The Factors Influencing the Way Each of the Members of the Jury Perceived the Murder in Twelve Angry Men

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The Factors Influencing the Way Each of the Members of the Jury Perceived the Murder in Twelve Angry Men

Each of the members of the jury perceived the murder according to

their own beliefs, values and social status. As the story unfolds,

reveals the jurors' complex personalities, preconceptions, backgrounds

and interactions. The most important factors that influence perception

is personality, learning and motivation.

The juror that strongly believes that the defendant is guilty is a

very rude man and biased. A factor that affects his perceptual

selections is that he sees the environment as hectic and unstable. On

the other hand, he is influenced by the estrangement from his own

teenaged son that causes him to be hateful and hostile toward all

young people. That indicates that learning is a crucial factor, which

affects perception.

Henry Fonda is a liberal-minded, patient truth-and-justice seeker who

uses calm logical reasoning. He is a conscious man that organizes his

perceptions into neat categories and retrieve data quickly in an

organized manner. At the same time, Fonda is motivated to make a fair

judgement in the case and therefore he was determined to defend his

opinion.

Some of the jurors are prejudiced and have strong stereotypes about

the defendant. For example, one juror believes that the defendant’s

negative background indicates that he is or will become a criminal.

The juries focus on the different opinions among them and they ignore

the real issues in the case that can potentially lead them to a

miscarriage of justice. Added into the mix, there are some jurors who

are anxious to "get this over with" as soon...

... middle of paper ...

...ou think that the defendant was innocent of guilty?

According to my opinion the defendant was not guilty. But this is my

perception based on my own beliefs about the case.

The boy on trial has been dealt as a bad child, growing up in a lousy

neighbourhood with an abusive father. Even if he did commit the crime,

the idea is that we need to look beyond the stereotypes and our

experiences with "similar" people and judge each person as an

individual based on what we know or can learn about them.

The key point the film makes is the verdict will be based on

prejudices and preconceived notions unless the evidence is thoroughly

examined. Guilty or innocent isn't the heart of the film. The heart

of the film is a democratic concept of right and wrong that allows not

just the court to function, but the society as a whole.

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