The iconic "dissected body" poster and title sequence set a stark, modern tone before the first frame even appears.
Otto Preminger’s (1959) remains the gold standard for courtroom dramas. It is a clinical, daring, and intellectually honest look at the American legal system that refuses to give the audience easy answers. Anatomia de Um Crime Crime, Drama, MistГ©rio 195...
💡 The film doesn't ask "Did he do it?" but rather "Can the law prove why he did it?" AI responses may include mistakes. Learn more The iconic "dissected body" poster and title sequence
It was one of the first major films to use terms like "rape," "contraceptive," and "semen," challenging the restrictive Production Code of the era. 💡 The film doesn't ask "Did he do it
The film focuses on the "mechanics" of law—the chess match between the defense and the prosecution—rather than over-the-top theatrics.
The story follows Paul Biegler, a humble, jazz-loving defense attorney in Michigan’s Upper Peninsula. He takes on a difficult case: Lieutenant Frederick Manion admits to killing a local innkeeper but claims it was "irresistible impulse" triggered by the victim raping his wife, Laura. Why It Broke Ground