The Verdict
{{Short description|1982 film by Sidney Lumet}}
{{Other uses}}
{{Use American English|date=January 2025}}
{{Infobox film
| name = The Verdict
| image = Verdict1.jpg
| caption = Theatrical release poster
| based_on = {{Based on|The Verdict|Barry Reed}}
| screenplay = David Mamet
| starring = {{plainlist|
}}
| director = Sidney Lumet
| producer = David Brown
Richard D. Zanuck
| studio = 20th Century-Fox{{cite web |title=The Verdict |url=https://catalog.afi.com/Catalog/moviedetails/56898 |website=AFI Catalog |publisher=American Film Institute}}
The Zanuck/Brown Company
| distributor = 20th Century-Fox
| music = Johnny Mandel
| color_process = Deluxe Color
| cinematography = Andrzej Bartkowiak
| editing = Peter C. Frank
| released = {{Film date|1982|12|8}}
| runtime = 129 minutes
| country = United States
| language = English
| budget = $16 million{{Cite the numbers|id=Verdict-The-(1982)|title=The Verdict|access-date=February 19, 2021}}{{cite book|last=Solomon |first=Aubrey |title=Twentieth Century Fox: A Corporate and Financial History |publisher=Scarecrow Press |year= 1989 |page=260 |isbn= 978-0810842441 }}
| gross = $54 million{{Cite Box Office Mojo|id=0084855|title=The Verdict|access-date=19 February 2021}}
}}
The Verdict is a 1982 American legal drama film directed by Sidney Lumet and written by David Mamet, adapted from Barry Reed's 1980 novel of the same name. The film stars Paul Newman as a down-on-his-luck alcoholic lawyer in Boston who accepts a medical malpractice case, initially to make money and improve his own tenuous situation. But he discovers while working the case that he is doing the right thing and serving justice. Charlotte Rampling, Jack Warden, James Mason, Milo O'Shea and Lindsay Crouse appear in supporting roles.
The Verdict garnered critical acclaim and box office success. It was nominated for five Academy Awards: Best Picture, Best Director, Best Actor in a Leading Role (Newman), Best Actor in a Supporting Role (Mason), and Best Adapted Screenplay.
Plot
Once-promising attorney Frank Galvin is an alcoholic ambulance chaser. As a favor, his former partner Mickey Morrissey sends him a medical malpractice case which is all but certain to be settled for a significant amount. The case involves Deborah Ann Kaye, who was left comatose after choking on her own vomit when she received general anesthesia during childbirth at a Catholic hospital. The plaintiffs, Kaye's sister and brother-in-law, intend to use the settlement to pay for her care.
A Catholic diocese representative offers Galvin $210,000 ({{Inflation|US-GDP|210000|1982|r=-3|fmt=eq}}{{Inflation/fn|US-GDP}}). Deeply affected by seeing Kaye, Galvin declines and states his intention to try the case, stunning the defendants and the judge. While preparing for trial, Galvin encounters divorcée Laura Fischer in a bar, and they become romantically involved.
Galvin experiences several setbacks. His medical expert disappears, and a hastily arranged substitute's credentials are challenged. Nobody who was in the delivery room is willing to testify that negligence occurred. The hospital's attorney, Ed Concannon, has a large legal team that is masterful with the press. Kaye's brother-in-law angrily confronts Galvin after Concannon's team tells him of the settlement offer that Galvin rejected.
In chambers, Judge Hoyle has a heated exchange with Galvin and threatens him with disbarment. Galvin dismisses Hoyle as a "Bag Man" for the local political machine and "a defendant's judge" who "couldn't hack it" as a lawyer. Hoyle denies Galvin's motion for a mistrial and threatens to have him arrested. Galvin storms out.
Galvin notices that Kaye's admitting nurse, Kaitlin Costello, filled out a form which included the question, "When did you last eat?" Galvin tracks down Costello in New York City and travels there to request her testimony. While Laura arranges to meet Galvin in New York, Morrissey finds a check from Concannon in her handbag and realizes she is Concannon's spy. Morrissey also travels to New York and informs Galvin of Laura's betrayal. Galvin confronts her in a bar and strikes her, knocking her to the floor. On the flight back to Boston, Morrissey suggests moving for a mistrial due to Concannon's ethics violation, but Galvin decides to continue the trial.
