The Liberation of L.B. Jones (1970) Poster

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8/10
A symphony of thunder and lightning
Gloede_The_Saint28 June 2011
Sometimes I have to scratch my head and wonder why the hell a film isn't more acclaimed and/or remembered. William Wyler's last film The Liberation of L.B. Jones (1970) is one of these. A nail biting inferno of racial hate and discomfort.

Don't read the tagline and stay away from certain posters, it might spoil it! But even though I knew part of the outcome parts of this film stopped me from breathing, and I'm still filled with this heavy indescribable feeling.

It's essentially the tale of when the people discriminated against stops being afraid. It's also an exploration of the small towns of a bygone age, and their despicable sentiments.

The Liberation of L.B. Jones would fit perfectly in the company of films in In the Heat of the Night. Perhaps it was just a tad late, or perhaps it was a bit too bleak, but this is surely a film I will remember. A wonderful way to go out for the legendary Mr. Wyler. One of the best directors who ever lived! 8.5/10
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8/10
This is a smart movie with a well told storyline
kevin_robbins2 August 2021
The Liberation of L. B. Jones (1970) is currently available on Tubi. The storyline involves a black couple going through a divorce when the man discovers his wife is cheating on him with a local white police officer. When the woman hires a lawyer and threatens to fight the divorce, the police officer is informed the nature of their relationship may become public. Since white and black people sleeping together is heavily frowned upon the police officer could lose his job. He quickly goes on a rampage beating his lover and trying to hide the nature of their relationship by any means necessary. This movie is directed by William Wyler (Ben-Hur) and stars Lee J. Cobb (12 Angry Men), Lola Falana (The Klansman), Lee Majors (The Six Million Dollar Man), Roscoe Lee Browne (Logan's Run) and Yaphet Kotto (Alien). The storyline for this is very well told and portrayed. The ex-husband's patience was absolutely unbelievable, but so was his wife's ruthlesness. This movie in some ways gave me divorce PTSD. I loved the character interactions across the board and the set-up by the ruthless and dirty police officers was good, which makes the ending even more enjoyable. Overall this is a smart movie with a well told storyline I would strongly recommend seeing. I'd score this a solid 7.5/10.
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8/10
liberation of l b jones
mossgrymk25 January 2023
It is appropriate that the title character is an undertaker for this final film from William Wyler feels like a mass funeral for all hopes of racial reconciliation in the America of 1970, (not that it's gotten any easier now). The last shot of the two white liberals and the lone black radical sitting on opposite sides of the train as it flees the benighted region of bigotry and violence says it all. You certainly do not expect that these thee will come together once the train passes from Kentucky to Ohio! A powerful, somber image to end a powerful, somber film. Somber but not dull. Sure the proceedings can get lurid at times, even semi trashy. But I prefer this to the heavy handed, messagey treatment Hollywood has often employed when dealing with black/white conflict. (See the ouevre of Stanley Kramer and his students). Indeed, had the screenplay, by Stirling Silliphant (revisiting racial bleakness after "In The Heat Of The Night") and Jesse Hill Ford (the novelist upon whose work the film is based and himself a tragic figure), been better, with a fuller examination of the white liberals' characters and their relationship with the white patrician lawyer, wonderfully played by Lee J Cobb, then this film would have approached greatness, in my opinion. As it is let us give it a B for a solid end to one of Hollywood's most distinguished directorial runs, as well as the performances of Cobb, Anthony Zerbe and Arch Johnson, playing two of the more despicable redneck cops you'll ever see, a young and intense Yaphet Kotto and, above all, Roscoe Lee Browne as defiant, unbending LB Jones. Haven't seen enough of this fine actor's work to say whether it's his best but it has to rank fairly high, one would think.

