Review: ‘Juror #2,’ starring Nicholas Hoult, Toni Collette, J.K. Simmons and Kiefer Sutherland

November 4, 2024

by Carla Hay

A scene from “Juror #2.” Pictured in front row, from left to right: Chikako Fukuyama, Nicholas Hoult, Adrienne C. Moore, J.K. Simmons, Drew Scheid and Hedy Nasser. Pictured in back row: Leslie Bibb and Cedric Yarbrough. (Photo by Claire Folger/Warner Bros. Pictures)

“Juror #2”

Directed by Clint Eastwood

Culture Representation: Taking place in 2021, in Chatham County, Georgia, the dramatic film “Juror #2” features a predominantly white cast of characters (with a few African Americans, Asians and Latin people) representing the working-class and middle-class.

Culture Clash: A magazine writer is selected to be on a jury for a murder trial when he finds out that the person who died might not be a murder victim but a victim of a hit-and-run accident that he caused a year earlier.

Culture Audience: “Juror #2” will appeal mainly to people who are fans of the movie’s headliners, director Clint Eastwood, and gripping courtroom/legal dramas that have very good acting.

People who love dramas about crime investigations and jury trials will find a lot to like about “Juror #2.” It’s an absorbing and suspenseful story about a juror with a very big secret that influences his actions as a jury member. The secret is revealed early enough in the movie for viewers to know if the person on trial is guilty or not guilty. The real mystery is what the guilty party will do to reveal or cover up the truth.

Directed by Clint Eastwood and written by Jonathan Abrams, “Juror #2” is the feature-film debut for screenwriter Abrams. It’s a very taut thriller that has a few minor plot holes or unanswered questions that don’t take away from the overall impact of the movie. Some viewers expecting a certain outcome might not like how the movie ends. “Juror #2” had its world premiere at the 2024 edition of AFI Fest.

“Juror #2” takes place in Chatham County, Georgia, where the movie was filmed on location. The story’s protagonist is Justin Kemp (played by Nicholas Hoult), a mild-mannered man who works as a writer for an unnamed regional lifestyle magazine. The movie takes place over the course of a few weeks in October 2021, although there are some flashbacks to things that happened in October 2020.

In October 2021, Justin and his schoolteacher wife Allison Crewson (played by Zoey Deutch) are anticipating the birth of a child, whose gender has not yet been revealed. Allison is in her third trimester of the pregnancy and is due to give birth on October 25, 2021. It’s later revealed that Allison had a miscarriage of twins in October 2020, which is why she and Justin are particularly anxious about her current pregnancy. So far, Allison hasn’t been experiencing any major health issues for this pregnancy.

Justin seems like an upstanding family man. However, he has a very troubled past that Allison knew about before they got married. Justin is a recovering alcoholic who’s been arrested and convicted in the past for more than one DUI. He got lucky and apparently didn’t get a felony conviction for his DUI cases, which would explain why Justin is eligible for jury duty. Justin has been clean and sober for a few years, which is about the same amount of time that he and Allison have been married.

Justin gets a jury duty notice, but he thinks he’ll be able to get out of jury duty if he explains that his wife is due to give birth any day that he would be required to be on jury duty in the next several days. Before he goes to the courthouse, Justin and Allison joke that Justin could just say something obscene or weird to get out of jury duty.

During this time, the local news has been saturated with reports about the upcoming trial of James Michael Sythe (played by Gabriel Basso), who is accused of the first-degree murder of his 26-year-old girlfriend Kendall Alice Carter (played by Francesca Eastwood), who died on October 21, 2020. Kendall’s mutliated body was found on a steep incline in a wooded area near a barrier rail on Old Quarry Road, which does not have lighting at night. Her death was ruled a homicide from blunt force trauma.

The defendant in this trial has a history of criminal activities, including domestic violence against Kendall, as well being a known drug dealer. He became the prime suspect because on the rainy night of Kendall’s death, he and Kendall were seen having a physical fight inside and outside a local bar called Rowdy’s Hideaway. People at the bar last saw Kendall and James that night when the couple’s arguing continued in the bar’s parking lot.

Kendall walked away from the bar, and James followed her by foot. Witnesses later testify that Kendall and James had a volatile relationship where they would get in physical fights, break up, and then get back together again. Kendall’s last night alive at Rowdy’s Hideaway is shown in several flashback scenes.

