If you were on the jury.
-
strntz — 12 years ago(March 03, 2014 05:51 PM)
Until that happened they totally seemed guilty, no question.
Good for you. Because they were revealed to be truly innocent (and not just found "not guilty), movie fans will state categorically that the prosecution didn't prove anything.
When I saw this the first time so many years ago, I distinctly remember believing that the boys were being framed because the evidence was so damning. All the eyewitnesses identified the boys, the peculiar car they were driving, etc. Later, when even the tire tracks and rubber compound matched the boys car, who wasn't wondering what the hell was going on?
Other than the murder weapon being missing, the prosecution had them. In fact, even the prosecuting attorney believed they were guilty until the Vinny/Lisa/Tempest scene.
In the real world, would they have been found not guilty? Who knows. They had Casey Anthony, and 12 morons acquitted her
It is bad to drink Jobu's rum. Very bad. -
beanos-1 — 12 years ago(March 30, 2014 09:02 AM)
Well if you remember, the real reason that Lisa's testimony was so neccessary and effective, was because the judge was doing the background check, and suddenly not only did Vinny have to win the case, but he had to win the case in the next 3 hours.
Lisa's testimony got the prosecution to formally drop all charges in that time frame. In the end it was moot, but still. -
mikeyg24 — 11 years ago(September 22, 2014 10:33 AM)
Yeah Vinny say's 'You're in Ala-fckin-bama, you killed a good old boy, there's no way that this was never going to trial'. Vinny knew it would go to trial on the basis that, as you said, it was a tight knit community no doubt prejudiced against two Italian American New York boys but I mean in a neutral situation there was nothing to convict.
There's a moral to this story Del Boy but for the life of me I can't find it! -
jefgg — 10 years ago(October 11, 2015 09:32 AM)
Did you ever have jury duty? The last time I did most of the other jurors were middle aged and elderly Archie Bunkers eager to convict anyone for anything. I was so glad the case was settled before the trial began because I was not looking forward to serving on a jury with those people.
-
JosephASpadaro — 10 years ago(November 07, 2015 08:07 PM)
From a strictly legal perspective, Vinny discredited all of the eyewitnesses very effectively. At the very least, this provided reasonable doubt.
However, that misses the whole point of the film. The point was that two cocky New Yorkers (and their smug lawyer, to boot) never stood a chance in that small hick town. That jury was going to vote guilty, no matter what. The evidence itself was just a formality that the jurors needed to pay lip service to. The whole thing was a kangaroo court and there's no way those Southern rednecks were going to let the smug New Yorkers get away with "this". Not to mention, those jurors (and the Southerners in general in the film) certainly did not seem very bright or worldly. They were far from being critical thinkers.
Just look at how the judge himself (supposedly the most impartial player of all, within the court) treated Vinny. He kept over-ruling all of his objections, even the valid ones. And he kept throwing him in jail for contempt of court. And so forth. The judge and the prosecutor were in bed together. The prosecutor had the judge in his pocket.
So, the two boys were found guilty well before the trial even started. -
JohnSmythe — 9 years ago(October 18, 2016 07:57 PM)
There certainly is no shortage of absolutely outrageous verdicts, for both convictions and acquittals. It's interesting how you 're supposed to be judged by a jury of your peers, when in reality, most of the times those 12 people couldn't have any less things in common with the defendant.