PS...I regularly excoriate TCM on its programming choices (like devoting an entire day to the work of Arlene Dahl or repeatedly showing "Wait Until Dark" and "Alice In Movieland") but I have to congratulate whoever came up with last month's spotlight on final films from great directors. A total blast. At the very least, (as in "Ambush"), interesting and at best, (as in "Madadayo"), eye opening.
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Starts out hackneyed, but ends with a punch
Guy Grand7 February 2002
William Wyler had such a diverse and non-stereotypical career. He painted on a grand canvas with "Ben-Hur," "Funny Girl," and "The Big Country," romped about with fluff on "Roman Holiday" and "How To Steal A Million," and reined in on tight dramas like "Jezebel," "Detective Story," and "The Collector", all to name but a few. "The Liberation of L.B. Jones" was his last film, and its message is still powerful and taut. Here, Wyler reins in very tightly on a drama, placing his camera stock still in three-walled sets and allows the intensity to grow from the individuals coming undone within its frame.

Hollywood was just turning the corner in its presentation of dramatic material around 1970, with the revolutionary "The Graduate," "Bonnie & Clyde", and "Midnight Cowboy" already released, so Wyler's effort appears rooted to an earlier period in its presentation. Elmer Bernstein's music is bombastic and overly showy. The confining studios sets scream of the backlot environment "daring" pictures were then moving away from. And Wyler's static camera technique is a far cry from the fluid shots used by up 'n coming directors Penn, Nichols, Friedkin, and Wexler. But the overall tone and downbeat ending of "Jones" foreshadowed the de rigueur hard-edged storytelling that would make '70s pictures so vibrant.

Taking place in some jerkwater burg in Tennessee, the title character of L.B. Jones (played with dignified austerity by Roscoe Lee Browne) is a wealthy undertaker whose wife (the smoldering hussy embodied by Lola Falana) is practically rubbing his nose in her affair with a local cop. Jones wants to divorce her. The proceedings, if a courtroom action is necessary, would reveal her liaisons with the policeman, played by Anthony Zerbe, and Zerbe truly does not want his own wife to know of his infidelity. Thus, sets in motion the harrassment and tragedy of L.B.'s situation as only a town full of rednecks can perpetrate towards the threat of an intelligent, self-made African-American man.

Lee J. Cobb as the town's D.A. who always finds a way to help out the white folks, at the expense of blacks, walks a fine line of bigotry and self-discovery. It may be L.B.'s "liberation", but it's Cobb's character that will ultimately be put to a test. What's unique about this film is that he fails, miserably. Most movies made in the '80s and '90s about the racial plight of African-Americans, whether it be "Cry Freedom" or "Amistad" always have that knight in shining "white" armor that studios feel are needed to "help" the black man break the bonds of tyranny. The black character is never allowed to just gain freedom, discovery or triumph on the merits of his own strengths. This film has the guts to show L.B. take his "liberation" into his own hands, albeit with tragic results, and damns the white majority who are a long way from compassion and understanding.

The standout performance in the flick comes from Anthony Zerbe. If all you've seen are his scenery chewing in "Omega Man," his digit-dropping in "Papillon" or his head exploding in "License To Kill," check out his fully-fleshed out character of Willie Joe in this film. He embodies centuries of redneckdom in one person, portraying the self-inflated, unrepentent coward sheltered in police corruption so effectively that he masterfully overshadows the performances of everyone else onscreen. Unfortunately, Yaphet Kotto as a vengeful out of town visitor is given very little to do. And Barbara Hershey and Lee Majors barely have enough motivation to fill in their sketchy roles as Cobb's daughter and her altruistic lawyer husband.

If you can stand a little datedness to the narrative (and Elmer Bernstein's horrible score), take a look at this unflinching glimpse at an era of bigotry we thought was eradicated...but it's obviously not. My rating **1/2 out of ****.
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7/10
Behind closed doors
davidmvining28 July 2023
Obviously made in the wake of In the Heat of the Night's financial and awards success, William Wyler's final film, The Liberation of L. B. Jones, based on the novel The Liberation of Lord Byron Jones by Jesse Hill Ford (who wrote the first draft of the screenplay, later taken over by Stirling Silliphant), is another look at racist institutions in the South in the days of Jim Crow. I think, despite Norman Jewison's earlier film's successes, that Wyler left the filmmaking world on a relative high note, succeeding more fully artistically while bearing its own set of small flaws that keep it down.

