After a young woman suffers a brutal gang rape in a bar one night, a prosecutor assists in bringing the perpetrators to justice, including the ones who encouraged and cheered on the attack.After a young woman suffers a brutal gang rape in a bar one night, a prosecutor assists in bringing the perpetrators to justice, including the ones who encouraged and cheered on the attack.After a young woman suffers a brutal gang rape in a bar one night, a prosecutor assists in bringing the perpetrators to justice, including the ones who encouraged and cheered on the attack.
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In the movie "The Accused" Sarah Tobias (Jodie Foster) was no Mary Sue. She was far from it, but that was not a justification for rape and the peanut galleryism that accompanied it.
Rightly or wrongly, in this society there are such things as good rape victims (meaning easy to prosecute the rapists) and bad rape victims (meaning difficult to prosecute the rapists). The good rape victim is one who is a conservatively dressed strait-laced woman minding her own business. A bad rape victim is a sexily-dressed, promiscuous woman prone to drinking and/or drugs and behaving in a provocative way.
Sarah Tobias was a bad rape victim.
She was sending all the signals that a lascivious man would need to act upon his lusts. She was scantily clad, entertaining the come-ons, giggling at everything the man said, smoking pot, drinking alcohol, and to top it all off; she did a sexy dance routine when no one else was on the dance floor. In the mind of the guy with no self-control: "she was asking for it." Whatever he, or anyone else, thought she was "asking for," she wasn't asking to be choked, pinned down, and forcibly raped by three men on a pinball machine. Only in the most depraved society would a woman be "asking" for that.
"The Accused" is a gutsy film that punches you in the gut. It equally tests your dedication to justice for Sarah and your despise of her actions leading up to the rape. "The Accused" doesn't hold back anything. It shows all the less than discretionary behavior of Sarah Tobias which makes you want to slap some sense into her at least. And it shows the despicably loathsome behavior of the rapists that make you want to protect Sarah and serve up some medieval style justice to her rapists. No, you are not spared. You will have to confront your feelings about the entire situation. And whether you feel comfortable about yourself and your opinions afterward or not, you will have some concrete thoughts and opinions.
Ms. Araujo, 21, and all four of her assailants were Portuguese, a major ethnicity in former New England "mill towns" like New Bedford. The Portuguese community sided with its errant sons, rather than their victim, and Cheryl Araujo was basically driven out of town by the animosity of her neighbors. She was killed in an automobile accident in Florida in 1986, leaving behind two children.
This film was loosely based on the Araujo case. Several of Jodie Foster's scenes were so powerful they nearly brought me to tears -- specifically, the scene where she confronts lawyer Kelly McGillis in the latter's apartment during a dinner party; her courtroom testimony; and the horrifying rape scene.
Kelly McGillis seemed to be sleepwalking through this entire film, with only a few moments when she roused herself a bit, but not enough to help. Even so, she appeared more sensitive than the volunteer from the rape crisis center, who stood NEXT TO the ER doctor during the post-assault pelvic exam. If I had been on that table, I'd have wrenched a foot out of the stirrups and kicked her. A woman who has just been gang raped doesn't need one more person invading her privacy.
I agree with an earlier poster who noted the difficult roles of the "cheer and clap" trio. It must have been extremely challenging for a guy who has any sensitivity at all about women to convincingly portray the kind of jerks those three were. My hat's off to all three of them.
The film concludes with disturbing statistics about one rape occurring in the United States every six minutes and one out of four being collective. I guess it's a blessing that we live in a time where the consentement of a woman isn't put into equation when she solicits justice after a rape, anyway not when a case is so horrendous as Sarah Tobias, a young woman who entered "The Mill" to chill out after a quarrel with her boyfriend and left it ravaged both externally and internally.
I suspect it didn't improve much, but the most difficult part of that subject is that like any crime that results in the confrontation of two parties: some attenuating circumstances are being sought if not the victim's responsibility in the form of apparent consentement. In Sarah's case, that she was drunk, wearing provocative clothes and looking like a low-class bimbo didn't facilitate her quest for justice and even the women who took photographs of her mutilated body didn't show much empathy.
That was 1988, and the story based on 1983 real-life incident, 30 years after and the #MeToo era having come through, rape has extended to situations of abuse of power due to professional status or age, which makes the areas of consentement grayer and rape of the chief causes of feminism. But "The Accused" is simply about justice.
Sarah, magnificently played by Jodie Foster, has been sexually assaulted on an pinball machine by three men in a bar, under the cheers and acclamations of other inebriated men making a pornographic live spectacle out of a crime, pure and simple. And the film's greatest accomplishment was to show the crime, it was accused of voyeurism or sexual exploitation but no, this is a film that reveals an ugly side of the human mind, and in such a truthful way watching it can only be helpful for us, to reconsider our thoughts in a more empathetic way toward victims, real or potential ones.