In her courtroom testimony, Costello says she wrote on the admitting form that Kaye ate a full meal one hour before arriving at the hospital. On cross-examination, an incredulous Concannon asks how she can prove this. Costello reveals that her superiors coerced her into changing the form from "1" to "9", but before doing so, she made a photocopy which she brought to court. Concannon objects that for legal purposes, the original document is presumed to be correct; however, Hoyle unexpectedly reserves judgment. Costello further testifies that the anesthesiologist later confessed he had failed to read her admitting notes and administered general anesthesia, which is dangerous for someone who ate only one hour prior. When the anesthesiologist realized his error, he threatened to end Costello's career unless she changed the form.
After Costello's testimony, Concannon again objects on the grounds that the original admitting document has precedence. Hoyle agrees and declares Costello's testimony stricken from the record. Afterward, a diocese lawyer praises Concannon's performance to the bishop, who asks "Did you believe her?", and is met with embarrassed silence.
Despite feeling his case is hopeless, Galvin gives an impassioned closing argument. The jury finds in favor of the plaintiffs, and the foreman asks whether the jury can award more than what was sought. Hoyle resignedly replies they can. As Galvin is congratulated outside the courtroom, he glimpses Laura watching him from across the atrium.
That night, a drunk Laura drops her whiskey glass, drags her telephone towards her, and dials Galvin's office number. Galvin is sitting with a cup of coffee. He moves to answer the call but changes his mind and lets it ring.
Cast
{{Div col|colwidth=20em}}
- Paul Newman as Attorney Frank Galvin
- Charlotte Rampling as Laura Fischer
- Jack Warden as Attorney Mickey Morrissey
- James Mason as Attorney Ed Concannon
- Milo O'Shea as Judge Hoyle
- Lindsay Crouse as Kaitlin Costello Price
- Edward Binns as Bishop Brophy
- Julie Bovasso as Maureen Rooney
- Roxanne Hart as Sally Doneghy, the victim's sister
- James Handy as Kevin Doneghy
- Wesley Addy as Dr. Towler
- Joe Seneca as Dr. Thompson
- Lewis J. Stadlen as Dr. Gruber
- Kent Broadhurst as Joseph Alito
- Colin Stinton as Billy
{{Div col end}}
Production
Film rights to Reed's novel were bought by the team of Richard Zanuck and David Brown. A number of actors, including Roy Scheider, William Holden, Frank Sinatra, Cary Grant and Dustin Hoffman, expressed interest in the project because of the strength of the lead role. Arthur Hiller was attached to direct while David Mamet was hired to write a screenplay.{{cite book|first=William |last=Goldman |author-link=William Goldman |title=Adventures in the Screen Trade |publisher=Grand Central Publishing |year=1983 |pages=62–67 |isbn=978-0446391177}}
=Completing the screenplay=
Though Mamet had made a name for himself in the theater, he was still new to screenwriting, with his first screenplay credit occurring recently in The Postman Always Rings Twice (1981).{{cite web |title=David Mamet |publisher=IMDb |url=https://www.imdb.com/name/nm0000519/?ref_=tt_ov_wr_2}} The producers were uncertain whether Mamet would take the job in light of the standards he set with his previous playwrighting, but according to Lindsay Crouse, who was then married to Mamet, the film project was actually a big deal for him. She recalled him struggling with Galvin's summation speech, but ultimately coming up with a satisfactory scene after staying up an entire night working on it.{{cite AV media|title=Milestones in Cinema History: The Verdict|type=featurette|publisher=20th Century Fox|year=2007}}
In Mamet's original adaptation, the film ended after the jury left the courtroom for deliberations, giving no resolution to the Deborah Ann Kaye case. Zanuck and Brown did not believe they could make the film without showing what happened in the trial, and Zanuck met with Mamet to convince him to rewrite the ending. Mamet replied that Zanuck's notion of an ending was "old-fashioned" and would hurt the film. He also reacted negatively to Zanuck's use of sarcasm to make his argument, i.e., Zanuck claimed his copy of the script seemed to be missing its final pages and that Mamet's film title would require a question mark after it. Hiller also disliked Mamet's script, and left the project.
The producers commissioned another screenplay from Jay Presson Allen, which they preferred, and they were approached by Robert Redford who wanted to star in the film after he obtained a copy of Allen's script. Redford recommended James Bridges as the film's writer-director, and he had Bridges create successive screenplay drafts, each one further sanitizing the lead character as Redford was concerned about playing a hard-drinking womanizer. Neither the producers nor Redford were happy with the rewrites, and soon Bridges quit the project. Redford then began having meetings with director Sydney Pollack without telling the producers; irritated, they fired Redford.
