(Nor for me: I still gave it 8/10. I think even aside from time constraints, they had written themselves into a box on those guys: they pumped up the drama by making them so adamant, and then when they had to have a unanimous decision to acquit at the end (obviously a hung jury would have been an unsatisfying conclusion), they had nowhere realistic to go.)
I can understand your opinion, because I thought the same. But then I started to climb
inside of the heads of those 2 men. I thought that the racist man noticed the indents on
the lady witnesses face as well, but couldn't bring himself to admit it out loud. Even if he
was racist, he knew deep down inside that not all people from the slums are bad, and that
the fact that the woman wore glasses was irrefutable, racist or not.
The other juror, the man with the son, had to admit to himself that his vote was based on
a personal grudge against his son. He sympathized with the dead father I believe, and was
hellbound to hang the accused son. Once he realized that there was no evidence to back
up his grudge-based vote, he broke down and voted "not guilty."
Any one of the jurors could have gone to the judge with the info that #8 investigated the crime, bought the knife, and brought it into the jury room - and almost certainly a judge would declare a mistrial (among other jury misconducts). That would have solved everything. They could have gotten a mistrial, told the defense their "theory" and he would have a new trial
Who on earth would snitch to the judge like that? Even though they weren't convinced at first and had some objections, they knew that #8 was making good points, that his investigations were totally justified. I don't know of one mature grown man who would be so low as to tattle on #8. Men should know when to keep something between the men in the room, and despite some of these characters having faults, they had enough self-respect than to go tell the judge.
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