This murder case is being prosecuted by ambitious and steely Faith Killebrew (played by Toni Collette), who is in the midst of a campaign to be elected district attorney. James is represented by public defender Eric Resnick (played by Chris Messina), who is as tough as Faith. Eric fully believes that James is not guilty of killing Kendall and thinks there wasn’t a proper investigation into other possible persons of interest or reasons for Kendall’s death.

And there’s room for reasonable doubt. For starters, there were no witnesses, and no murder weapon was found. However, James doesn’t have a verifiable alibi of where he was at the time of Kendall’s death. He says he drove home alone and wasn’t on Old Quarry Road. There’s no security camera footage to prove or disprove he’s telling the truth. And it appears he had a clear motive to kill Kendall. James has rejected a plea bargain deal and wants to go to trial.

During jury selections, Justin finds out that his jury duty is for this trial. And that makes him want to get out of jury duty even more, because murder trials can be unpredictable regarding how long they could last. Judge Thelma Hollub (played by Amy Aquino), who is presiding over the trial, doesn’t accept Justin’s “baby on the way” excuse for getting out of jury duty. Justin is selected as Juror #2.

It seems to be an open-and-shut case. The case’s medical examiner (played by Kurt Yue) testifies that the blunt force trauma that caused Kendall’s death could only be caused by a weapon that was not used accidentally. Several witnesses testify to James’ violent tendencies and his past domestic abuse of Kendall. James seems to be the only person with a motive to murder Kendall.

But as the testimony goes on and the facts are presented, Justin comes to a horrifying awareness that he was in Rowdy’s Hideaway on the same night of Kendall’s death. And he was driving on Old Quarry Road around the same time that Kendall died and when his car accidentally hit something heavy that he thought was a deer. Whatever he hit went over the barrier rail, but since it was dark and raining, Justin couldn’t see anything when he looked over the rail. After looking at the crime scene photos of Kendall’s body, and hearing where she was injured, Justin now believes that she died from the hit-and-run accident that he caused.

What was a recovering alcoholic doing at a bar by himself? It turns out that Justin was tempted to relapse during the period of time that the movie implies was when his and Allison’s twins recently died from the miscarriage. At Rowdy’s Hideaway that night, Justin had ordered an alcoholic drink, but he didn’t drink it, and he left the bar shortly afterward. While driving on Old Quarry Road that rainy night, he was sobbing and distracted by a phone call from Allison when his car accidentally hit what he thought was a deer.

Now, one year later, Justin is fairly certain that he was the one who killed Kendall. Justin asks for advice from his attorney friend Larry Lasker (played by Kiefer Sutherland), who is a leader of the Alcoholics Anonymous meetings that Justin attends. Larry advises Justin not to tell anyone else about this secret, because Justin isn’t completely sure and no one can prove that Justin was the one who caused Kendall’s death. Larry also says that because of Justin’s history of DUI arrests and alcoholism, and because Justin was at Rowdy’s Hideaway that night, Justin could be facing serious prison time if he confessed to the hit and run.

Justin can’t get out of jury duty, so he thinks the best thing to do is make sure that James is found not guilty by the jury. James doesn’t want it to be a hung jury because there would likely be a re-trial where James would be found guilty. It’s an uphill battle for Justin to convince his fellow jurors to vote not guilty. When the jurors begin deliberations, almost all of them say that they want to vote for a guilty verdict. Justin is the first to cast doubt, but he comes up against a lot of resistance from several jurors who say they refuse to change their minds about voting guilty.

The other jurors have various backgrounds and different reasons for their conclusions about the case. Jury foreperson Denice Aldworth (played by Leslie Bibb), who has previous experience as a jury foreperson, tries to be as fair as possible and attempts to keep the peace when the jurors inevitably argue with each other. Outspoken bus driver Yolanda (played by Adrienne C. Moore) is one of the jurors who says she won’t change her guilty vote. Yolanda keeps saying she just wants to complete this jury duty as soon as possible so she can go home to her three kids. Another person who’s adamant about voting guilty is youth center worker Marcus (played by Cedric Yarbrough), who has an agenda for wanting to find James guilty.

The other jurors are senior citizen Nellie (played by Rebecca Koon), divorced dad Luke (played by Jason Coviello), medical student Keiko (played by Chikako Fukuyama), stoner Brody (played by Drew Scheid), social media influencer Courtney (played by Hedy Nasser), “regular guy” Vince (played by Phil Biedron), college-age Eli (played by Onix Serrano) and retired homicide detective Harold (played by J.K. Simmons), who is the only other person on the jury besides Justin who initially says there’s room for reasonable doubt. There’s also an alternate juror named Irene (played by Zele Avradopoulos), a true-crime enthusiast, who brings a little bit of comic relief to this tension-filled story.