The titular character, Lord Byron Jones (Roscoe Lee Browne) is the respected black undertaker in the small Tennessee town of Somerton. He is married to a young woman, Emma (Lola Falana) who has taken up an affair with one of the white police officers, Willie Joe (Anthony Zerbe), in secret enough for Willie Joe to keep the knowledge from his own wife and children (whom we never see, which I think is something of an odd choice, but I'll get to that) but not secret enough that she isn't afraid of flaunting it around the Jones house in her own room. Jones wants a divorce, and he goes to the office of Oman Hedgepath (Lee J. Cobb) to hire him in what he says will be an uncontested divorce. Only through Hedgepath's new law partner, his nephew Steve (Lee Majors), does Hedgepath decide to take the case, which quickly turns complicated when Emma decides to contest the divorce for her own reasons.

The film is an exploration of the unspoken ways that things get done in a system where the law cannot be followed in order to preserve certain customs and power centers. Willie Joe is a white man in a segregated town, and Cobb feels more for Willie Joe and the potential collapse of his life, both professional and personal, than for the cuckolded L. B. Jones of another race. So, he tells Willie Joe to convince Emma to drop the suit, implying that the only way to get out of this is to prevent the divorce from happening. Willie Joe is a not terribly bright young man who has a tendency to take advantage of his position of power to get whatever it is he wants, and he's just the kind of person who would take things too far.

My central issue with the film is Willie Joe himself. He's viciously evil in a way that leaves no room for interpretation. Part of that presentation is, I think, the complete lack of presence by his family, but it's heightened by one scene that stands out. A young black man has been taken in on a small charge, and his wife approaches him in his squad car, begging for help to get him out so he can go back to work the next day. He, along with his squad car partner, take her out into the country where Willie Joe rapes the girl. I mean, we've already seen Willie Joe slap around Emma violently when she won't do what he says, did the portrayal need to go this far? That, combined with the absence of his family makes Willie Joe really one-note in a way that smooths out any potential wrinkles. This feels like an effort on the part of Wyler and his screenwriters (the book was apparently based on some real life events in Ford's hometown, and they were not happy with him for the portrayals) probably took the character of Willie Joe in particular as an obvious signal to the audience that they were "on the right side of history" or something. It makes the drama less compelling by making the point more obvious.

Thankfully, though, the central dramatic fulcrum is not Willie Joe. It's this intricate balance between Jones himself, Hedgepath and his nephew, and a more minor character, Sonny (Yaphet Kotto). He actually begins the film by jumping off the train passing through Somerset with a pistol in a cigar box, filtering through the movie in the background and interacting with Jones in some small ways. He's a native of Somerset who fled fifteen years prior because a white cop had beaten him terribly, returned to exact vengeance. There's a mirror aspect between Sonny's decision to let his anger go because violence won't fix the problem in his soul. However, that view gets revisited when Willie Joe decides that the only way out of his problem is to take Hedgepath's suggestion to its twisted conclusion by getting what he wants no matter what.

The ending is a tragedy because it's about lost opportunities to make things better. All of the "law" that gets followed is unspoken and in direct contradiction to actual law, which is why it needs to be handled through suggestion and hushed conversations behind closed doors. Everyone knows this, most particularly Hedgepath who ends up just perpetuating the worst of the unspoken system, solving nothing but preserving a broken, unjust, and hidden system that's always in the open.

Really, the portrayal of Willie Joe is my only real issue with the film. This final film by the Golden Age of Hollywood master Wyler is just about everything I would expect from one last gasp of such a filmmaker in the changing era of the late 60s and early 70s. His precise visual style is still there, but it's muddled a bit by emerging conventions influenced by television while also falling prey to decreased budgetary wiggle room where he could only do his extended, complex takes in very enclosed environments. A more nuanced approach to the central antagonist (I wouldn't expect anything like finding out he's a great family man, but making him so thoroughly a monster without question is just too far) would have really helped take this from a solidly good film into, perhaps, something great.