Next, Zanuck and Brown contacted Sidney Lumet to direct, sending him the Bridges and Allen screenplays. After reading the various drafts, Lumet decided the story's grittiness was fast devolving and he told the producers he would do the film, but that he chose Mamet's original script (they did not know he was aware of its existence). In Lumet's opinion, the rewrites were getting worse because Redford "was slowly shifting the emphasis on the character. Mamet had written a drunk hustling his way from one seedy case to another until one day he sees a chance for salvation and, filled with fear, takes it. The star [Redford] kept eliminating the unpleasant side of the character, trying to make him more lovable so that the audience would 'identify' with him."{{cite book |last=Lumet |first=Sidney |title=Making Movies |location=London |publisher=Bloomsbury |year=1995 |page=39 |isbn=0747522707}}
While preferring Mamet's script, Lumet did identify a couple of problems in it, but he believed they were fixable. Unlike Zanuck, when Lumet spoke to Mamet, he was able to get the writer's consent to make script changes. Lumet recalled that he and Mamet only had to revise one or two scenes, in particular, supplying a resolution to the trial, as Zanuck and Brown had initially suggested. Paul Newman was approached about starring in the film. He requested all versions of the script, and he too chose the Mamet script and agreed to play Frank Galvin.{{cite book |last=Levy |first=Shawn |title=Paul Newman: A Life |publisher=Crown Archetype |page=436 |isbn=978-0307353757}}
=Casting and filming=
After Newman was cast, Lumet recruited Warden and Mason, both of whom he had worked with before. He wasn't sure if Mason, a renowned actor in that era, would take a supporting role, but Mason liked Mamet's script and did not object.
Prior to filming, Lumet held extensive dress rehearsals, standard practice for his films but uncommon in other Hollywood productions. Newman was appreciative as the rehearsals proved crucial in developing his performance, giving him the time he needed to tap into the emotional bankruptcy of his character.{{cite AV media|title=Hollywood Backstories: The Verdict|type=featurette|publisher=AMC|year=2001}} In his 1995 book Making Movies, Lumet described what happened in a run-through of the script after two weeks of rehearsals:{{blockquote|There were no major problems. In fact, it seemed quite good. But somehow it seemed rather flat. When we broke for the day, I asked Paul [Newman] to stay a moment. I told him that while things looked promising, we really hadn't hit the emotional level we both knew was there in David Mamet's screenplay. I said that his characterization was fine but hadn't yet evolved into a living, breathing person. Was there a problem? Paul said that he didn't have the lines memorized yet and that when he did, it would all flow better. I told him I didn't think it was the lines. I said that there was a certain aspect of Frank Galvin's character that was missing so far. I told him that I wouldn't invade his privacy, but only he could choose whether or not to reveal that part of the character and therefore that aspect of himself. I couldn't help him with the decision. We lived near each other and rode home together. The ride that evening was silent. Paul was thinking. On Monday, Paul came in to rehearsal and sparks flew. He was superb. His character and the picture took on life. I know that decision to reveal the part of himself that the character required was painful for him.{{sfn|Lumet|1995|pp=60–61}}}}
At one point during production, Newman barely avoided serious injury when a light estimated to weigh several hundred pounds fell about three feet away from him after breaking through its supports. The wood planks were apparently weakened by overnight rain.
Since The Verdict is, in Lumet's words, "about a man haunted by his past", the director instructed his art director to use:{{blockquote|only autumnal colors, colors with a feeling of age. That immediately eliminated blue, pink, light green, and light yellow. We looked for browns, russets, deep yellows, burnt orange, burgundy reds, autumnal hues. Studio sets were done in those colors. If we got stuck in a location and had an unwanted color, we got permission to repaint it.{{sfn|Lumet|1995|p=98}}}}
The producers were reluctant to keep the scene where Newman strikes Rampling, believing it would turn the audience against his character and even damage his public image. Newman insisted on keeping it, believing it was right for the story. After the film was finished, the studio's executives sent Lumet several suggestions and urged him to rework the ending so that Galvin eventually answers Laura's drunken phone call. But Zanuck said that Lumet had final cut authority, and the film would remain as completed.
The courtroom scenes in The Verdict were notable for the appearance of Tobin Bell and Bruce Willis as observers.{{cite web |url=https://www.tvguide.com/movies/the-verdict/cast/2030120910/ |title=The Verdict - Full Cast & Crew |website=TV Guide.com |publisher=Fandom, Inc. |location=San Francisco, CA |access-date=October 1, 2024}} Both were uncredited extras.
