MovieChat Forums > 12 Angry Men (1957) Discussion > Textbook case of fighting one type of bi...

Textbook case of fighting one type of bigoted stereotyping with other type of bigoted stereotyping


A clever thing critics have been noticing recently is how a lot of TV shows and movies will fight bigotry with just as bad or even worse bigotry.

For example, so much of 12 Angry Men is based on this idea that the defendant has the odds stacked against him because he's an ethnic person from a disadvantaged background, but then uses bigoted stereotyping to exonerate him.

In the case of a female witness, her testimony could be completely discounted due to ageist and sexist notions that because she was middle-aged and not dressing her age, she must have been hiding the fact that she wore glasses.

In the case of the elderly witness, his testimony could be completely discounted due to the ageist and classist notion that someone who was old and disheveled probably was neglected and decided to say he heard something on the night of the murder for the attention.

My favorite example of fighting bigotry with bigotry is Juror 8's insistence that the defendant came from a rough background, might've been abused and been hit one time too many...never mind that most people from that background almost never kill their parents nor are they any less abused than any other demographic, so there was no reason to assume that his father was naturally an "abuser" just because of his ethnicity and class.

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Classic movie.

The point of the movie was to show that it wasn't such an open-and-shut case, that there was reasonable doubt. Nothing is quite as simple as it first seems.

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His spiel reads like someone who never actually watched the movie, and instead has only heard about it. He's making absurd claims not because it has anything to do with the actual movie, but because it starts "a discussion" about his disillusions that his racism and bigotry some how is reflected in old movies if you squint hard enough.

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You're the one who didn't watch the movie, contrarian/disinfo troll. It's why you didn't refute the specific points that I made and instead started dribbling about how I never saw it. What do you have to say about the scene in which the elderly juror implies that a witness testimony shouldn't be taken seriously because he looked old and lonely?

Or the implication that a woman's testimony couldn't be taken at face value because she was middle aged and wore "young clothes"? And that therefore, it should be surmised that marks on her nose suggested that she was probably nearsighted, because wanting to look young, she didn't wear her glasses to court?

I dare you to say that these scenes never happened.

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You're the troll, only trolls use ignore and spew lies and misinformation.

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[deleted]

You destroyed him with this comment. Kudos

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[deleted]

Reasonable doubt has nothing to do with casting aspersions on testimony and evidence presented in a trial that otherwise was sound. In other words, it's not hearing someone say, "I saw the defendant stab the victim," and then arguing, "How does the witness know it was the defendant? He has marks on his nose, implying that he's near-sighted."

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I heard you once, I don't have to hear it in stereo.

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Wow, someone has never heard of an accidental double post. Okay. Internet much?

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Don't be so trigger-happy on the Post button, then.

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No, the point is how you can manipulate people into taking your side by playing on their emotions and feelings of guilt.

Fonda's reasoning for reasonable doubt was very weak and contrived and based on a lot of assumption and speculation on his part.

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Rubbish.

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This movie? Yeah, definitely.

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You know damn well I meant what you said.

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No, I know damn well that what you said is rubbish. How about actually coming up with an argument, hmm???

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That's a good point. Maybe that was the point of the movie.

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No, because nothing he said actually happened.

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lol well I thought it made some sense.

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It only really makes sense if you never watched the movie... kind of like completely ignoring that the Oompah Loompahs willingly came with Willy Wonka to make the argument that Willy Wonka enslaved them and forced them to work in his factory and we need to all recognize that slavery is bad and old films promote it.

Typically, these type things pop up from people who've never watched the movie and instead just want to talk about a topic that has nothing to do with the actual movie.

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Okay I see where you're coming from. It's like if it's not in the movie, then it didn't happen?

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More so that Willy Wonka's actual actions were explained in the movie, but people who just want to have a discussion where they bash old movies for not being woke enough never actually watched the movie and thus don't know the details that the movie provides.

I fully explained why everything this guy claims makes this movie racist had nothing to actually do with the movie, because as someone who has actually watched the movie I understand why he's making the mistakes of assuming the only reason the woman's testimony was dismissed was because she is a woman. In reality, it is only offered up as explanation as to why she didn't wear her glasses, but the fact that she wears glasses and that it wasn't brought up by the defense is the reason her testimony was actually dismissed.

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Ah I see. Yeah I've seen it several times myself, it's a great one. Extraordinary.

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"In reality, it is only offered up as explanation as to why she didn't wear her glasses, but the fact that she wears glasses and that it wasn't brought up by the defense is the reason her testimony was actually dismissed."

Wrong. The reason her testimony was dismissed was based on the explanation why. Instead of speculating that she could've been wearing sunglasses or that she's far-sighted, they assumed she was a vain woman who usually wears glasses and therefore could not have seen what she claimed to have seen.

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Wow, that's a new pathetic low for internet debating. Let's just LIE and pretend that the points made never happened.

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Actually, that is what you're doing Liberal.