Still, this is a good film for Wyler to go out on. It showed that despite the industry leaving him behind, he could have continued on in the newer system, bringing his consummate craft to newer stories with newer stars. That the film completely bombed at the box office while meeting with tepid critical notices though, was the final nail in the coffin of the man who hadn't had a real hit since Ben-Hur and was rarely a big box office crafter to begin with.
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6/10
Liberated From Life
bkoganbing17 January 2011
Warning: Spoilers
Unless the author of the original novel Jesse Hill Ford who also contributed to the screenplay meant the liberation from life with death for the title character, I'm not sure what The Liberation Of L.B. Jones is all about. Certainly Roscoe Lee Browne comes closer to sainthood than Sidney Poitier ever did in his work which is the usual criticism directed toward Poiter films.

Browne is L.B. Jones, town undertaker who is married to a young slut of a wife in Lola Falana. She's openly carrying on with white deputy Anthony Zerbe and she's even been knocked up by Zerbe. The problem for Browne is that if he goes for a divorce and he's finally had enough to do that, the relationship comes out in the open and Zerbe does have a wife and kids. She's obviously not the one giving him a spring in his step however.

Enter Yaphett Kotto who's come back to town on a mission of his own, he wants to kill Zerbe's partner Arch Johnson for the murder of a 13 year old kid some years back that Kotto witnessed. Shades of the infamous murder of Emmett Till. He's taking a Hamlet like approach to doing the deed until Jones is killed by Zerbe.

The Liberation Of L.B. Jones was done in those transitional days when the new civil rights law and voting rights act were making radical changes in the South. Helping to adapt the screenplay is Stirling Silliphant who did the same for the much better In The Heat Of The Night. The fault lies I think in that Roscoe Lee Browne for what he put up with ought to be listed in the Book of Martyrs. The heavy handed symbolism in the end with Browne being hung in the junkyard like a crucifiction was over the top.

The whites in this story, especially those in the establishment fail miserably. From Mayor Dub Taylor, to sheriff Ray Teal, to city attorney Lee J. Cobb they all are far more concerned with order than law. And order translates keeping the black population in their place.

Lola Falana really makes the film work in her scenes though. What a sexy morsel she was back then. She was more interested in the nightclub scene than films however, had her priorities been the other way she could easily have been promoted as a black Rita Hayworth.

The Liberation of L.B. Jones is a downbeat film both in content and the way it's presented. Not a bad film, but William Wyler the director should have had Funny Girl as his swansong.
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9/10
Pretty Powerful stuff
HEFILM26 March 2006
The "novel" this is based on was according to the author, almost entirely true, only the names were changed to protect the innocent and the guilty. This underlying truth plays out strongly here. I must stop to say the plot synopsis has nothing to do with the film. This is not a mystery with a "who did it" structure and it is not a courtroom justice or injustice movie. The events play out in sequence and we jump from character to character so that it remains, every bodies story, so to speak. We aren't allowed to distance ourselves from the story by taking the look from the good lawyer or cops perspective after the fact. Yaphet Kotto among many, probably gives the best performance. The photography and the score both seem a bit dated, though each have their strong moments, otherwise this doesn't date at all. The characters motives, good and bad, are clearly laid out and well performed. There are a few moments of technical slop, some optical blow ups of shots in the middle of dialog scenes and a couple of lazy zooms that would not have appeared in a Wyler film a few years before that, but in every other way this shows him still at the top of his game. It's a shame that he stopped making films after this. He himself considered it a strong film and he seems to have more or less expected that it would anger people (white ones that is) when it was released. His usual skill with actors is in evidence and there is some interesting use of sound to help tell the story at crucial moments. Very powerful stuff all around.
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7/10
THE LIBERATION OF L.B. JONES (William Wyler, 1970) ***
Bunuel19761 August 2011
Warning: Spoilers
The old guard of the "Golden Age of Hollywood" must have clearly read the writing on the wall that a new and different era was looming on Tinseltown because, right at the start of the oncoming decade, both the greatest (Howard Hawks) and the most honored (William Wyler) of American film-makers decided to call it quits; ironically, while Hawks – a former colleague of Wyler's at the Samuel Goldwyn company who kept making his own kind of old-fashioned film (thus being deservedly deemed an auteur) – bowed out with the enjoyable but slight John Wayne Western vehicle RIO LOBO, the 68-year old Wyler – whose penchant for fluidly cinematic adaptations of prestigious literary properties turned him into virtually the antithesis of that label so beloved by the French critics! – made his exit via a hothouse racial drama. Indeed, following his unprecedented Oscar triumph with BEN-HUR (1959), the director seems to have gained the necessary clout to deal with controversial themes head-on – which he did in the lesbian drama THE CHILDREN'S HOUR (1961; previously filmed by Wyler himself in 1936 as the heavily bowdlerized THESE THREE), the abduction thriller THE COLLECTOR (1965) and THE LIBERATION OF L.B. JONES itself. Even so, he seemed out-of-his-depth portraying the modern forms of dancing and, ultimately, the strength of the film at hand lies primarily in Robert Surtees' luminous cinematography and Elmer Bernstein's vigorous score rather than for any devastating insight into the racial issues!

