While serving as a juror in a high profile murder trial, family man Justin Kemp finds himself struggling with a serious moral dilemma…one he could use to sway the jury verdict and potentially convict—or free—the accused killer.
Nicholas Hoult
Justin Kemp
Toni Collette
Faith Killebrew
J.K. Simmons
Harold
Chris Messina
Eric Resnick
Gabriel Basso
James Michael Sythe
Zoey Deutch
Allison Crewson
Cedric Yarbrough
Marcus
Leslie Bibb
Denice Aldworth
Kiefer Sutherland
Larry Lasker
Amy Aquino
Judge Thelma Hollub
Adrienne C. Moore
Yolanda
Megan Mieduch
Allison's Friend
Melanie Harrison
Campaign Manager (VO)
Drew Scheid
Brody
Hedy Nasser
Courtney
Phil Biedron
Vince
Bria Brimmer
Bailiff Wood
Chikako Fukuyama
Keiko
Zele Avradopoulos
Irene
Onix Serrano
Eli
Jason Coviello
Luke
Rebecca Koon
Nellie
Francesca Eastwood
Kendall Carter
KateLynn E. Newberry
Hideaway Bartender
Rachel Walters
Woman from Bar
Scott Alan Smith
Custodian
Javier Vazquez Jr.
Hiker
Kurt Yue
Medical Examiner
Tom Thon
Elderly Man
RaVal Davis
Reporter
Gabriel Butler
Oliver
Kevin Saunders
Burly Guy
Luciano Antonino
Fraternity Guy
Lou Bosch
Coffee Cart Attendant
Kellen Boyle
Faith's Assistant
Vincent Minutella
Groundskeeper
Ella Fraley
Hostess (uncredited)
Grant Roberts
Desk Cop (uncredited)
Derrick Lemmon
(uncredited)
Director
Clint Eastwood
Writer
Jonathan A. Abrams
November 3, 2024
7
Expectant father "Justin" (Nicholas Hoult) is slated for jury duty and so duly sets off for the selection hoping that he doesn't get picked and that he can return to his wife to await the arrival of their bundle of joy. Sadly, though, they like the cut of his jib and selected he is. It's a murder trial with a man accused of brutally killing his girlfriend after a bar-room brawl. Prosecutor and aspiring DA candidate "Faith" (Toni Collette) thinks it's all in the bag, but defence attorney "Resnick" (Chris Messina) isn't so sure. As the proceedings commence, our second juror gets a bit of a shock. Some of this evidence is proving startlingly evocative. The more he hears of the incident, the more he begins to realise that his job as a juror might prove to be much more personal than he anticipated. With pressure from his wife and his fellow jurors to get it all over with, he has to fight to try and find a way to more fully explore the evidence and luckily he manages to convince one of their number "Harold" (J.K. Simmons) to help him. As the they dig deeper, what might they find and what might they incentivise the prosecutor to find too? I think Hoult holds this together well, and as the audience becomes better briefed on just who did what to whom, director Clint Eastwood still manages to keep the film engaging and tensely paced leaving the audience with quite a moral dilemma as truths start to out and sympathies become severely tested. Simmons supports well, as do Collette and Messina but Kiefer Sutherland appears too sparingly to make much impact on the story so it really is left to us and "Juror #2" to come to terms with what happened and with our own consciences.