A slick, well-acted film that nonetheless distorts the facts and looks at the civil rights movement from a strictly white perspective by imposing on the actual case the format of a Hollywood cop thriller.
Mississippi Burning (1988)
Tomatometer
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Reviews Counted:14
Fresh:11
Rotten:3
Average Rating:6.2/10
Synopsis: In 1964, when three civil-rights workers, two white and one black, mysteriously disappear while driving through Mississippi, two FBI agents, Ward (Willem Dafoe) and Anderson (Gene Hackman), are... In 1964, when three civil-rights workers, two white and one black, mysteriously disappear while driving through Mississippi, two FBI agents, Ward (Willem Dafoe) and Anderson (Gene Hackman), are sent in to investigate. While Ward is young and by the book, Anderson is a seasoned southerner comfortable with the Byzantine (and, to Ward, morally ambiguous) ways of his region. Together they sift through a variety of leads and come up empty-handed--until the town sheriff's wife (Frances McDormand) steps forward and reveals some surprising information. In order to solve the case, the two contrasting agents must not only overcome the hostility of the local authorities and the black community but contend with their own differences as well. A fictionalized account of one of the landmarks in the civil-rights movement, MISSISSIPPI BURNING is a swift and powerful film. Director Alan Parker, continuing his investigation of human cruelty (begun explosively in his harrowing 1978 film MIDNIGHT EXPRESS), crafts a historically poignant film that fingers the monstrosities of a virulent strain of racial intolerance in America. Dafoe and Hackman are convincing as they investigate the disappearance of the civil-rights workers and unravel the grisly web of obfuscation around a scandalous, cancerous truth very near the heart of a nation. [More]
Starring: Gene Hackman, Willem Dafoe, Frances McDormand, Brad Dourif
Starring: Gene Hackman, Willem Dafoe, Frances McDormand, Brad Dourif, R. Lee Ermey, Gailard Sartain, Stephen Tobolowsky, Michael Rooker, Pruitt Taylor Vince, Kevin Dunn, Frankie R. Faison, Rick Zieff, Park Overall
Director: Alan Parker
Director: Alan Parker
Screenwriter: Chris Gerolmo
Producer: Frederick Zollo, Robert F. Colesberry
Composer: Trevor Jones
Reviews for Mississippi Burning
Starts out as a vivid portrait of the Civil Rights era and ends up a cop drama in which vengeful anger is used against racist killers.
Hackman delivers some of the best work of his career. And this guy's been doing it for 30 years.
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