


There’s a certain time period and a class of movies that have mostly passed me by — basically 70s(ish) American drama movies. I mean, I’d rent absolutely any VHS tape that showed up in my local video store in the early 80s (when I was… like 14 when this dropped), but dramas like this often didn’t, and I’ve never made it a point to revisit this period. So I’ve watched tons and tons of 40s and 50s movies, but it just has never occurred to me to poke around this period. Which is just odd, because so many of the movies from this time are things that have been in the cultural zeit-geist for me.
For instance, I had the Joe Jackson album Body and Soul, which starts with a song called “The Verdict”, and I love it, but it’s just never entered my mind to actually watch the movie. Which is why I appreciate that Hazel Flagg lists movies like this, because that makes me go “yes, of course I should watch that movie”.
So here we are. Four and a half decades later.



This movie sure has some names. Not just Newman, but it’s the second movie written by David Mamet (first one was the Cuckoo thing), and the director is Sidney Lumet:

Well, that’s some career… I don’t know how many of those I’ve seen, but it’s a lot.
But he did The Wiz!? I’m amazed they ever let him do another movie…

Yeah, on a distinctly downward trajectory:

But that took a couple decades — he’s still on a roll in 1982, sort of.




Wow, that’s a brown law office… it’s easy to forget that the 70s lasted until around 1984, but movies like this clarify that.


I love what he’s done with the place!




I love what he’s done with his office.



I always love a shot out doorways.






Could she possibly be Irish!?


I wonder whether Clint Eastwood was in the running for this role — it seems like Newman is doing a sort of Eastwoodesque performance to me. I mean, it’s great, but it’s not a very typical Newman performance.

Charlotte Rampling is great here, too, but it’s not a huge role.
I really enjoyed this movie. It’s, like, a proper movie — no nonsense, just the kind of serious film they used to make.
The Verdict. Sidney Lumet. 1982. ⚄

