Cinematic Releases: Juror #2 (2024) - Reviewed

Images courtesy of Warner Brothers

The last time we saw Clint Eastwood in the director’s chair as well as on the silver screen was the post-COVID 2021 lighthearted western drama Cry Macho.  Adapted from the 1975 novel of the same name, the film opened to mixed reviews and for some forecasted the coming end of the great actor and director’s creative output.  Three years later, at the age of 94, Eastwood is back with the Nicholas Hoult courtroom drama Juror #2, a film which gained some minor notoriety online when it became apparent that Warner Brothers CEO David Zaslav all but completely buried what will probably be Eastwood’s final film in the United States.  For several months, the film played overseas while talk of dumping the film outright on the Max streaming platform was-floated about here.  Until circa-Thanksgiving Day, the film quietly expanded from it’s miniscule fifty-theater opening to a somewhat wider proper theatrical run, giving audiences a chance to finally see Clint Eastwood’s latest film as he intended prior to its digital release tomorrow.

 
Savannah, Georgia based recovering alcoholic journalist Justin Kemp (Nicholas Hoult) is summoned for jury duty involving the death of Kendall Carter who a year ago exited a local bar after fighting with her boyfriend James Sythe (Gabriel Basso) before being found dead under a bridge with all eyes on Sythe as the prime suspect.  However, as the married man with an expectant wife digs deeper into the case it becomes apparent he himself may have more culpability in the crime than he initially realized, creating a moral dilemma where he fears the wrong man might face conviction while also fending off suspicion he might involuntarily draw upon himself.  Spearheading the case is prosecuting attorney Faith Killebrew (Toni Collette) who has her own motives for taking the case hoping to campaign for district attorney.  As the jury room itself wrangles over the facts and misgivings raised by Justin Kemp in scenes echoing 12 Angry Men, the film becomes something of a morally ambiguous thriller that’s intensely critical of the judicial system while also functioning as a nuanced character study of a internally conflicted man coming to terms with whether or not he is ready to give himself up.

 
With arresting scope cinematography by recurring Eastwood collaborator Yves BĂ©langer and an understated somewhat mournful score by Cry Macho composer Mark Mancina, Juror #2 is one of the filmmaker’s best in years leaving the audience with much to contemplate long after the film is quietly over.  With Nicholas Hoult in the Henry Fonda role of 12 Angry Men in that his refusal to concede to a guilty verdict without further investigating the facts, the actor is given perhaps his most complete role in his still evolving resume.  Shouldering the film and tasked with portraying a wide variety of wordless facial expressions conveying his own horror when he begins to question everything he thought he knew going into the case, Hoult is proving to be more than a character actor but a major movie star ready to disappear into a role.  Toni Collette and J.K. Simmons give solid, nuanced performances as well in strong supporting roles while Keifer Sutherland makes an unexpected appearance as Justin Kemp’s AA sponsor and defense attorney.  All in all, it is a strong ensemble piece largely navigated by Hoult and Collette.

 
Controversial for not being given a typical regular domestic theatrical run in the US while the rest of the world happily got it in cinemas with many think pieces written on what engendered the decision to more or less bury the film here, Juror #2 now expanded to something resembling an actual theater run for only a few days before landing on streaming is an understated and nuanced courtroom drama featuring a gifted performance from Nicholas Hoult.  Likely to be the last time Eastwood will sit in the director’s chair unless he’s got another one up his sleeve, Juror #2 unlike his others invites discussion and potential revisitation rather than laying it all on the plate to be taken in on a single helping.  In other words, this is one you’ll find yourself coming back to over the years.  That it barely received a theatrical release is a tragic disservice to one of the company’s most prolific and profitable players, even at the ripe old age of 94.  Even now, the filmmaker despite slowing down hasn’t lost his touch and can still make you pick your own brain about what you’ve seen long after the end credits finish rolling.

--Andrew Kotwicki