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Conviction

“An extraordinary journey of how far we go to fight for our family.”

7.1
2010
1h 47m
Drama
Director: Tony Goldwyn

Overview

When Betty Anne Waters' older brother Kenny is arrested for murder and sentenced to life in 1983, Betty Anne, a Massachusetts wife and mother of two, dedicates her life to overturning the murder conviction. Convinced that her brother is innocent, Betty Anne puts herself through high school, college and, finally, law school in an 18 year quest to free Kenny. With the help of best friend Abra Rice, Betty Anne pores through suspicious evidence mounted by small town cop Nancy Taylor, meticulously retracing the steps that led to Kenny's arrest. Belief in her brother - and her quest for the truth - pushes Betty Anne and her team to uncover the facts and utilize DNA evidence with the hope of exonerating Kenny.

Trailer

CONVICTION - Official Trailer Official

Cast

Reviews

AI-generated review
The Cult of the Macabre

When we discuss the "Golden Age of Television," we often point to the slow-burn character studies of *Mad Men* or the moral decay of *Breaking Bad*. But in 2013, Kevin Williamson (the architect of 90s meta-horror like *Scream*) attempted something more visceral on network television: he tried to weaponize the slasher genre for a weekly audience. *The Following* is not merely a police procedural; it is a brutal, frantic meditation on the seductive power of violence. While it occasionally buckles under the weight of its own nihilism, it offers a fascinating, if imperfect, look at the symbiosis between the hunter and the hunted.

Kevin Bacon as Ryan Hardy

Visually, *The Following* eschews the warm, glossy filters typical of network dramas for a palette of steel grays, bruises, and arterial reds. The atmosphere is suffocating, often reflecting the internal state of its protagonist, Ryan Hardy (Kevin Bacon). Hardy is not the shiny, capable hero of *CSI*. He is a wreck—a walking scar tissue of alcoholism and heart failure, living in a world where every shadow could conceal a knife. The camera work emphasizes this paranoia, often lingering on open doors or empty hallways just long enough to make the viewer uncomfortable. The violence is sharp and often performative, a choice that mirrors the antagonist’s obsession with the theatricality of death.

The Cult of Joe Carroll

At the narrative's center is a grotesque romance of wits between Hardy and Joe Carroll (James Purefoy). Purefoy plays Carroll not as a foaming madman, but as a failed novelist turned charismatic professor who treats murder as a form of high art. He wraps his atrocities in the velvet cloak of Romantic literature, specifically the works of Edgar Allan Poe. This is where the series finds its most compelling, if occasionally pretentious, hook: the idea that evil can be intellectualized and taught. Purefoy and Bacon share an electric chemistry—Hardy the blunt instrument of justice, Carroll the conductor of a symphony of screams. They are two sides of the same obsessed coin, neither able to exist without the other’s validation.

However, the show’s most terrifying concept is not the central villain, but the "Followers" themselves. Williamson taps into a primal fear of the unknowable neighbor. The cult members are not visibly monstrous; they are nannies, police officers, and shopkeepers. In the age of social media and radicalization, the idea of a charismatic leader activating "sleeper agents" feels disturbingly prescient. The terror comes from the loss of safe spaces; when the seemingly innocent girl next door pulls out an ice pick because a literature professor told her to, the social contract dissolves.

Tension and Investigation

Ultimately, *The Following* is a flawed masterpiece of pulp tension. It requires a suspension of disbelief that can be demanding—the FBI’s incompetence often serves the plot rather than logic—but it succeeds as a mood piece. It asks us to stare into the abyss and acknowledges, with a wink, that we are watching because part of us enjoys the darkness. It remains a sharp, adrenaline-fueled bridge between the standard procedural and the prestige horror that would follow in its wake.
LN
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