To Kill A Mockingbird (1962) Based on Harper Lee's Pulitzer Prize winning book of 1960. Atticus Finch is
a lawyer in a racially divided Alabama town in the 1930s. He agrees to
defend a young black man who is accused of raping a white woman. Many of
the townspeople try to get Atticus to pull out of the trial, but he decides
to go ahead. How will the trial turn out - and will it change any of the
racial tension in the town ? Through the eyes of "Scout," a feisty six-year-old tomboy, TO KILL A
MOCKINGBIRD carries us on an odyssey through the fires of prejudice and
injustice in 1932 Alabama. Presenting her tale first as a sweetly lulling
reminiscence of events from her childhood, the narrator draws us near with
stories of daring neighborhood exploits by she, her brother "Jem," and
their friend "Dill." Peopled with a cast of eccentrics, Maycomb ("a tired
and sleepy town") finds itself the venue of the trial of Tom Robinson, a
young black man falsely accused of raping an ignorant white woman. Atticus
Finch, Scout and Jem's widowed father and a deeply principled man, is
appointed to defend Tom for whom a guilty verdict from an all-white jury is
a foregone conclusion. Juxtaposed against the story of the trial is the
children's hit and run relationship with Boo Radley, a shut-in who the
children and Dill's Aunt Rachel suspect of insanity and who no one has seen
in recent history. Cigar-box treasures, found in the knot hole of a tree
near the ramshackle Radley house, temper the children's judgment of Boo.
"You never know someone," Atticus tells Scout, "until you step inside their
skin and walk around a little." But fear keeps them at a distance until one
night, in streetlight and shadows, the children confront an evil born of
ignorance and blind hatred and must somehow find their way home. The place: a small town in the south of the United States. The time: the
early 20th century. A black man is accused of raping a woman, and an
idealistic lawyer gets to defend him. We start watching the reasons that
make his defense far from easy; and that's mostly because nobody in this
town seems determined to believe in the guiltlessness of an accused negro. In the rural American south during the depths of the Depression, two
children watch as their principled father takes a stand against
intolerance. |