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WSWS : Arts Review : Film Reviews
The "Hurricane" Carter story on film: What's there, and what's not
By J. Cooper
18 January 2000
Back to screen version

The Hurricane , directed by Norman Jewison, based on books by Rubin �Hurricane�
Carter and Sam Chaiton and Terry Swinton, screenplay by Armyan Bernstein and
Dan Gordon

The arrest and frame-up in 1966-67 of Rubin �Hurricane� Carter, the number one
contender for the middleweight boxing crown, and John Artis, a young
acquaintance, for the shotgun murders of three white people in a Paterson, New
Jersey bar plunged the two young men into a struggle for their lives that
lasted more than 20 years. The case mobilized masses of people into action
against the injustice inflicted upon two young black men.
The newly released film by Norman Jewison The Hurricane, based on Carter's
autobiography The Sixteenth Round and Lazarus and the Hurricane written by Sam
Chaiton and Terry Swinton, brings Carter's story of this 20-year struggle for
justice to a popular audience at a time when most Hollywood fare barely
acknowledges a world outside its own trivial illusions. It is a film well worth
seeing because this case was such a transparent miscarriage of justice, and a
film depicting the fight to free Carter has intrinsic value. It is a healthy
sign that a filmmaker today would choose such a subject.

While virtually no one in the entertainment industry in the United States is
dealing with issues of social turbulence, there have been a few films recently
based on �true stories� of struggles against �the system.� At the end of 1999
The Insider, and now The Hurricane present stories based on historical fact.
While The Insider succeeds cinematically in �looking honestly� (see
http://www.wsws.org/articles/1999/nov1999/ins-n17.shtml) at the state of
things, the real power of The Hurricane lies in the subject matter.
Carter's story is extraordinary. The film deals with the enormous personal
struggles as well as legal struggles Carter underwent to prove his innocence.
Unfortunately, the film turns what was a state-organized frame-up into a
private vendetta carried out by a fictionalized police detective, Vincent Della
Pesca (played by Dan Hedaya), against the tough, street-smart Rubin Carter
(Denzel Washington). More than one reviewer has referred to the detective
character as �Javert-like,� referring to the notorious police detective in Les
Miserables. The true story of Carter and Artis's 20-year battle is more
compelling and has much more political significance than is shown in the film.
The film implies that the frame-up of Carter and Artis was unique�an aberration
of justice. But as Carter was well aware in 1967, the state was out to crush
the rising opposition simmering in the urban ghettos, and he was a prime
target. He was outspoken, bold and had spent much of his youth in a
correctional facility.

Norman Jewison is known for directing films dealing with controversial
subjects, with injustice and racism in particular ( In the Heat of the Night, A
Soldier's Story, And Justice for All are several of the works he has directed).
But as in his earlier films, there is a tendency in The Hurricane toward
sentimentality: to wrap everything up in a neat package so it all comes out
right in the end.

>From early scenes in the film we learn that Carter at age 11 was arrested while
defending a friend against the predatory advances of a wealthy white man.
Already a petty thief and child of the roughest streets of urban New Jersey,
Carter stabs the man in self-defense. He is arrested and interrogated by Della
Pesca, introduced here as the police detective who would hound Carter for more
than 20 years.
When Carter escapes from the Juvenile Home before his scheduled release at the
age of 21, he enlists in the army. Stationed in Germany, he begins boxing,
realizing this is the way to harness his anger at the world. The boxing scenes,
filmed in black and white, evoke a visceral sense of the anger pent up inside
of Carter. These brutal sequences are reminiscent of Martin Scorsese's Raging
Bull. They draw the viewer into Hurricane's hostility, while allowing one to
empathize with these aggressive emotions.

While on leave from the army back in New Jersey he meets the woman he
eventually marries. As he is beginning to straighten out his life and settle
down, Della Pesca reappears to haul him in to finish the last 10 months of his
juvenile detention. Upon his release, his boxing career skyrockets.
Carter was, by his own account, flamboyant, arrogant and hostile. Having fought
his way up from an impoverished childhood, he relied on his skills and his
sharp mind. As he grew more successful he flaunted that success. He shaved his
head bald and wore expensive clothing. He owned luxury cars. He was also an
outspoken critic of racial prejudice, and a supporter of the civil rights
movement in the US from the early 1960s.

