"Jurors point of view in 12 angry men" Essays and Research Papers

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    12 Angry Men: Story 2

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    Introduction In the movie 12 Angry Men‚ (1957)‚ twelve white men from different socioeconomic backgrounds with diverse personal prejudices‚ beliefs and personalities are brought together in a small jury room on a hot summer day. The jurors are forced to debate evidence presented in a case and carry out the task of deliberating on the guilt or innocence of a teenager accused of killing his father with a switchblade. This film dramatically illustrates how a group dynamic can influence what should

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    something for which people over centuries have been willing to struggle and even die. Examples of Justice are novels 12 Angry Men and The Green Mile. 12 Angry Men is a novel written by Reginald Rose in 1955. The story takes place in 1957 in the jury-room of a New York Court of Law. It is about a young delinquent who is on trial for the murder of his aggressive farther. Eleven jurors are directed by the judge to gather on a hot afternoon to declare if there is any reasonable doubt as to why the boy

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    Rose has used the actions and motives of the jurors as a method of characterising and thus criticising the practise of McCarthyism. A fine example of this is the 3rd juror. A reckless and unrestrained man‚ he makes accusations against fellow jurors for not siding with his point of view; ‘Listen‚ you voted “guilty”‚ didn’t you? What side are you on?’ – a direct reflection of the actions adopted by senator Joseph McCarthy in the 1950’s. The 3rd juror also wrongly accuses the 5th for changing his vote

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    murder case. Twelve men were placed as jurors for a young man being accused of stabbing his father to death‚ During a preliminary tally‚ eleven tired men voted guilty‚ while one lone man voted not guilty. That person was Juror #8. A simple man nearing middle age with full dark hair‚ dark mystic eyes‚ and a well-leveled tone‚ who carried himself firmly. Of course‚ the eleven men grew frustrated with this and tried to explain to Juror #8 their reasons the young man was guilty. Juror #8 defended his opinion

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    Twelve Angry Men This essay will show the comparison and contrasts of Juror 3 and Juror 8. The first comparison of the jurors is‚ Juror 3 is very opinionative‚ and Juror 8 is factual. Another comparison is juror 3 has a lot of anger which makes him aggressive‚ and juror 8 is calm so he is passive. The final comparison that will be discussed is that juror 3 is a bully and yells on top of his lungs to get his way‚ and juror 8 is a natural leader who persuades the jury with his facts. This movie was

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    12 Angry Men Review

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    The film Twelve Angry Men follows the jury deliberation of a first degree murder case. The jury‚ totaling twelve men‚ dispute their decision of innocence or guilt throughout the movie. Many concepts of social psychology including conformity‚ anger displacement‚ and stereotypes are used in the struggle between these men to reach a verdict. Conformity is the tendency for people to go along with a group’s opinion despite what they really feel‚ just to fit in or be liked. In many cases‚ conformity

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    12 Angry Men Analysis 5

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    12 Angry Men is a story of twelve jurors responsible for deliberating and deciding the fate of a teenage boy accused of murdering his father.  Although it seems to the jurors that the boy is unquestionably guilty‚ one juror (Juror 8) speaks out against the comfortable groupthink of the other jurors. Juror 8‚ Henry Fonda‚ approaches the issue from a teamwork point of view‚ and over and over again gains acceptance his views as he calmly and realistically discusses what he believed are inconsistencies

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    12 angry men themes paper

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    12 Angry Men Themes What’s the most important thing when working in a group? In the play Twelve Angry Men‚ there are a lot of themes‚ but there are a couple that stuck out to me. Three themes that did are: honesty (if you want anything to work‚ there must be honesty) forgiveness‚ (someone can not hold a grudge over something that happened a long time ago.) cooperation(if there is no cooperation‚ nothing will get done). If you do not have these you‚ won’t get anything done. Honesty can mean many

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    Juror #5 In the play‚ 12 Angry Men‚ there are 12 jurors in a jury room. All of them are completely different‚ coming from various occupations and backgrounds. Juror #5 stood out among them because of a few things. He was from a very different background than the others. He grew up in the slums‚ just like the teenager being tried in the case. Because of this‚ he would take offense to the rude things the other jurors said about people from the slums. This contributed a lot to him changing his

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    12 Angry Men Thesis Paper

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    Declaration of Human Rights‚ "Everyone is entitled in full equality to a fair and public hearing by an independent and impartial tribunal‚ in the determination of his rights and obligations and of any criminal charge against him." The American Film 12 Angry Men clearly demonstrates that even in a place where individuals are required by law to step outside of societal norms‚ cultural and social behavior patterns are so deeply planted into the mind that people often operate fully without being aware of

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