The Thin Blue Line (1988) cast and crew credits, including actors, actresses, directors, writers and more. Menu. ... The Jefferson County District Attorney's Office Paul McWilliams ... special thanks: The Jefferson County District Attorney's Office Noel Ian Morris ... dedicatee Peter …
The Thin Blue Line (1988) Edith James: Self - Defense Attorney. Showing all 2 items Jump to: Photos (1) Quotes (1) Photos . Quotes . Edith James ...
The Thin Blue Line is a British sitcom which aired on BBC One from 1995 to 1996. It was created and written by Ben Elton, and starred Rowan Atkinson. The series was popular with viewers, …
May 01, 2012 · The Thin Blue Line. and the Ambiguous Truth. In his 1988 documentary, The Thin Blue Line, Errol Morris explores the 1976 murder case of police officer Robert Wood and the …
Protective Wellness was created by Bridget Truxillo, an attorney and former law enforcement officer who spent time on both the Undercover Narcotics Unit and the SWAT team. Protective …
Thin blue line flag, commonly associated with the Blue Lives Matter movement | |
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Formation | December 20, 2014 New York City, New York, U.S. |
Founders | Active and retired law enforcement officers |
Type | Social movement |
Location | United States |
The prosecutor (Douglas D. Mulder) does not appear in the film. The film's title comes from prosecutor Doug Mulder 's phrase during his closing argument that the police are the " thin blue line " separating society from " anarchy ".
US$ 1,209,846 (US and Canada) The Thin Blue Line is a 1988 American documentary film by Errol Morris, about the trial and conviction of Randall Dale Adams for the murder of Texas police officer Robert Wood. Morris became interested in the case while doing research for a film about Dr. James Grigson, a psychiatrist known in Texas as "Dr.
Stanford Law Review author Richard Sherwin believes The Thin Blue Line actually presents two plots. He says Morris presents one plot through the construction and ordering of the non-linear story, revealing an easy-to-follow narrative implicating Harris instead of Adams, not unlike the story that implicated Adams in the first place, because it presents an easy-to-believe retelling of history. The other plot, Sherwin says, is an example of "postmodern skepticism". Within this notion Sherwin notes sociologist Jean Baudrillard 's interpretation of the postmodern media landscape as "flattening" meaning as well as the impossibility of the existence of "truth, authority, and history".
Morris is often credited with re-purposing film noir aesthetic to the documentary format. Film scholar Charles Musser has credited Morris for using 'fiction film' techniques in The Thin Blue Line. Morris himself has claimed all of his films are brazenly "anti-vérité" in style.
The " thin blue line " in the title "refers to what Mr. Morris feels is an ironic, mythical image of a protective policeman on the other side of anarchy". The film won many awards, but was a controversial film among documentary film critics, who felt the use of reenactment had no place in the documentary format.
The Thin Blue Line grossed $1,209,846 in the US and Canada. On its opening weekend, in only one theatre, it took in $17,814. Although the film is the 95th highest grossing documentary film released since 1982, Morris says he lost money on the production.
The Thin Blue Line made its DVD premiere in July 2005 from MGM. In Australia, the film was released on DVD by Umbrella Entertainment in June 2007. The DVD includes Umbrella Entertainment trailers as special features. A special edition Blu-ray of the film was released in North America by the Criterion Collection in March 2015.
Ultimately The Thin Blue Line makes us recognize that the truth is difficult to ascertain and we simply cannot blindly accept what is presented to us as ...
Curry, Renée R. “Errol Morris’ Construction of Innocence in ‘The Thin Blue Line.’ Rocky Mountain Review of Language and Literature 49.2 (1995): 153 – 167.
Morris effectively makes Miller appear nosey and suspect: someone the jurors should have never believed. While the prosecution uses language and suspect testimony to persuade the jurors of Adams’ guilt, Morris uses film and its devices to influence his audience of Adam’s innocence and Miller’s incompetence.
Morris helps us sort through the testimonies, however is Morris himself trustworthy? Ultimately yes. While it is true that Morris is actively trying to construct Adams as innocent and is by no means impartial, he did find the defendant truly innocent. In an interview with Cineaste, Morris explained that “most of the people in jail are guilty,” and after interviewing thirty-five inmates on death row, he believed, “they were all guilty – with the exception of Randall Adams” (Bates 17). Clearly Morris did not act with self-indulgence, taking on the case of a truly guilty person to see if he had the ability to persuade audiences that the guilty person was innocent. Rather, Morris was genuinely interested in exposing the mistrial and chose film as his medium of exposure. Morris argues that even though he used film, the story of Randall Adams’ mistrial should not be treated any less seriously as just ''because a film is put together in one way rather than another doesn't make it any more or any less true” (O’Connor). However, even though Morris seems to defend the choice of film, he too recognizes the pitfalls of the medium such as the fact that truth cannot accurately be depicted with film either.
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Protective Wellness was created by Bridget Truxillo, an attorney and former law enforcement officer who spent time on both the Undercover Narcotics Unit and the SWAT team. Protective Wellness provides legal support and wellness training designed exclusively for law enforcement intended to provide comfort, ease, and support in order to create a more balanced and joyful life.
Filmmaker helped free innocent man. Sentenced to death in 1977 for the murder of a police officer in Dallas, Texas, Randall Dale Adams was exonerated as a result of information uncovered by film-maker Errol Morris and presented in an acclaimed 1988 documentary, The Thin Blue Line. Patrolman Robert Wood was shot to death during a traffic stop on ...
And that's why I'm trying to correct an injustice.". On December 2, 1988 , Judge Baraka recommended to the Texas Court of Criminal Appeals that Adams be granted a new trial, and two months later he wrote a letter to the Texas Board of Pardons and Paroles recommending that Adams be paroled immediately.
In fact, the Millers had only moved from one part of Dallas to another. When the defense asked to introduce Emily Miller's statement, Judge Metcalfe would not allow it.
Harris was never tried for the murder of Officer Woods. On June 30, 2004, he was executed for the Mayes murder.
Thus, he said, he was asking Governor Bill Clements to commute Adams's sentence to life in prison. When the governor promptly complied, Wade proclaimed that there now would be no need for a new trial.
Adams took the stand and emphatically denied having any knowledge of the crime . But then the prosecution sprang two surprises. The first was the introduction of Adams's purported signed statement, which police and prosecutors claimed was a confession, although it said only — falsely, according to Adams — that when he was in the car with Harris, they had at one point been near the crime scene. The second was the testimony of three purported eyewitnesses whose existence had until then been unknown to the defense. One of these witnesses, Michael Randell, testified that he had driven by the scene shortly before the murder and, in the car that had been stopped by the officers, had seen two persons, one of whom he claimed was Adams. The other two witnesses, Robert and Emily Miller, had happened by at about the same time, but claimed to have seen only one person in the car — Adams.
11. The District Attorney that prosecuted Randall Adams, Doug Mulder, said that the police are "the thin blue line that separates the public from anarchy." This seems to represent a "pessimistic" view of human nature, that people are truly evil and need laws and rulers to keep the peace. Is this an accurate view of human nature?
9. Emily Miller, the female witness, claimed that she really "liked to help." Apparently, her opinion of being a helpful witness was making sure that Adams was convicted not that he was given a fair trial and considered "innocent until proven guilty." Why might her view of "helping" be the former and not the latter?
10. David Harris stated that: "Criminals always lie." Consider that at the time of Adams trial, Harris was on probation and accused of several other crimes, should that have affected the way the court received his testimony? The same could be said for Emily Miller, who lied about having a job when in fact she had been fired from it for stealing. What factors make some testimonies more reliable than others?