In a recent interview on National Public Radio, James Hirsch, Carter's official
biographer, said, �He scared people and advocated any means necessary for black
people to defend themselves.� This side of Carter is not developed at all in
the film. The film presents the conflict between his hostility and his
determination as a conflict that Carter waged with himself to gain mastery over
his own will. His experience in the army is credited with empowering him with
dignity and self-restraint. The political issues that agitated him and about
which he felt passionate are left out of the film.

The motive for arresting Carter and Artis for the murders on June 17, 1966 is
imputed solely to Della Pesca, who appears outraged at Hurricane's success and
popularity. While tailing Hurricane at a lavish reception, Della Pesca turns to
his partner and says, �Can you believe that black punk? He thinks he's champion
of the world.� But why were they tailing him in the first place? The film
doesn't tell us. In reality it was not merely because a certain police
detective was a racist and enjoyed sleuthing a popular boxer. It was because of
his outspoken position on civil rights and his willingness to advocate �any
means necessary� for blacks to defend themselves against racism.

On the night of June 17 Carter is shown leaving an after-hours club with John
Artis. They are pulled over and surrounded by the police looking �for two
Negroes.� Carter retorts: �Any two will do?� They are taken to the hospital
where the critically injured survivor of a shooting at the Lafayette Bar and
Grill is urged by Della Pesca to identify Carter and Artis as the killers. The
witness cannot positively identify them.
Compressing the timeframe of the actual events, the film introduces Alfred
Bello and Arthur Bradley, two petty criminals who were at the crime scene.
Entering the bar after hearing shots and watching two black men flee in an old
white car, Bello steals the money from the cash register and tells a woman at
the back of the scene to call the police. A later scene shows Bello being
coaxed by Della Pesca to lie and finger Carter and Artis. It is implied that he
will receive leniency by assisting the prosecution.

Carter and Artis, convicted of the murders, are sentenced to prison �for the
rest of your natural life.� Carter realizes that, as an innocent man, he cannot
cooperate with the prison authorities as if he were guilty. He says to the
warden on entering the prison, �I have committed no crime. A crime has been
committed against me.� He refuses a prison uniform and is thrown into solitary
confinement for 90 days wearing his suit, tie, good leather shoes and jewelry.

In the streets of Newark, New Jersey, Detroit and other cities, just weeks
after Carter and Artis were convicted in May 1967, the �long hot summer� of
rioting blew up against the intolerable conditions of ghetto life. These were
the conditions that had formed young Rubin Carter: run-down apartments,
unemployment over 20 percent, poor schools and little future for youth.

A year and a half before, Malcolm X had been assassinated in New York City. A
year hence, Martin Luther King was to be assassinated in Memphis. The war in
Vietnam was becoming a focus of tens of thousands of young people. A
radicalization was under way. State forces were mobilized against this growing
movement through open police provocations, frame-ups and murders. The National
Guard was called out to quell the riots in the cities. It was one of the most
volatile periods of US history since the 1930s. This is the social background
to the Carter and Artis case that is barely touched on by the film. The
audience is left to conclude that it was one bad cop and one angry black man
locked in battle.

The film is successful in conveying a sense of personal struggle and change.
There is a sequence in The Hurricane showing Carter in a mental boxing match
with himself. The one�angry, raging and bitter, against the other�disciplined,
proud, principled. We can all relate to these conflicting emotions, but when
one is unjustly imprisoned, in solitary confinement for the first three months
of the rest of one's visible future, most would succumb to the bestial side.
The film does not attempt to dilute this angry and sometimes violent character.
Carter, in his autobiography, readily acknowledged that he could have killed
someone. His mental opponent in this sequence relies on the discipline and
independence he has gained from life. He emerges proud and determined not to
allow the system to defeat him emotionally.

However, as with the personification of evil in Della Pesca, we meet the
�guardian angel� jailer who helps Carter retain his dignity by bending the
rules for him. This character, also a fictional creation loosely based on one
of the guards at Rahway prison, reinforces the artificial �balance� that the
filmmakers bring to the story in their attempt to demonstrate that ultimately
the American Justice System �can work.�
Carter turns the system inside out for himself. He sleeps when everyone else is
awake. At night he puts himself through demanding physical exercise to maintain
his athletic abilities both physically and mentally. He studies law, works on
his appeals, and he writes The Sixteenth Round, his autobiography, which is
published in 1974. Carter has described it as �throwing the message in the
bottle into the ocean.�

>From the beginning of their ordeal Carter and Artis insisted on their
innocence. The state's case relied entirely on the testimony of Bello and
Bradley. Coincident with the publication of Carter's book, Bello and Bradley
recanted their testimony, acknowledging they were pressured by the Paterson
police to implicate Carter and Artis in the triple murder. They admitted they
were offered a cash reward and lenient treatment in prison. This is not shown
in the film.