“Juror #2” stumbles a bit in the second half of the movie when Justin does some things that would be obvious red flags of suspicion in the real world. For starters, he hasn’t fully repaired the damage to the car, which he is in the process of selling. There are also some scenes of Faith doing door-to-door detective work that someone on her level of prosecutor would not be doing in real life. In real life, an underling investigator would be doing that type of work. Viewers will have to suspend some disbelief in those scenes, since “Juror #2” is a fictional movie.

What makes “Juror #2 riveting to watch are the engrossing direction and convincing performances. Hoult does a very good job of depicting the inner turmoil of Justin as an expectant father who is trying to hold his life together as he knows that things could easily fall apart if his secret is exposed. At the same time, Justin feels tremendously guilty about the possibility of wrongfully convicting someone who didn’t commit the crime.

Collette and Hoult, who previously worked together in the 2002 drama “About a Boy,” give the standout performances in “Juror #2.” Simmons and Messina also deliver noteworthy performances, even though they’ve played these types of characters many times already—the grizzled cynic for Simmons, the sarcastic dealmaker for Messina. Sutherland shares top billing for “Juror #2,” but he’s only in the movie for less than 15 minutes. “Juror #2” will not only keep people guessing on the outcome but this memorable movie also effectively shows how lines can be blurred between “heroes” and “villains.”

Warner Bros. Pictures released “Juror #2” in select U.S. cinemas on November 1, 2024. Max will premiere the movie on December 20, 2024.

Review: ‘The Contractor’ (2022), starring Chris Pine

April 26, 2022

by Carla Hay

Chris Pine in “The Contractor” (Photo courtesy of Paramount Pictures)

“The Contractor” (2022)

Directed by Tarik Saleh

Culture Representation: Taking place in the United States and in Berlin, the action film “The Contractor” features a cast of predominantly white characters (with some African Americans) representing the working-class and middle-class.

Culture Clash: A former Green Beret takes a mercenary job as a private contractor, and he finds himself at going against orders and being hunted by his former colleagues. 

Culture Audience: “The Contractor” will appeal primarily to people who are fans of star Chris Pine and anyone who likes formulaic “shoot ’em up” movies.

Gillian Jacobs and Chris Pine in “The Contractor” (Photo courtesy of Paramount Pictures)

“The Contractor” is as generic and dull as its title, with an over-used action-movie plot of a bitter military veteran who goes rogue. Throw in some ‘daddy issues,’ sloppy editing and a drab Chris Pine—and that sums up this soulless film. It’s also got an awkward mix of trying to be gritty and sentimental, often in the wrong places.

Directed by Tarik Saleh and written by J.P. Davis, “The Contractor” (formerly titled “Violence of Action”) is being marketed as an action thriller, but any “action” or “thrills” are utterly predictable and don’t really come until the last half of the movie. The first half of the movie is a dreary slog showing what led to James Harper (played by Pine) going from being a Green Beret to joining a shady mercenary operation as a private contractor. James is living in the shadow of his father Mason, a high-ranking U.S. military officer who expected James from an early age to also go into the military.

In the beginning of “The Contractor,” James has been estranged from his father for years, for reasons that remain vague. However, flashbacks and conversations reveal that Mason (played by Dean Ashton) was an overly demanding and emotionally abusive father during James’ childhood. The movie starts off with James as a U.S. Army Special Forces Sergeant first class, also known as a Green Beret. James is also a war veteran, and he sustained injuries during his war duties. James is currently stationed in Fort Bragg, North Carolina.

Now seemingly recovered from his injuries, James is due to go before a board of military decision makers who will determine if he will be reinstated as a Green Beret. However, James has a secret: Because he’s desperate to be in the type of physical shape where he can be re-instated, James has been illegally taking human growth hormones through needle injections.

The U.S. Army finds out when James tests positive for these drugs. He is honorably discharged, but as punishment, he won’t be getting his military pension or insurance benefits. It comes at a very bad time, because James and his homemaker wife Brianne (played by Gillian Jacobs) are heavily in debt and getting dangerously close to going bankrupt. They’re so financially broke, they’re behind on their utility bills. When debt collectors call, James just ignores the phone calls.

In addition to having a financial strain on their marriage, James and Brianne have grown emotionally distant from each other. Brianne and James have a shy and introverted son named Jack (played by Sander Thomas), who is about 8 or 9 years old and the couple’s only child. Because James has spent a long time away from home, Jack is bashful around James, but James wants to be a loving and attentive father, so he makes an effort to get closer to his son, by doing things such as teaching Jack to swim in a public pool.

