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A Lesson Before Dying


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Editorial Reviews:  
 
 
A young man convicted of a murder he did not commit has been sentenced to die. Now it falls upon a teacher to enrich a life he cannont save and in so doing somehow redeem his own by teaching one young man. Studio: Hbo Home Video Release Date: 01/23/2001 Starring: Don Cheadle Mekhi Phifer Run time: 101 minutes Rating: Pg13
 
 
On a bright sunny day in 1948, Jefferson (Mekhi Phifer) sets off down the road to go catch some fish; by the end of the movie's opening sequence, he is the one who's been caught, and wrongly accused of the murder of a white shopkeeper. Racial inequality, at the time, is so pervasive in Louisiana that the white defense lawyer's argument at Jefferson's trial is that his client is not worthy of conviction: "You might just as soon put a hog in the 'lectric chair as this," he declares. Outraged by this statement, Jefferson's godmother (Irma P. Hall) does not want her godson to die as a hog. To this end she enlists the reluctant aid of the black community's teacher, Grant Wiggins (Don Cheadle), to teach him to "be a man." As Grant and Jefferson get to know each other (and the viewer gets to know them both), it's not clear which of them needs the lesson more. As in Ernest J. Gaines's award-winning novel, the movie goes beyond the conflict between the races to explore divisions that splinter the black community: education versus religion, dark skin versus light. And, thanks to masterful performances from Cheadle and Phifer as well as a thoughtful screenplay by Amy Peacock, A Lesson Before Dying goes even further, examining what it means to be human and the responsibility a man has to himself and to his community. Originally made for HBO, this adaptation of Gaines's novel richly deserves to be seen by a wider audience. --Larisa Lomacky Moore
 


A Lesson Before Dying

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User Comments About A Lesson Before Dying
 
ok
 

This movie was ok but i did not like all the foul language in it I will be throwing mine in the trash.



Hello! This is an American Masterpiece!
 

"A Lesson Before Dying" has made it to the top of the charts in my film world. Mekhi Phifer, Cicely Tyson and the Grant Wiggins characters are never to be repeated performances. Make sure you have some tissue's available. You won't be disappointed. It's a heart warming tear-jerker of a movie. At Amazon's current $6.99 it is a steal. This is Americana at its very best.

Where are the Oscars. Take a look. Where are the critics. Hall,. This film has it all, from injustice in Court to Protestant and Catholic prejudices resolved with a polite conversation. This is an American Masterpiece. Hello.

Old aunt Emma, Jefferson, the feisty preacher, Irma P.



"I'm happy, tonight. I'm not worried about anything. I'm not fearing any man."
 

The good news is that his exceptional performance here is one of many that are woven together into a powerful, and very American story. This quest touches everyone. Jefferson (Mekhi Phifer) is the purest of victims, Grant (Don Cheadle) is the intellectual wrestling with fight or flight, Tante Lou (Cicely Tyson) is fierce in her belief that self-discipline holds the answer, while the unforgettable Miss Emma (Irma Hall) embodies all we've ever learned about the abiding courage and astounding endurance of black women, still strong enough to love, give, and do what it takes to defend their own. This is a tough-minded picture that asks a very hard question. Highly recommended. They are people first, black people second. Every life is seen through the lens of racism.

This unbiased neutrality imbues A Lesson Before Dying with real force. Racism, in all of its cruel and unjust stupidity, does not define them; it is simply the water they swim in, the air they breathe. Don Cheadle is always worth watching, he was haunting in Hotel Rwanda.

The black people we meet all have distinct personalities complete with problems, strengths, fears, disappointments, and ambitions - just like anybody else. But how can Grant help him die with dignity. Why is that such an important goal - a gift to himself, to Miss Emma, and to the children of the town.

The movie's most compelling quality is its clear-eyed view of racism in America's deep south. From screenplay, to cinematography, and most certainly through the exceptional performances, this superb film is a tearjerker you can feel good about - on many levels. Everyone knows Jefferson is innocent, they also know he will be executed.