The box-office and Oscar success of IN THE HEAT OF THE NIGHT (1967) spawned not only two further adventures of black policeman Virgil Tibbs in 1969 and 1971 but a couple of other Southern-set racial dramas: these are the film under review and TICK…TICK…TICK (also dating from 1970). As already intimated and as was his fashion, Wyler deals with a weighty subject matter but one has to wonder, however, whether he was completely sincere here – given that the film depicts at least two blacks (an eccentric old lady intent on securing for herself a cozy coffin from the titular undertaker, played by Roscoe Lee Browne, and the doddering yet 'fresh' manservant of the community's patriarchal figure, eminent lawyer Lee J. Cobb) in the stereotypical, i.e. politically incorrect, manner one usually associates with the old Hollywood (and which now necessitates that it be put into context via disclaimers when not eliminated or withheld outright)!

A measure of the script's confusion in this respect (but also its thematic complexity) lies in the multi-layered title. While liberation originally referred to the character's divorce application (his much-younger wife, played by future nightclub celebrity Lola Falana, is cheating on him), it can also be attributed to Anthony Zerbe (channeling Marlon Brando as a villainous cop and the lover in the affair) who kills Jones, thus being rid of him. However, there is also the fact that the murder creates an uproar which threatens to bring down the white man's supremacy: though it is all quickly and efficiently hushed, the seams definitely start to show when Lee Majors, Cobb's initially naïve and eager-to-please nephew (here engaged to a young Barbara Hershey), leaves in disgust over the latter's hypocritical leadership and corrupt hold over the town! Incidentally, this dishonesty also exists between the whites themselves: Zerbe does not immediately admit to his interracial relationship (during the course of the film, he not only beats up Jones' wife, impregnated by him, when she decides to fight for her husband's wealth rather than give him a quick concession to the divorce but he actually exerts his authority by raping another black girl in exchange for a reduced sentence for her husband). As for Cobb, he takes Zerbe to task over his shameful behavior when, several years back, he had himself been involved with a colored chambermaid (and which had cost him the companionship of the woman he loved)!

