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The movie follows a young lawyer as he defends a black man accused of murdering two men who violently raped and beaten then dumped his 10-year-old daughter in a river, sparking a rebirth of Ku Klux Klan and the Civil Rights Movement.
With Joel Schumacher's tasteful but second-rate-Sidney-Lumet direction and Akiva Goldsman's nuts-and-bolts script, these boys have created a surprisingly stirring indictment of racism.
August 13, 2006
Variety
Although it has its share of implausibilities, A Time To Kill is generally the most satisfying of the John Grisham screen adaptations to date.
Looks aren't enough. In the lead, McConaughey isn't there.
July 04, 2004
San Francisco Chronicle
Untrained as an actor, with only three minor roles to his credit, McConaughey holds the screen against Samuel L. Jackson, Sandra Bullock and Kevin Spacey, and completely justifies the buzz surrounding his role...
Justice may be blind, but rarely have courtroom dramas presumed quite so heavily on cultural myopia as this heinous version of John Grisham's first novel.
If the film doesn't add up to a cogent legal argument, neither does it have trouble delivering 2 hours and 20 minutes' worth of sturdy, highly charged drama.