbourhood in iron pincers, he tries any means to get Quinn to testify, but he stubbornly refuses and even goes to jail for contempt. Meanwhile the casualties pile up in the jam of this unresolved case, and the murderer keeps smiling, paying everyone off who keeps their silence, until it goes too far. It's a typical mob story, this is how it works, when something happens everyone turns his back to it and no one has seen anything, and the most horrible scene is the preliminary murder scene. The smiling murderer shoots down his victim with repeated shots while all the customers of the joint just turn their backs seeing nothing. This finally gets up to Quinn's neck, and there is an unexpected final settlement. The expert witness has done his duty by actually doing nothing, the nightmare is over, but the casualties remain behind as silent but the most eloquent and irrefutable witnesses of all.
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