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Wow, lay off the weed man.

First off, the movie isn't based on the idea that the defendant has the odds stacked against him because he isn't white... you obviously never watched the movie if you actually believe that. The movie is based on the idea that jumping to conclusions is irrational. The one racist guy was only ONE juror that had to be convinced, and the poor neighborhood white juror was really just there to support the "there is no poor neighborhood people" claim. You've missed every other scene in the movie!

Like when we combine the evidence from the old man who swears he was able to hear the boy scream "I'm gonna kill ya" over the roaring L train that the eyewitness claims she was able to see through.

The fact that the totally unique knife wasn't unique at all!

The fact that the woman and the old man actually lied, and it was proven they lied.

All the nonsense you're spewing didn't happen... if you only read the cliffnotes so you can pretend to be woke, you might think it happened. But the fact is the only racist here is you.

I recommend, sit down and actually watch the movie, it is like a sherlock holmes mystery where Sherlock explains to watson how all the red herrings were false. Anyone who isn't high or drunk while watching the movie can understand it has nothing to do with bigotry.

I think the Holmes analogy is perfect here. What you're doing is trying to poke holes into Holmes' deductions after the case has already been solved. The woman was proven to have needed to wear glasses, the old man was proven to have been incapable of both hearing the boy yell "I'm gonna kill you" and was proven incapable of having traversed the distance to the door in time to see the boy running down the stairs.

Their testimony was dismissed because they were proven liars. The question was "if she needed glasses, why wasn't she wearing them in court" and you, being the only real bigot here, decided that the deductive leap of "well, maybe she wanted to look good" is why the entire testimony was dismissed rather than the proof that she was a liar.

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I'm putting you on ignore. Have a nice day.

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"Their testimony was dismissed because they were proven liars."

What the hell are you talking about? Fonda "proved" nothing whatsoever. He simply drew a lot on conclusions based on his own preconceived notions.

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They were proven liars, people who have never seen the movie don't know the scenes and make up what happened.

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"They were proven liars"

Okay, know you've proven that YOU are a liar.

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Just wanted to explain why I put a certain user here on ignore.

There's a huge disinfo troll problem here on MovieChat and other online platforms. The user I ignored outed himself as one of them. I know he's one, because one of their tactics is to make statements deliberately designed to mislead posters unfamiliar with the topic being discussed.

For example, if you've seen 12 Angry Men, you know that the subject of the female witness who had "marks on her nose" started when the jurors began making comments about how she looked and was dressed. Her appearance caused the jurors to start arguing that she must have been too near-sighted to have seen the murder clearly. How do we know she was near-sighted? Because she had marks on her nose. The marks on her nose was a sign that because she was trying to look younger than her age, she must have been hiding the fact that she was wearing glasses.

If you've seen 12 Angry Men, you know that what causes the jurors to second guess an old man's testimony is that he was old and looked disheveled, and naturally must have felt neglected and embellished his account for the attention.

The whole point of my post is that Juror 8 loses credibility in his crusade by using the very tactics he accuses the jurors of being guilty of. In other words, the other jurors are wrong for finding the defendant guilty because of his background, but it's also okay to hold two witnesses' testimonies against them because one was a woman trying to look young and the other was an old man who wore shabby clothing.

This all happened, but the disinfo troll here (brodee) used the classic tactic of screaming and yelling online that this all never happened, for the benefit of posters wandering into this thread either unfamiliar with the movie or maybe forgetting pertinent details about it. And then, to add insult to injury, he's going to keep painting the false picture that I've never seen the movie, when I've not only seen the movie several times over the course of 25 years, I've written two blog entries about it.

Usually, I just kind of laugh at trolls like this, but this kind of tactic, it doesn't get any lower or pathetic.

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You couldn't debate FACTS so you lied and put me on ignore. The FACT is that you're making shit up about the film that never happened... it's stuff that makes sense if you never actually watched it or just read the cliff notes but you know you didn't watch it and I know you didn't watch it.

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More lies, what REALLY happened is that the juror who was wearing glasses took his off, he began rubbing the sides of his nose, the old man noticed this and remarked that the woman who testified also had those marks and also rubbed her nose and that it is feasible that she wore glasses.

Nearsighted or farsighted doesn't matter, the only thing that mattered was that the defense never brought it up. That was the point that was driven home, the defense should have brought it up!

Again, if you weren't a troll you'd know this.


" I've written two blog entries about it."

Q.E.D. You're a troll who spreads hate and lies online.

The fact that you're the one spreading hate and misinformation about a film you've never seen is undeniable.

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"that it is feasible that she wore glasses."

A possibility at the most, NOT proof.

"Nearsighted or farsighted doesn't matter, the only thing that mattered was that the defense never brought it up. That was the point that was driven home, the defense should have brought it up!"

That's the problem of the defense. The jury can't base their verdict on evidence that wasn't presented in court. Very dangerous to support such a notion.

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