The Thin Blue Line Sparknotes

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On the night of November 28th 1976, 28-year-old Randall Adams was hitchhiking on a Dallas road when 16-year-old David Harris picked him up. Harris, a runaway from Texas had stolen the car along with his father’s shotgun. They spent the day together and that night went to a drive-in movie The Swinging Chandeliers. Later that same evening officer Robert Wood was shot and killed when he pulled a car matching the exact description as Harris’s over. Two witnesses-including Harris, named Adams as the murderer. Adams received a death penalty sentence that in 1979 that later was reduced to life in prison. It was early in the 1980’s when director Errol Morris happened upon Adams’s court transcripts whilst shooting a different documentary about a Dallas psychiatrist who was frequently consulted in death row cases. Convinced of Adams innocence and the false accusations made against him Morris began making a film on the subject.

The Thin Blue Line is a fantastic piece of pulp fiction documentary that is both a murder investigation and an examination of the thin line between truth and fiction. Its stylized aesthetics …show more content…

Morris is making a point that sometime the truth isn’t what is presented to you and you have to look beyond what is handed to you. During the trial the prosecution use similar tactics with the jury; information was mishandled and kept from the jury, for example, Harris’ past criminal record was completely ignored by the court and the defence had no witnesses whereas the prosecution had multiple. “Morris makes it clear that Randall Adams was constructed for the prosecution before they ever investigated him. Adams sounded like exactly what [the prosecution] needed, and so they pursued him as a perfect fit” (Currsy

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