Another subplot concerns Yaphet Kotto, who returns home armed with a gun hidden in a cigar box (an irrelevant but funny scene early on has him quarrelling over the weapon with the blackmailing shopkeeper he had given it for safe-keeping, where the latter ends up buried under various items stirred off the shelves in the hubbub!) in order to exact revenge on the cop – Zerbe's equally seedy partner – who had mistreated him in his youth. Interestingly, he is made to relent when eventually given the opportunity to shoot him but, following his target's involvement in Jones' brutal slaying in a junkyard, he approaches his original plan with even more harshness (the policeman now getting his just desserts – in unintentionally amusing, and surprisingly bloodless, fashion – by way of his own wheat-cropping tractor!). Tellingly, Kotto has recently revealed how Wyler had asked him to cry at this point but the actor refused and stormed off the set1 Other ineffectual authority figures here include warden Chill Wills (yet another comic scene has the latter becoming the brunt of the Chief Of Police's ire, the latter played by Ray Teal, when the black man accused of Jones' murder, forced into signing a confession by being fed repeated charges of electricity, turns out to have been a 'jailbird' already at the time the crime was committed!) and mayor Dub Taylor. For the record, Wyler had earlier depicted the hectic (read: heightened) goings-on inside a police station in one of his best films, namely DETECTIVE STORY (1951).
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10/10
Jim Crow style southern grit!!!
kevinkishin18 March 2020
I've read the book liberties & omissions were taken, overall this movie is a true gem no sugar coating here I recommend you watch it & read the book you'll come full circle I guarantee it. I would also add a remake of this wouldn't hurt just too put more flesh on the characters & script it.
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7/10
Provocative
junemo27 November 2022
Warning: Spoilers
I'd never heard of this movie until recently, while watching Netflix's "Is That Black Enough for You?!?", which seemed to categorize this movie as a typical blaxploitation flick, showcasing one of Lola Folana's scenes parading around in her fluffy skivvies. And when I read who all was in this, and that it had been directed by William Wyler, I thought, how bad can it be? Disturbingly so, apparently. It's not a bad movie, but it's one where there's no one really to root for. The main area I found unreal was why the town wouldn't have known about Willie Joe Worth and Mrs. Jones, which makes everything that happened to try and keep the things quiet even more horrific. It leaves a bad taste in your mouth, likely because the story rings true. Any claimed liberation Mr. Jones achieved was just sad and wasteful.
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5/10
A rough watch
BandSAboutMovies19 April 2021
Warning: Spoilers
William Wyler is the most nominated director in Academy Awards history, as well as the only director in Academy history to direct three Best Picture-winning films (for which he also won Best Director*), for directing thirty-six Oscar-nomimated performers and for being the director of more Best Picture nominees than anyone else.

For his final movie, he decided on a script by Jesse Hill Ford and Stirling Silliphant that was in turn based on Ford's 1965 novel The Liberation of Lord Byron Jones. While a work of fiction, it was based on an actual event that had happened in Humboldt, Tennessee, where Ford lived. This movie did him no favors in that town**. Silliphant's life may not have been so turbulent, but he did write The SIlent Flute with Bruce Lee, as well as the film he won an Oscar for writing, In the Heat of the Night.

The titular L. B. Jones (Roscoe Lee Browne) is a wealthy funeral director in Tennessee looking for a lawyer to represent him in his divorce from his much younger wife Emma (Lola Falana), who is having an affair with police officer Willie Joe Worth (Anthony Zerbe) which has left her with child.

The problem is that Jones is black and Worth is white.

Worth begs Emma not to contest the divorce, but she wants to keep living the moneyed life she has become accustomed to. Worth ends up beating her and then works with his partner Stanley Bumpas (Arch Johnson) to arrest Jones after he refuses to drop his case. Yet the man becomes shocked at what he's done and at how cold Bumpas is as he goes about making the crime look like black-on-black crime.

Worth is willing to goto jail, but the crime is covered up by attorney Oman Hedgepath (Lee J. Cobb), but justice somewhat wins out, as Sonny Boy Mosby (Yaphet Kottot) gets revenge for a beating he endured by killing Bumpas. Hedgepath loses the love of his family, with his nephew Steve (Lee Majors) leaving the firm and taking his wife Nella (Barbara Hershey in one of first roles) away from all of this madness.

There is a major moment in film history here. This film marks the first time that a black man killed a white man on screen in an American movie. It was also the debut of both Falana and Brenda Sykes. And it has blood the color of an Italian horror movie.