And having the victim a trailer trash type of girl not as articulate and educated as a student or a nurse, a smoker, drinker and a liberated girl might incline some loose minds to find excuses for the assaillant. "The Accused" is the antidote to such poisonous thoughts. When Assistant D. A. Kathryn Murphy (Kelly McGillis) make deals with the defense and replace the term 'rape' by 'reckless endangerment' to avoid the trial, preserve one of the accused's honor, and let them serve a mild sentence, it gives you an idea about how the legal system works.
But like the best trial films, a line is drawn between justice and legality. After the verdict, Sarah feels cheated by her defendant and finds herself harrased by one of the men who literally orchestrated the operation by taunting the second and the third rapist (creepily played by Leo Rossi), resurrecting Sarah's trauma but also allowing Kathryn to have her own epiphany. It's one thing to charge rapists, but what about those who encouraged them? As the film goes to its foregone climax, the real points stops to be Sarah's responsibility but the one of the other men who kept cheering, clapping and calling the turns.
As Kathryn points it out during the trial, as a moral as it is, one can't be convicted for witnessing a rape and turning his face away, but cheers might constitute a form of participation, hence accessory. That question sheds a new light on the previous sentences and Kathryn is put in the situation where her own career is at stakes, which is the narrative arc that accompanies Sarah's own: to be recognized as a victim of rape. It's not a matter of nobility but of principles and also a necessity to prevent such crimes to happen again.
The film is sober in tone and ordinary in its structure because the subject is so important it couldn't be distracted by "originality" or some twist, Kenneth Joice (Bernie Coulson) who's the boy who called the police and watched the whole thing isn't even a last-minute witness and is showed from the very start. However, the film showcases the extraordinary talent of Jodie Foster who won the Oscar, and it's probably deserved because it was perhaps the hardest role she ever had. McGillis deserve praises, as for the accused ones, that they felt sick during the shooting of the climax tells you how willing everyone was to show the reality of rape in its ugliest form.
And I remember watching the film at 11, I had to cover my eyes during the climax because it felt truly like an horror film, which it was. The most brutal part isn't just the gang rape but the sheer terror on Sarah's eyes, the way the camera shows her POV, and the cries and shouts around making "The Mill" a hell an absolute hell on earth for Sarah, putting into perspective Kenneth's dilemma to betray his best friend Bob (Steve Antin) by calling what he done by its name.
Writer Tom Toper deserves accolades for not turning the film into a battle-of-the-sexes thing, but a simple matter of justice for Sarah and redemption for those who didn't help her, whether Kenneth or even Kathryn who sold her for the first verdict. It also shows the role of peer pressure in such cases, especially through the last man who assaulted her because his virility was being ridiculed.
Within its normal look, "The Accused" might be the ultimate film about rape because it not only questions the causes without accusing the victim but it also raises collateral issues that can be extended to other crimes, and it's not afraid to show the whole thing, so if people can't stand watching it, maybe if they witness it someday, they will know the right thing to do.
Did you know
- TriviaThe film is based on the experience of Cheryl Araujo, who survived a violent gang rape on March 6, 1983 at Big Dan's Tavern in New Bedford, Massachusetts by six men (four of whom were later convicted). The bar lost its liquor license the next day, and was permanently closed two days later.
- GoofsWhen Kathryn Murphy visits Sarah Tobias in Sarah's mobile home shortly after Sarah's hospitalization, the gash on the bridge of Sarah's nose has suddenly healed and completely disappeared.
- Quotes
Sarah Tobias: You don't understand how I feel! I'm standing there with my pants down and my crotch hung out for the world to see and three guys are sticking it to me, a bunch of other guys are yelling and clapping and you're standing there telling me that that's the best you can do. Well, if that's the best you could do, then your best sucks! Now, I don't know what you got for selling me out, but I sure as shit hope it was worth it!
- ConnectionsEdited into The Clock (2010)
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Details
- Release date
- Country of origin
- Language
- Also known as
- Acusados
- Filming locations
- 10190 River Rd, Delta, British Columbia, Canada(Location of The Mill Pub. Was the Sidetrack Pub at the time, burned down in 2010.)
- Production companies
- See more company credits at IMDbPro
Box office
- Budget
- $13,000,000 (estimated)
- Gross US & Canada
- $32,078,318
- Opening weekend US & Canada
- $4,316,369
- Oct 16, 1988
- Gross worldwide
- $32,078,318
- Runtime1 hour 51 minutes
- Color
- Sound mix
- Aspect ratio
- 1.85 : 1
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