Kathleen Riley
Cher
Kathleen Riley

“She's a lawyer who broke two laws of her profession... Never get involved with a juror and don't look for clues in dangerous places.”
When a Supreme Court judge commits suicide and his secretary is found murdered, all fingers point to Carl Anderson, a homeless veteran who's deaf and mute. But when public defender Kathleen Riley is assigned to his case, she begins to believe that Anderson may actually be innocent. Juror Eddie Sanger, a Washington lobbyist, agrees, and together the pair begins their own investigation of events.
Suspect (1987) 35mm film trailer, flat open matte, 2160p
Kathleen Riley
Cher
Kathleen Riley
Eddie Sanger
Dennis Quaid
Eddie Sanger
Carl Wayne Anderson
Liam Neeson
Carl Wayne Anderson
Judge Matthew Bishop Helms
John Mahoney
Judge Matthew Bishop Helms
Charlie Stella
Joe Mantegna
Charlie Stella
Paul Gray
Philip Bosco
Paul Gray
Grace Comisky
E. Katherine Kerr
Grace Comisky
Morty Rosenthal
Fred Melamed
Morty Rosenthal
Judge Franklin
Bill Cobbs
Judge Franklin
Everett Bennett
Richard Gant
Everett Bennett
Marilyn
Lisbeth Bartlett
Marilyn
Parking Lot Attendant
Michael Beach
Parking Lot Attendant
The innocent shall know the glory of heaven! Peter Yates directs and Eric Roth writes the screenplay. It stars Cher, Dennis Quaid, Liam Neeson, John Mahoney and Joe Mantegna. Music is by Michael Kamen and cinematography by Billy Williams. Pot has Cher as a public defender tasked with defending a deaf and mute homeless man accused of murder. It's a solid legal eagle thriller is this, it opens with a dramatic suicide and the discovery of a woman's dead body, and then runs through many of the staples of feature film courtroom shenanigans. There's some spice thrown in for good measure as the lawyer and a member of the jury get too close for comfort, while the central premise of a deaf and mute person being the accused makes for fascinating viewing - the makers obviously having a social awareness of the issue. As the mystery to be solved question holds the attention, pic does descend into the realm of the far fetched with the behaviour of Cher and Quaid's characters. It's also not something of a shock once the big reveal arrives. Yet this has enough savvy performances, nice technical touches (William's cinematography sparkles at times) and a strong pot boiling premise, to make it well worth the time invested with it. 7/10
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