*Mrs. Miniver, The Best Years of Our Lives and Ben-Hur.

**Ford dealth with numerous threats, mainly from white residents of Humboldt, when it came to this story and the ensuring movie, as well as his second book,The Feast of St. Barnabas. When black players were barred from the high school football team post-integraton, Ford's son, the team captain, began to receive death threats of his own. This may be the reason why Ford shot a 19-year-old black soldier, Pvt. George Henry Doaks Jr., when he saw the man's car in his private driveway and believed he was someone out to hurt his son. In a strange moment of fate, Doaks' female companion was related to the woman who had served as the basis for this story. He was initially indicted on a charge of first degree murder but, in what could be cruel irony, he benefitted from the same Southern justice he had written against. All along, he claimed that he had fired his rifle and not aimed, hoping to scare off the car. The incident pretty much ruined his life and he never finished another novel. His life took him on a journey from liberal to far right conservative, writing for the USA Today, in which he defended Oliver North and complained about the ACLU. After a book of his letters was published and he went through open heart surgery, he grew depresse and shot himself in 1996.
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8/10
I can only assume the film didn't sell too well in the Southern USA.
planktonrules26 August 2023
"The Liberation of L. B. Jones" is a feel-bad movie that is worth seeing...provided you aren't already seriously depressed. If you are, try watching something fun, as "The Liberation" is where fun goes to die!

The story is set in Tennessee and racism in this county is rampant. You will probably never find a movie that uses the 'n' word more...which I appreciate because it just shows how ugly racism is. The cops are evil perverters of women and justice and the place is NOT a place any black person would enjoy visiting...as they certainly would not have been welcome.

L. B. Jones happens to be the richest black man in the county and he is having problems with his wife. She's carrying on an affair with one of the cops and he's sick of it and wants a divorce. He seeks the help of a local lawyer (Lee J. Cobb) who at first refuses to take the case. But when his idealistic son-in-law shames him into taking it, he agrees...and spends much of the rest of the film perpetrating evil along with the local police department. What exactly did they do? See the film...but it certainly ain't nice!

The film came out after quite a few other race films had debuted and just before the big blacksploitation craze...so the timing was excellent. The film is brutal in the way it shows racism, as it's unflinching and will make you sick as you watch. This is a good thing...but a painful thing to see and hear. Well worth your time.
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6/10
the racial South
SnoopyStyle27 December 2022
In small town Tennessee, Sonny Boy Mosby (Yaphet Kotto) jumps off the train with a pistol. Rich businessman L. B. Jones (Roscoe Lee Browne) is desperate to divorce his wife Emma who is having an affair with white police officer Willie Joe Worth. Emma intends to hold L. B. to ransom before giving him a divorce. Officer Worth wants him to drop the matter entirely. Lawyers Oman Hedgepath (Lee J. Cobb) and his nephew Steve Mundine (Lee Majors) also advise him to let it go. Officers Worth and Bumpas like to brutalize the black community.

This definitely has a feel of "In the Heat of the Night" except the story is messier and less iconic. A bit of simplification would make this more compelling. I know it's based on a book, but most of time, long books need to be chopped down in order to fit into a movie. It also pales in comparison with others of its genre.
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3/10
"Dumb stupid cops! I've seen better heads on cabbage!"
moonspinner5515 June 2021
A black funeral home director in a small Tennessee town seeks a divorce from his wife, a sexy young thing who's cheating on him with a white policeman; she's contesting the divorce to get as much money out of her husband as possible, which would mean bringing the interracial affair with the cop into the courtroom. Heated racial melodrama directed by William Wyler, in his final bow, is a world away from his previous film, "Funny Girl". Screenwriter Jesse Hill Ford, adapting his novel "The Liberation of Lord Byron Jones", plugs the scenario with narrative, which Wyler is surprisingly ineffective at handling (the picture feels disjointed or, at times, constipated). Many fine actors pop up in the cast, though their drawlin' Suth'n performances are as over-scaled as the plot. *1/2 from ****
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Black acting power
manuel-pestalozzi4 April 2003
This is a sad film about personal weaknesses. The storyline has several weak points too, but on the whole I should think the movie does a great director like William Wyler justice and is still watchable today. There is a certain similarity with the Oscar winning In the Heat of the Night. The screenplay is by the same author, Stirling Silliphant.

