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    12 Angry Men - 6

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    story‚ 12 Angry Men‚ there are multiple similarities and several differences from what is in the movie. In fact‚ there are more differences than there are similarities. Some of the differences really change the movie from the book. In the opening act of the short story‚ there is a narration that states that the judge is a male. In the opening act of the movie‚ you can see that the judge is not a male. Also‚ in the story‚ the judge seems quite a bit more serious about making the jurors really think

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    12 Angry Men Questions

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    12 Angry Men Questions Shakil Mirza April‚ 20th 2012 1. Do you think that the jury in this movie came to the right decision? Why/why not? I think that the jury in this movie came to the wrong decision‚ because I feel that all throughout the deliberation the factual evidence did not have any reasonable doubt lingering above it‚ which was the complete opposite of the opinion of juror 8‚ and gradually everyone else. While there was factual evidence presented‚ juror 8 persuaded all the

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    12 Angry Men: Parts

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    12 Angry Men Part One The Sociogram shows the dialogue between the group. It’s very obvious that Juror number 3 and Juror number 8 lead the conversation throughout the group. Number 8 engages in conversation with every person in the jury numerous times. Whereas Number 3 excludes many different members of the jury‚ focusing the majority of his efforts on convincing the people he views as threats. Part Two The Foreman established the first rule‚ which was that each Juror sit in

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    Moral Foundations 12 Angry Men and Morality A moral person does what is right for the group or society as a whole‚ not what is just right for themselves or one other person at any given point in time. In 12 Angry Men the voice of moral reason is clearly Juror Number 8‚ who from the beginning is the only “Not Guilty” vote because he believes they should at least talk about the court case of the Puerto Rican boy before they send him ultimately to his death. Juror 8 had integrity; he realized

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    12 Angry Men Analysis

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    12 Angry Men was released in 1957. Its opening scene is in a courtroom where the judge is giving directions to the jury. An 18 year old boy has been accused of murdering his father with a knife. The death sentence is mandatory if the boy is convicted and the verdict must be unanimous‚ either guilty or not guilty. The remainder of the movie is set in a hot‚ stuffy jury room. An initial vote is taken and the count is 11 guilty and 1 not guilty. As the vote is taken it is clear that some jurors are

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    12 Angry Men is a film that plays on the psychological mind‚ and highlights many features of Organizational Behavior. As the jury of 12 men convene in a locked room to decide the future‚ or lack thereof‚ of a young boy accused of murdering his father‚ they illustrate movement through the four stages of Bruce Tuckman’s Group Development Model of Forming‚ Storming‚ Norming and Performing. Along with this model‚ the movie portrays the difficulties and cohesiveness that 12 different men experience

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    Tajhe Lamarre 12 Angry men The movie “12 Angry Men” displays many well orchestrated examples of the terms Pathos‚ Ethos‚ and Logos. Through this film many topics arise in order to reach a verdict on a young mans life. The boy was on trial for murder‚ and most of the evidence at first glance made him look guilty. Twelve jurors must reach a unanimous decision in order to convict this young man‚ but the task seems to be more difficult to accomplish as one of the men fights in the boys favor.

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    Characterisation of McCarthyism 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

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    audience and include different opinions into a shared conclusion. In the movie “12 Angry Men”‚ juror number 8 (Henry Fonda) was not sure if evidence presented against a young defendant in court left reasonable doubt for a guilty conviction. The other jurors believed the presented facts and the defendant’s background warrants a guilty conviction. The movie showed how juror number 8 persuasively got the other jurors to review each fact logically‚ which led to an unanimous not guilty decision. Conger

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    12 Angry Men

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    12 Angry Men Welcome gentlemen of the jury‚ I am here to prove why the accused is guilty for murdering an innocent victim. At the time of the crime scene there were two witnesses who claim that the accused murdered the victim. One of the witnesses was an old man that lived above the accused apartment who heard the victim and the accused arguing‚ the second witness who lived across the street was an old lady who saw the victim get attacked by the accused with a knife. The weapon that the accused

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