The Accused (1988)

The Accused (1988)

Taglines: On April 18th 1987, Sarah Tobias stops for a drink at a bar called The Mill.

The Accused movie synopsis. Sarah Tobias goes to her local bar and is gang-raped by three men. The district attorney on the case is Katheryn Murphy who wants to prove that although Sarah had taken drugs that night and was acting provocatively while in the bar, this is no reason for her to be so brutally attacked and the men responsible should be brought to justice.

The Accused is a 1988 American drama film written by Tom Topor and directed by Jonathan Kaplan. It starred Jodie Foster and Kelly McGillis. The film is set in Washington state and filmed in Vancouver, Canada. The film was loosely based on the 1983 gang rape of Cheryl Araujo in New Bedford, Massachusetts, and the resulting trial, which received national coverage. This film was one of the first Hollywood films to portray rape graphically.[citation needed]

The film was well received. Jodie Foster portrayed Sarah Tobias, the victim, earning the Academy Award for Best Actress, the film’s sole nomination. This was the first time that the lead actress won the Best Actress Academy Award without the film being nominated in any other category since 1962, when Sophia Loren won Best Actress for her performance in Two Women.

The Accused (1988)

Film Review for The Accused

Having failed to bring her attackers to justice, a young rape victim goes to court to take on the witnesses who encouraged their crime

In the United States of America, a rape is reported every six minutes. One of every four rape victims is attacked by two or more assailants. These are the grim statistics against which The Accused is played out, and it’s to the credit of Kaplan and his cast that this dark and bitter pill has not been sweetened by the Hollywood bubblegum machine.

Jodie Foster, of course, won an Oscar for her extraordinary portrayal of rape victim Sarah Tobias — a role which was originally offered to, and turned down by, Kelly McGillis, herself the survivor of a rape. Instead, McGillis elected to play Kathryn Murphy, the deputy D.A. who takes on Sarah’s case.

What’s astonishing is how quickly and easily Sarah is marginalised by a legal and social structure which simply isn’t geared to handle ‘.nyone like her. She’s too loud, too complex. She smokes dope, drinks, hangs out with a biker, waits tables and likes to “fool around”. When she is brutally raped by three men in a bar, Sarah is considered by Murphy to be too unreliable a witness to take the stand, and as a result the men get off on a lesser charge. Outraged, she shames McGillis into trying to convict the onlookers who, she says, were clapping and cheering and who would therefore be guilty of “criminal solicitation”.

The Accused (1988)

Kaplan and scriptwriter Tom Topor use McGillis’ development to track some uncomfortable and complex social issues—the way Sarah’s world collides with the sleazy plea-bargaining world of her lawyers; the way she has to fight against Murphy’s initial distaste; the way she finds herself laughing outside a record store with a guy who turns out to have been at the bar that night.

Foster is simply fantastic as the tough Sarah, unshakeable in her belief that justice has not been done and that she has a right to demand it. McGillis, from a slow start, builds beautifully and by the time the action has switched to the courtroom, she has shed her starchy persona for a true advocate’s passion. Her coaxing of Foster’s testimony results finally in each sentence from Sarah ending with “was inside of me”, and it’s enough to break your heart.

When it comes, almost at the end of the film in flashback, the rape scene is devastating, harrowing and utterly convincing; the suggestion that it’s either gratuitous or voyeuristic is, frankly, nonsense. Rather, it’s the point towards which the film hurtles from the opening scene in which Sarah emerges screaming from the bar, clutching her torn blouse.

The Accused Movie Poster (1988)

The Accused (1988)

Directed by: Jonathan Kaplan
Starring: Kelly McGillis, Jodie Foster, Bernie Coulson, Leo Rossi, Ann Hearn, Carmen Argenziano, Steve Antin, Peter Van Norden, Terry David Mulligan
Screenplay by: Tom Topor
Production Design by: Richard Wilcox
Cinematography by: Ralf D. Bode
Film Editing by: O. Nicholas Brown, Gerald B. Greenberg
Costume Design by: Trish Keating
Set Decoration by: Barry W. Brolly
Art Direction by: Sheila Haley
Music by: Brad Fiedel
Distributed by: Paramount Pictures
Release Date: October 14, 1988

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