Reception
Rotten Tomatoes gives the film an approval rating of 88%, with an average rating of 7.8/10, based on 40 reviews. The website's critics consensus reads: "Paul Newman is at the peak of his powers as an attorney who never lived up to his potential in The Verdict, supported by David Mamet's crackling script and Sidney Lumet's confident direction."{{Cite Rotten Tomatoes|id=verdict|type=m|title=The Verdict|access-date=8 March 2024}} {{Metacritic film prose |score=77 |count=17}}{{cite Metacritic |id=the-verdict|title=The Verdict Reviews |type=movie |access-date=January 19, 2023}} In her New York Times review, Janet Maslin called the Frank Galvin character "as good a role as Mr. Newman has ever had, and as shrewd and substantial a performance as he has ever given."{{cite news |last=Maslin |first=Janet |author-link=Janet Maslin |url=https://www.nytimes.com/1982/12/08/movies/paul-newman-stars-in-the-verdict.html |title=Paul Newman Stars in 'The Verdict' |date=8 December 1982 |newspaper=The New York Times}}
In a poll of 500 films held by Empire magazine, The Verdict was voted 254th Greatest Movie of all time.{{cite web|url=https://www.empireonline.com/500/48.asp|title=Empire's The 500 Greatest Movies of All Time|work=Empire|access-date=19 October 2022|archive-date=8 September 2013|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20130908084527/http://www.empireonline.com/500/48.asp|url-status=dead}} In 2013, the Writers Guild of America ranked the screenplay #91 on its list of the "101 greatest screenplays ever written".{{cite web|url=https://www.wga.org/writers-room/101-best-lists/101-greatest-screenplays/list|title=WGA Lists Greatest Screenplays, From 'Casablanca' and 'Godfather' to 'Memento' and 'Notorious'|access-date=19 October 2022|archive-date=30 November 2019|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20191130130322/https://www.wga.org/writers-room/101-best-lists/101-greatest-screenplays/list|url-status=live}} Richard D. Pepperman praised the scene in which Judge Hoyle eats breakfast and offers Galvin coffee as "a terrific use of objects, making for a believable judge in his personal, comfortable and suitable place, as well as a Physical Action (motion) that demonstrates the subtext of the Judge's objective (in support of the insurance company, the doctor and their attorney) without an abundance of expository dialogue."{{cite book|last=Pepperman|first=Richard D.|title=Film School: How to Watch DVDs and Learn Everything about Filmmaking|year=2008|publisher=Michael Wiese Productions|isbn=9781615930401|pages=184–185|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=lgVZPfv1K6MC&pg=PT185|access-date=7 April 2013}}
The film opened in 3 theaters in New York City and grossed $143,265 in its first 5 days.{{cite magazine|magazine=Daily Variety|date=14 December 1982|page=1|title=Major Openings Bolster B.O.}} The following weekend it expanded to 615 screens and grossed $2,331,805, finishing seventh for the weekend,{{cite magazine|magazine=Daily Variety|page=1|date=21 December 1982|title='Tootsie,' 'Toy' And 'Dark Crystal' Win Big At National Box-Office|last=Ginsberg|first=Steven}} and went on to gross $54 million.
Awards and nominations
The film is recognized by the American Film Institute in these lists:
- 2006: AFI's 100 Years...100 Cheers – #75{{cite web|title=AFI's 100 Years...100 Cheers|url= https://www.afi.com/afis-100-years-100-cheers/ |publisher=American Film Institute|access-date=14 August 2016|archive-date=16 March 2013|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20130316140946/http://afi.com/Docs/100Years/cheers100.pdf|url-status=live}}
- 2008: AFI's 10 Top 10: #4 in the Courtroom Drama category{{cite web|title=AFI's 10 Top 10: Courtroom Drama|url=https://www.afi.com/afis-10-top-10/|access-date=14 August 2016 |publisher=American Film Institute (AFI)}}
See also
References
{{Reflist}}
External links
{{Wikiquote}}
- {{IMDb title|0084855|The Verdict}}
- {{TCMDb title|18651|The Verdict}}
- {{AFI film|56898}}
- {{Rotten-tomatoes|verdict}}
{{Sidney Lumet}}
{{David Mamet}}
{{Authority control}}
{{DEFAULTSORT:Verdict, The}}
Category:20th Century Fox films
Category:American legal drama films
Category:American courtroom films
Category:1980s legal drama films
Category:1980s English-language films
Category:Films scored by Johnny Mandel
Category:Films about alcoholism
Category:Films about medical malpractice
Category:Films based on American novels
Category:Films directed by Sidney Lumet
Category:Films produced by David Brown
Category:Films produced by Richard D. Zanuck
Category:Films set in New York City
Category:Films shot in Massachusetts
Category:Films shot in New York City
Category:Films shot in Toronto
Category:Films with screenplays by David Mamet