The Liberation of L. B. Jones really belongs to the African American cast, the whites' performances do pale in comparison. Roscoe Lee Browne plays the well-to-do undertaker who is cheated by his wife with a white policeman. He gives his character a quiet dignity that lasts throughout the story, up to the bitter and sad end. Yaphet Kotto's portrayal of an angry young man who comes to town with a score to settle is equally intense and convincing. Both Browne and Kotto have a few very good scenes in which they act by themselves. They both seize the chance to give their characters real depth. Lola Falana is convincing as the amoral undertaker's wife and there is a good supporting cast. I fondly remember a small, well acted scene at the beginning with an elderly lady who regularly visits the undertaker's show room to have a look at the coffin for which she pays instalments.

The white population is, it seems to me, much more stereotypical. The only really interesting figure here is the town's most important lawyer, played somewhat stiffly by Lee J. Cobb. He is a racist against his better judgment. His unlawful actions to protect white criminals seem like a reflex, not coming from the brain but rather from the spinal cord.
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5/10
Starts of the decade with a statement
HotToastyRag17 November 2022
It certainly makes a statement that William Wyler chose The Liberation of L. B. Jones as his final directorial film in a career that traced back to the silent era. He always chose his films wisely, and to end at the very top of a new decade, with a film that touched on all the hot topics of the modern era, showed his audience that even though he was going to retire, he was still relevant.

The plot feels like an Otto Preminger movie: a black man in the South is divorcing his pregnant wife because she's had an affair with a white man. The man about to be named correspondent is a policeman, and there will be a huge scandal in the small town if it gets out. Roscoe Lee Browne is the title character, and Anthony Zerbe plays the villainous cop. I'm not spoiling anything by revealing Zerbe as the bad guy; he beats up his pregnant lover pretty early on in the movie and then is even more violent and gruesome to her husband. Lee J. Cobb plays Browne's lawyer, and Lee Majors is his nephew. There's a lot of fuel for those who are interested in the law or get frustrated when sometimes loopholes or foul play allow the bad guys to get away with... you know.

There are parts of the movie that feel quite dated, but there are also scenes that could absolutely be found in a modern movie. Unfortunately, race relations ebbed and flowed and have recently returned to the heightened emotions of the 1970s, so much of the racism in this 1970 drama doesn't feel out of place in 2022. There's a particularly upsetting scene where Lola Falana gets harassed and nearly assaulted by police officers, making the infamous scene from Crash look like a picnic. I wouldn't really recommend this movie unless you are very invested in race relations films that spread a message and leave the viewers feeling lousy. If you fall in that target audience, check out Tick, Tick, Tick next, a similar film from 1970.

Kiddy Warning: Obviously, you have control over your own children. However, due to violence, I wouldn't let my kids watch it.
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3/10
Deeply unsatisfying
Pimilli29 June 2019
Warning: Spoilers
While a painful glimpse at white privilege, the resolution of the movie is deeply unsatisfying. These are all hateful characters. Hateful.
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SPOILER- I've only seen the shock ending
HalfCentury20 November 2006
Warning: Spoilers
I caught the tail end of this movie at a drive in. It involves Yaphet Kotto and probably Anthony Zerbe. Kotto forces Zerbe into a hay bailing machine and a very realistic looking dummy is shown being broken and mashed around in the machine. I've always wanted to see the rest of the movie to see what lead to this grisly comeuppance. I also wonder if like a lot of under respected movies, horribly shocking scenes get cut out and forgotten. It wouldn't surprise me if the VHS copy omits the scene. It was very well done. Kind of the opposite of gory. Here the body keeping its integrity while being horribly bent is what shocks. It made quite an impression on me.
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