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Framing truth and testimony: the interrogation of justice in 'The Thin Blue Line'
List of Titles
Framing truth and testimony: the interrogation of justice in 'The Thin Blue Line'
Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: http://hdl.handle.net/1959.3/238019
- Title
- Framing truth and testimony: the interrogation of justice in 'The Thin Blue Line'
- Author(s)
- Heller-Nicholas, Alexandra
- Abstract
- Just after midnight on 28 November 1976, during a routine traffic stop in Dallas, police officer Robert W Wood was murdered by a man whom police investigators determined to be Randall Dale Adams. Adams was sentenced to death and imprisoned; twelve years later, documentary maker Errol Morris re-examined his story in his film 'The Thin Blue Line' (1988). The discoveries uncovered in this film caused the case to be re-opened: Adams was found innocent and was released the following year. Aside from the remarkable fact that his movie helped save the life of a man wrongly convicted of a crime, Morris' documentary marks a crucial point in the history of documentary film. With its focus on the crime itself and the subsequent investigation, The Thin Blue Line introduced many thematic and stylistic elements that have since become commonplace, not only in other documentary feature films but also in related areas such as television documentary.
- Publication type
- Journal article
- Research centre
- Swinburne University of Technology. Faculty of Life and Social Sciences. The Swinburne Institute for Social Research
- Source
- Screen Education, Vol. 67 (Spring 2012), pp. 109-114
- Publication year
- 2012
- FOR Code(s)
- 1902 Film, Television and Digital Media
- Keyword(s)
- Crime; Documentary films; Evidence; The Thin Blue Line; Truth
- Publisher
- Australian Teachers of Media
- ISSN
- 1449-857X
- Publisher URL
- http://www.metromagazine.com.au/screen_ed/
- Copyright
- Copyright © ATOM.
- Peer reviewed


