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Presumed Innocent [DVD] [1990] [Region 1] [US Import] [NTSC]

4.3 out of 5 stars 42 customer reviews

Estimated delivery 14 - 25 Apr. to Germany - Mainland when you choose Standard Delivery at checkout. Details
Dispatched from and sold by RAREWAVES USA.
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Region 1 encoding. (This DVD will not play on most DVD players sold in the UK [Region 2]. This item requires a region specific or multi-region DVD player and compatible TV. More about DVD formats)
Note: you may purchase only one copy of this product. New Region 1 DVDs are dispatched from the USA or Canada and you may be required to pay import duties and taxes on them (click here for details) Please expect a delivery time of 5-7 days.
£4.01 Only 9 left in stock. Dispatched from and sold by RAREWAVES USA.

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Product details

  • Format: NTSC
  • Language: English
  • Subtitles: English, French, Spanish
  • Dubbed: French
  • Region: Region 1 (US and Canada DVD formats.)
  • Number of discs: 1
  • Classification: R (Restricted) (US MPAA rating. See details.)
  • Average Customer Review: 4.3 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (42 customer reviews)
  • ASIN: B0045HCJ8K
  • Amazon Bestsellers Rank: 319,559 in DVD & Blu-ray (See Top 100 in DVD & Blu-ray)

Customer Reviews

Top Customer Reviews

Format: DVD Verified Purchase
Apart from "Mosquito Coast" has Harrison Ford ever made a bad film?If he's in it you know it will be OK. This is more than OK it's a great plot, well scripted, well acted and a brilliant cast. And there is a real end twist....but you'll have to watch the movie to discover what it is. You certainly don't see it coming....at least I didn't.
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Format: DVD
Presumed Innocent is a good solid thriller/courtroom drama staring Harrison Ford as prosecutor Rusty Sabich who finds himself accused of the rape and murder of a female colleague. Although admitting he had an affair with this woman Sabich find that incriminating evidence has been found at the crime scene linking him with the offence. His boss turns against him and finding himself isolated from the rest of the legal community Sabich's only support seems to come from his betrayed wife and the lawyer hired to defend him.
The idea of being accused for a crime one didn't commit and then finding that the odds are stacked against you of proving your innocence is probably a nightmarish thought that scares most people. In this sense the film works very well as you can't possibly see a way out for Ford's character. What adds another element to the tale is that the personality of Sabich is one where you can actually believe he did commit the crime, making the plot a real guessing game all the way through.
Because Ford has to play this characteristic of "Did he? Didn't he?" his actual performance is quite subdued which is a surprise for such a big star. This does mean though that several bit part players really shine and put on great performances. Ones that caught my eye were Raul Julia as the lawyer hired to defence Sabich, John Spencer as the detective who doesn't abandon Sabich, Paul Winfield as the judge and Joe Grifasi as the short "chip on the shoulder" ridden Tommy Molto.
The film itself is quite slow to get going and only really comes to life when the courtroom scenes begin. The final twist in the tale is well worth waiting for, especially as not only does it contain a couple of separate twists but also leaves you wondering about the future of the main characters.
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Format: DVD
Harrison Ford plays a District Atourney who has an affair with a colleague, which she breaks off. The colleage is then found murdered. All evidence points towards Mr Ford... but is he the culprit?? A good movie, with a brilliant twist at the end An excellent choice if you're after a murder/mystery movie. enough said.... buy the movie and judge for yourself!!!!
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By Spike Owen TOP 500 REVIEWER on 31 May 2011
Format: DVD Verified Purchase
Presumed Innocent is directed by Alan J. Pakula, who also co-adapts for the screen with Frank Pierson from the Scott Turow novel. It stars Harrison Ford, Brian Dennehy, Bonnie Bedelia, Raúl Juliá, Paul Winfield, John Spencer and Greta Scacchi. Music is scored by John Williams and Richard Wolf, and cinematography is by Gordon Willis.

Prosecuting attorney Rusty Sabich (Ford) suddenly finds himself a murder suspect after his one time lover, Carolyn Polhemus (Scacchi), is found raped and murdered in her home. As the evidence piles up against him, and his marriage comes under further strain, Rusty hires top lawyer Sandy Stern (Juliá) to represent him when the case goes to trial. Battling the system that he knows inside out, Rusty finds that there's a big can of worms about to be opened.

A tip top court room mystery drama that we could do with seeing more of these days. Expertly strung together by the director of All the Presidents Men and Sophie's Choice, Presumed Innocent isn't just a by the numbers legal who done it? The makers get in deep with the political machinations of a district attorney's office, the intricate steps of a police investigation, and of course the legal eagle operations of a court room. In to the mix is an horrendous crime, of which a lawyer himself is charged with committing, he may or may not be guilty of the crime, but wonderfully we are never sure until the astonishing finale plays out. The air of mystery hangs heavy throughout, nagging away like an itch you can't scratch, with Pakula neatly unfolding the drama in a collage of flashbacks, side-plots and present time intricacies.
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By Mr. C. Gelderd VINE VOICE on 28 April 2015
Format: DVD
As a lover of great legal drama/thillers, this had always passed me by as I was never sure what it was about. Something along the lines of the seedy thriller ‘Tightrope’ from Clint Eastwood popped into my head; a good man walking the line of right and wrong as he delves into the sordid nightlife of society. I was wrong however, and in light of recent events surrounding Harrison Ford’s plane crash, I wanted to watch a film from the great man. Sadly, the man still is great but this film wasn’t anything I had hoped.

On the whole, it’s a very average affair (literally) – the basic template of a man slowly being framed for murder of a woman he had an affair with, and soon facing the nightmare of losing everything he has tried to build while attempting to prove his innocence. Standard legal drama narrative. While the film starts well, establishing a nice cast with the likes of Ford, Brian Dennehy, Bonnie Bedelia and the wonderfully silver-tongued Raúl Juliá, all who are very engaging and engrossing on screen, all set up the scene for your usual tense, gritty and powerful display of right vs wrong, truth vs lies.

But nothing really comes of it and everything seems very placid in places, with no real moments of tension or nail-biting drama. The plot rolls on and we are spoon fed the next set-up so we can keep up with who deceives who, and why, and what motive they had, before a little more courtroom drama, and then hopping back out to explore the character’s and their battle of demons. While the acting calibre here is more than generous, they never really are given much to go on, and during the second half of the film, Ford is sadly reduced to not doing much, but always watchable and likeable.
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