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Paul Newman in The Verdict (1982)

Metacritic reviews

The Verdict

77

Metascore

17 reviews · Provided by Metacritic.com
  • 100
    Chicago Sun-TimesRoger Ebert
    Chicago Sun-TimesRoger Ebert
    The screenplay by David Mamet is a wonder of good dialogue, strongly seen characters and a structure that pays off in the big courtroom scene - as the genre requires.
  • 100
    Time Out
    Time Out
    Admittedly this is a legal "Rocky, convincing rather than realistic, witty rather than analytical, but it amounts to a far more effective indictment of the US legal system than ...and justice for all, and is the first courtroom drama in years to recapture the brilliance of the form.
  • 90
    The New York TimesJanet Maslin
    The New York TimesJanet Maslin
    A solidly old-fashioned courtroom drama such as The Verdict could have gotten by with a serious, measured performance from its leading man, or it could have worked well with a dazzling movie-star turn. The fact that Paul Newman delivers both makes a clever, suspenseful, entertaining movie even better.
  • 90
    The New RepublicStanley Kauffmann
    The New RepublicStanley Kauffmann
    This is realistic American film acting at its veristic/imaginative best.
  • 90
    TV Guide Magazine
    TV Guide Magazine
    Sidney Lumet directs effectively, keeping the tension strong, and unfolding David Mamet's intelligent screenplay slowly but with maximum impact.
  • 90
    The A.V. Club
    The A.V. Club
    Though screenwriter David Mamet writes some chewy lines, director Sidney Lumet balances out any pulpiness with a somber mood, making sparing use of the musical score and creating a Boston awash in brown, beige, and gray.
  • 80
    EmpireWilliam Thomas
    EmpireWilliam Thomas
    It's Newman's performance itself that really makes this film work and helps it truly get close to Lumet's own '12 Angry Men'.
  • 80
    IGNScott Collura
    IGNScott Collura
    What was boring and dull to our 12-year-old selves back when Dad was watching this film 25 years ago is now a thoroughly engrossing and satisfying film experience, and a reminder that what is old can be new again -- whether it's Newman's Galvin's outlook on life, an old courtroom drama premise, or a movie revisited after a quarter century lapse.
  • 80
    Chicago ReaderJonathan Rosenbaum
    Chicago ReaderJonathan Rosenbaum
    Sidney Lumet's direction, like David Mamet's patchy script (which adapts a Barry Reed novel), may not be quite good enough to justify the Rembrandt-like cinematography of Edward Pisoni and the brooding mood of self-importance, but it's good direction nonetheless; and there are plenty of supporting performances—by James Mason, Jack Warden, Milo O'Shea, Charlotte Rampling, and Lindsay Crouse, among others—to keep one distracted from Newman's dogged Oscar-pandering.
  • 70
    Variety
    Variety
    There are many fine performances and sensitive moral issues contained in The Verdict but somehow that isn't enough to make it the compelling film it should be. David Mamet's script [from a novel by Barry Reed] offers little out of the ordinary.
  • See all 17 reviews on Metacritic.com
  • See all external reviews for The Verdict

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