Carter managed to bring international attention to his case by 1975. He
gathered the support of singer and songwriter Bob Dylan, actress Ellen Burstyn,
heavyweight boxer Muhammad Ali and other celebrities known for their commitment
to civil liberties. During the second trial Bello recanted his recantation and
the prosecution introduced a motive of �racial revenge� for the first time, and
Carter and Artis were convicted again. The celebrities disappeared. The film
shows Carter sinking into despair, cutting off relations with his wife and
refusing any outside communication.

Several years later in Toronto, Lesra Martin (Vicellous Reon Shannon), a black
youth who was �adopted� by a group of Canadians, bought a copy of The Sixteenth
Round at a used book sale. Moved and inspired by Carter's story, Martin
convinced his mentors to become involved in the Carter case. Two members of the
group, Sam Chaiton (Liev Schreiber) and Terry Swinton (John Hannah), later
wrote Lazarus and the Hurricane upon which the film is partly based. While the
film enhances the role played by this group for dramatic effect, one of the
stronger aspects of The Hurricane is the unfolding of the relationship that
developed between Carter and Martin.

Lesra struggles within himself to achieve his goal of becoming a lawyer, while
barely being able to read Carter's autobiography. He immediately relates to the
conditions from which Carter emerged. He, too, was raised in the slums of
Brooklyn. Moving in with the Canadian group was the one chance that allowed him
to transcend the fate that befell Carter. It is the determination of this young
man to meet Hurricane Carter and to fight for his release that eventually
created a very close bond both in the film, and from other accounts, in
reality, between Carter and Martin. However, this is the aspect of the film
that becomes overly sentimental. In one scene in which Lesra visits Hurricane
in prison, to the background of violins, Hurricane looks at Lesra from behind
the prison bars, reaches out and grips his hand, saying �Hate put me in prison,
love's gonna bust me out.� This is unnecessary. The music, the tight close-ups
and �intimate� dialog serve to make you weep, not allow you to be genuinely
moved by the truth of the real story.
During the next nine years Carter's defense team, aided by the Canadians,
worked to uncover previously unknown evidence. They discovered a consistent
pattern of deception, suppression of evidence and mishandling of the case by
the Paterson police. Three of the Canadians actually move to New Jersey to work
on the case. We follow the growing trust that Carter develops for these
Canadians and Lesra. Since the release of the film Carter has made a point of
acknowledging his gratitude to the Canadian group, calling them �the best level
of people on the planet earth.�

After further setbacks and enormous effort to assemble a brief, the case was
brought before Federal Court in 1985, at which time Judge H. Lee Sarokin
overturned the 1976 conviction. Sarokin ruled that the prosecution had
committed �grave constitutional violations.� He further ruled that the
convictions had been based on �racism rather than reason and concealment rather
than disclosure.� What we do not learn from The Hurricane is that the
prosecution subsequently attempted to appeal Sarokin's ruling for the next
three years, all the way to the US Supreme Court. The Court denied the state's
appeal, effectively squashing the prosecution's hopes of yet a third state
trial.

Clearly the story of Hurricane Carter holds many lessons and has a deep impact
on us today. In an interview Carter expressed that he was well aware of the
broader significance of his arrest. He said he felt at the time, �If they get
me and John Artis now, they'll get you tomorrow.� So what is the significance
of the choices made by the filmmakers of what to depict or emphasize and what
to omit? According to a pre-release interview with executive producer Rudy
Langlais, �When you see these two white people and a young black kid and this
wrongly accused boxer, standing on the courthouse steps after the convictions
were overturned, we want you to feel good, to feel like the system works for
people sometimes.� To achieve this goal, the film excises the social conditions
that gave rise to the frame-up of Carter and Artis and its broader
implications.

As Hurricane exits the final courtroom scene a free man, a low-angle shot shows
the federal courthouse against the blue sky, its roof pointing heavenward.
Truth and Justice have prevailed. Under conditions in which Mumia Abu-Jamal is
facing the death penalty and Nathaniel Abraham, a 13-year-old in Michigan, has
been tried for murder as an adult, we wonder how the system �works for people
sometimes.� One hopes that the film will inspire the audience members to find
out about the real story and draw their own conclusions.
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