Criminal Law (1988)

R   |    |  Crime, Drama, Thriller


Criminal Law (1988) Poster

A lawyer defends a killer, but soon after he wins, he finds out that the killer is guilty.


5.7/10
3,381

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  • Gary Oldman in Criminal Law (1988)
  • Kevin Bacon and Karen Young in Criminal Law (1988)
  • Kevin Bacon and Gary Oldman in Criminal Law (1988)
  • Kevin Bacon and Gary Oldman in Criminal Law (1988)
  • Gary Oldman in Criminal Law (1988)
  • Kevin Bacon and Gary Oldman in Criminal Law (1988)

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Cast & Crew

Top Billed Cast



Director:

Martin Campbell

Writer:

Mark Kasdan

Awards

1 win.

Reviews & Commentary

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User Reviews


29 December 2007 | blanche-2
7
| The imperfections of law examined
In 1988's Criminal Law, Gary Oldman plays Ben Chase, an attorney who defends a man, Martin Thiel (Kevin Bacon) accused of a particularly vicious murder. With clever lawyering, he gets Thiel off, only to realize shortly afterward that Thiel is guilty and out there killing again. This time, though, Thiel is playing a mind game with Chase and wants to retain him when suspicion falls on him for a second murder that Ben knows he committed. Ben wants to right the wrong of the first "not guilty" plea so he agrees to work as Thiel's attorney, hoping for inside information that will convict the man.

This is very interesting premise, though the various themes get lost in an uneven script that tries to do too much. The focus actually becomes the performances of Oldman and Bacon - Oldman giving a very emotional performance and Bacon a very cold one. Posts here have pronounced Oldman as hammy - hammy to me is when a performance is bigger than the emotions underneath so that the performance seems phony. Here, the character of Ben seemed to be truly overwrought, and the emotions came from a real place. Oldman at any rate is an interesting actor, and this material in the hands of a lesser one would have made it dismissible. As it is, the film survives on the basis of the work of the two actors.

Honing in on one theme rather than several would have helped "Criminal Law." It tries to tackle psychosis, legal technicalities, the law versus justice, attorney-client privilege, mystery and romance in one script. When it comes out of the Mixmaster, it's all pretty vague.

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