Based on the true story of Jack DiNorscio, a mobster who defended himself in court for what would be the longest mafia trial in U.S. history.
Vin Diesel
Jackie DiNorscio
Alex Rocco
Nick Calabrese
Ron Silver
Sidney Finestein
Peter Dinklage
Ben Klandis
Linus Roache
Sean Kierney
Frank Pietrangolare
Carlo Mascarpone
Annabella Sciorra
Bella DiNorscio
Richard DeDomenico
Tom Napoli
Vinny Vella
Graziedei
James Biberi
Frank Brentano
Raúl Esparza
Tony Compagna
Frank Adonis
Phil Radda
Richard Portnow
Max Novardis
Jerry Adler
Saul Rizzo
Steven Randazzo
Chris Cellano
Marcia Jean Kurtz
Sara Stiles
Gerry Vichi
Theodore
Domenick Lombardozzi
Jerry McQueen
Josh Pais
Harry Bellman
Salvatore Paul Piro
Mike Belaggio
Tony Ray Rossi
Joe Bellini
Frankie Perrone
Henry Fiuli
Paul Borghese
Gino Mascarpone
Jerry Grayson
Jimmy Katz
Nicholas A. Puccio
Alessandro Tedeschi
Chuck Cooper
James Washington
Oscar A. Colon
Pissaro
Ben Lipitz
Henry Kelsey
John Di Benedetto
Guard - Jesse
Vinny DeGennaro
Danny Roma
Director, Screenplay
Sidney Lumet
Screenplay
T.J. Mancini
Screenplay
Robert J. McCrea
November 21, 2022
6
I think I might have appreciated this rather plodding courtroom drama a bit more had I been able to hear more of what Vin Diesel was actually saying - but for much of this he had the distinct disadvantage of not being too near a working microphone. He portrays real life hood Jackie DiNorscio, a man already serving a thirty year sentence when he is summoned by District Attorney Tierney (Linus Roache) and offered a deal. Testify against one of the big five crime families and have his prison term reduced. He sticks to his guns and declines, only to find himself joining the list of arraigned and facing even longer behind bars. Broke, he decides to defend himself and is soon entertaining and annoying the judge and the jury in equal measure with his lively and unorthodox methods. Diesel does not do emotion well, nor subtlety - and when the part calls for it, he delivers poorly. Otherwise though, he turns in a reasonable enough effort as the charismatic crook who makes no bones about his naughty past, but extols the virtues of loyalty, family and decency to try and persuade the jury to acquit not just him, but his gaggle of positively dodgy associates. It's based on a true story so the ending is a matter of public record thus robbing this of any jeopardy and unfortunately, that too, renders the story rather unremarkable save for the fact that the trial lasted all but two years and cost a fortune. Ron Silver stands out amongst the supporting cast as the no nonsense judge but otherwise the others offer little by way memorable contribution to a story that is itself pretty lacklustre and for which this particular star isn't really well equipped. It's over two hours long and to be honest, I was rather tired with it after about half of that time.
Status:
Released
Original Language:
English
Budget:
$13,000,000.00
Revenue:
$2,636,637.00