Not long after getting the bad news about his military discharge, James finds out that his father has died. This death seems to trigger some strange behavior in James, in obvious indications that he has unresolved issues with his father. For example, Brianne finds James doing repairs on their house’s roof in the middle of the night. When Brianne wants an explanation, James says defensively to her: “I’m not my father.”

And in cliché-ridden tripe such as “The Contractor,” that means you’re going to see some hazy-looking flashback scenes of James as child of about 10 or 11 years old (played by Toby Dixon) and James’ father Mason, who was a stereotypical stern and macho military type. As seen in flashbacks, Mason was the type of father who expected James to be tough from a very early age. He even forced a pre-teen Mason to get a tattoo at a tattoo parlor, even though it’s illegal for tattoo parlors to give tattoos to people under the age of 18.

At his father’s funeral, James reconnects with his former military best friend Mike (played by Ben Foster), who is happily married to a woman named Christine (played by Tyner Rushing), who likes and respects James too. Mike and Christine have two children: Mike Jr. (played by Nicolas Noblitt), who’s about 10 or 11 years old, and Kelly (played by Eva Ursescu), who’s about 12 or 13 years old. When James goes to Mike’s house for dinner, Brianne is not with him, which is another indication of the cracks in their marriage.

During this visit at Mike’s house, James confides in Mike about his financial problems. Mike tells James that if James is interested in private contractor work, Mike can easily help James get a contractor job that pays $350,000. It’s an offer that’s too tempting to refuse, and James desperately needs the money, so he says yes. This “private contractor” work is really mercenary-for-hire work, usually done by ex-military people, for secretive employers who want to keep these “black ops” jobs as confidential as possible.

Brianne isn’t too pleased about this decision, especially since James promised her that he would never do this type of work. James has already made up his mind though, and there’s nothing Brianne can do to stop him. James’ family life then gets mostly sidelined, as the rest of the movie is about his private contractor job.

James’ supervisor in this job is a rough and jaded character named Rusty (played by Kiefer Sutherland), who says that James will get $50,000 up front as payment, and the remaining $300,000 after the job is completed. To launder his money, Rusty owns a company that imports and exports coffee.

Rusty knows that James is taking this job because James was essentially ousted from the U.S. military. Rusty tells James: “I was you. That’s why we started our own tribe.” Rusty also warns James about the ruthless mercenaries he will encounter in the job. “The stink of those guys, they will rub off on you.”

It’s an assignment that will take James, Mike and some other people on this black-ops team to Berlin. The other members of the team include a cunning operative named Katia (played by Nina Hoss) and a muscle-bound brute named Kauffman (played by Florian Munteanu). Later, James meets a mysterious recluse named Virgil (played by Eddie Marsan), who might or might not be helpful to James.

In Berlin, this black-ops group has been tasked with hunting down a 42-year-old man named Salim Mohsin (played by Fares Fares), a retired professor of virology who used to work at Humboldt University in Berlin. Salim is doing privately funded research, and he’s suspected of being involved in bioterrorism, because he is developing a poisonous gas that could be used as a weapon of mass destruction.

Salim’s research is being funded by Farak Ojjeh, the founder of El Sawa, a charity with known links to Al Qaeda in Syria. Salim and his wife Sophie (played by Amira Casar) have a 9-year-old son named Olivier (played by Tudor Velio) and a 7-year-old son named Yanis (played by Aristou Meehan). And predictably, this family will be caught up in some way in whatever dirty dealings happen in the movie.

Things happen during this mission that don’t sit right with James, so he decides to not follow orders. It leads to James and Mike going on the run from their colleagues, with double-crossings and shootouts in the mix. The action scenes aren’t impressive. And too much of the action has clunky editing, thereby making some of the chase scenes look very phony.

It all just leads to a very formulaic conclusion, where the people who die and those who survive are too easy to predict. All of the cast members just seem to be going through the motions in the action scenes. The only attempt at some emotional depth is in the underdeveloped family scenes near the beginning of the film.

“The Contractor” has all the cinematic resonance of a mediocre video game. That might be enough to entertain some viewers watching a movie with talented cast members who deserve better material. Everyone else can skip “The Contractor,” because they won’t be missing out on anything meaningful.

Paramount Pictures released “The Contractor” in select U.S. cinemas, on digital and VOD on April 1, 2022. The movie is set for release on 4K Ultra HD, Blu-ray and DVD on June 7, 2022.

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