A lesson for us all
 

I can't say enough about "A Lesson Before Dying." The injustice committed will anger you, the fate of Jefferson will sadden you, but ultimately knowing these people and sharing in their lives, and seeing dignity and love rise from the ashes of a cruel and uncaring world make the anger and sadness worth it all. Mehki Phifer gives a powerful performance as Jefferson, a young man sentenced to die for a crime he did not commit. And Don Cheadle brings compassionate and dignity to the teacher who must help Jefferson stand tall. A "Lesson Before Dying" is a powerful and passionate film, so beautifully written and so beautifully acted it is one of those rare exceptions where the film adaptation is better than the book. He truly brings honesty and humanity to a young man who is seen by white society as inhuman.



There are more important lessons to be learned than death with dignity
 

However, you really have to accept the premise or else the movie cannot have the requisite transformations at the end. The flaw here is that I was not convinced that Jefferson thought he was a hog rather than a man. The focus here is not on justice, but rather on death with dignity. That is to say, as a Negro Jefferson is no more intelligent than a hog and not capable of understanding what he is doing, therefore he should not be convicted. When they stop at a local store to get some beer the other men do not have enough money and the white storeowner will not give them credit. But Jefferson's mother, Miss Emma (Irma P.

The fact that Wiggins wants to marry a light-skinned Negro woman becomes part of this equation as well, because "A Lesson Before Dying" indicts the schoolteacher for turning his back on his race (indeed, there is a scene where his remarks to his students are as demeaning as those of any of the white characters). After all, the premise of white supremacy is that Negroes are not human, with the idea that they were property rather than people codified in the U.S. But since his family accepts the fact that the white justice system is going to kill Jefferson I would be inclined to think he would be of a similar mind and that he would not take his lawyer's simile to heart. He resists being asked to do this task because it means going backwards, giving up some of his own dignity to go with hat in hand to ask the white men to be allowed to meet with Jefferson. Constitution as well as implicit in the practice of slavery.

Given the Civil Rights Movement to come what becomes interesting is not so much the battle by Wiggins to communicate with Jefferson, but the conflict between the teacher and Reverend Ambrose (Brent Jennings) over what is best for the condemned young man. Ultimately, the character who learns the most is Wiggins, as the teacher becomes the student. The jury, no doubt well acquainted with the practice of barbeque, has no more qualms about having Jefferson executed than they would of slaughtering a hog for a feast. By the end of the film life with dignity is the goal. The key moment is not what happened in the store but rather what is said during the trial, when Jefferson's defense attorney, a white lawyer, seeks to save his client's life by saying that Jefferson is like a hog. Obviously I think the fault is to be found in Ann Peacock's Emmy winning screenplay, because the performances by the cast and as good as you would expect them to be, but if you buy the story's premise from the beginning then you will not be having a major problem with director Joseph Sargent's film.

Wiggins is a college educated black man in a place where few of either color get such formal education. Gaines ("The Autobiography of Miss Jane Pittman"). The fact that he is innocent of the actual killings is not important to this 1999 HBO movie adapted from the novel by Ernest J. So they badger local schoolteacher Grant Wiggins (Don Cheadle), the only educated black man in town, to visit Jefferson in jail and convince him that he is a man and not a hog. Maybe my problem is that Jefferson is played by an actor who is playing a doctor on "ER," not to mention the fact that I reject the idea of racial superiority or inferiority.

Now, this is certainly an interesting idea. Hall), and his aunt Tante Lou (Cicely Tyson), are outraged that the boy has been called a hog. Guns are drawn and everybody ends up dead but Jefferson, who is arrested for the crime. Nobody is going to save Jefferson from his fate. "A Lesson Before Dying" which won the 1999 Emmy for Outstanding Made for Television Movie, is one of those movies adapted from a novel where I have not read the book but I end up thinking the depth it provides probably fixes a lot of the film's shortcomings.

Does death with dignity preclude salvation or does the quest for salvation require acceptance of your fate. Since this is a question of black and white justice in the South before the Civil Rights Movement, Jefferson is condemned to be executed. In Louisiana in 1948 a young black man named Jefferson (Mekhi Phifer) makes the fatal mistake of accepting a ride from another pair of young men. If Jefferson accepts this characterization, advanced by his own attorney and inherent in the social system in which he lives, then convincing him otherwise is a noble effort.



 

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