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The Trials of Darryl Hunt

  • 2006
  • PG-13
  • 1h 46m
IMDb RATING
7.5/10
1.1K
YOUR RATING
The Trials of Darryl Hunt (2006)
Home Video Trailer from Think Film, Inc
Play trailer2:29
7 Videos
3 Photos
CrimeDocumentary

"The Trials of Darryl Hunt" is a feature documentary about a brutal rape/murder case and a wrongly convicted man, Darryl Hunt, who spent nearly twenty years in prison for a crime he did not ... Read all"The Trials of Darryl Hunt" is a feature documentary about a brutal rape/murder case and a wrongly convicted man, Darryl Hunt, who spent nearly twenty years in prison for a crime he did not commit. Both a social justice story and a personally driven narrative, the film chronicles... Read all"The Trials of Darryl Hunt" is a feature documentary about a brutal rape/murder case and a wrongly convicted man, Darryl Hunt, who spent nearly twenty years in prison for a crime he did not commit. Both a social justice story and a personally driven narrative, the film chronicles this capital case from 1984 through 2004. With exclusive footage from two decades, the fi... Read all

  • Directors
    • Ricki Stern
    • Anne Sundberg
  • Writers
    • Ricki Stern
    • Anne Sundberg
  • Stars
    • Evelyn Jefferson
    • Fred Flagler
    • John Reeves
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    7.5/10
    1.1K
    YOUR RATING
    • Directors
      • Ricki Stern
      • Anne Sundberg
    • Writers
      • Ricki Stern
      • Anne Sundberg
    • Stars
      • Evelyn Jefferson
      • Fred Flagler
      • John Reeves
    • 11User reviews
    • 11Critic reviews
  • See production info at IMDbPro
    • Awards
      • 8 wins & 4 nominations total

    Videos7

    The Trials of Darryl Hunt
    Trailer 2:29
    The Trials of Darryl Hunt
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    The Trials Of Darryl Hunt: Clip 5
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    Photos2

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    Top cast45

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    Evelyn Jefferson
    • Self - Deborah Sykes' Mother
    Fred Flagler
    • Self - Former Editor, Winston-Salem Sentinel
    John Reeves
    • Self - Crime Stoppers Coordinator
    Mary Anne Sheboy
    • Self - Former Reporter, WXII
    Mark Rabil
    • Self - Defense Attorney
    Gordon Jenkins
    • Self - Defense Attorney
    Darryl Hunt
    • Self - Wrongfully Convicted
    Larry Little
    • Self - Winston-Salem City Alderman
    Joseph Masten
    • Self - Winston-Salem City Chief of Police
    Sammy Mitchell
    • Self - Piedmont Correctional Facility
    Don Tisdale
    • Self - Former District Attorney
    Johnny Gray
    • Self - State's Witness
    Khalid Griggs
    • Self - Darryl Hunt Defense Fund
    • (as Imam Khalid Griggs)
    Thomas Murphy
    • Self - Witness
    James Daulton
    • Self - Detective
    Roger Weaver
    • Self - Witness
    Margaret Crawford
    • Self - Witness
    Mark Mayhew
    • Self - Newscaster
    • Directors
      • Ricki Stern
      • Anne Sundberg
    • Writers
      • Ricki Stern
      • Anne Sundberg
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews11

    7.51.1K
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    Featured reviews

    barry-mendel

    check it out

    I saw this at the IDA Festival, ArcLight, Los Angeles. It's about how racism and also the pressure police and DA's feel to obtain convictions can sometimes trump justice. Here, on shaky evidence, African-American Darryl Hunt goes to prison for 19 ½ years for the rape and murder of a young white woman.

    There are many death row and miscarriage of justice stories, and like this one, they all mostly sympathize with the accused. For me, DEAD MAN WALKING is a model of balancing sympathy for the victim and their loved ones with sympathy for the railroaded convict. My group's after-movie conversation explored how exactly the system went wrong – how did the DA justify to himself not giving out the state's files to the defense (this was uncovered by a journalist years later, after numerous appeals had been denied)? After the initial conviction by an all-white jury divided the community along racial lines, why did the judge in the second trial decide to try the case again in an all-white area? We weren't discounting racism or sloppy police work or a judge or DA motivated by political expedience, but we all felt people rarely act with purely malicious intent, life tends to be much less simple. We each resisted when the film would show the DA or his witnesses in a bad light, encouraging us to mutter "those racist bastards" or "he's definitely innocent" under our breath. The film spends a lot more time with Darryl and his supporters (all of whom seem moral and sympathetic) than with the victim's family, so one's natural inclination becomes to WANT Darryl to be innocent (i.e. the filmmakers know the outcome and are leading us there). But since we don't know how it would turn out, we feel a little nudged, and personally, when nudged, I tend to stand my ground or even push back. In spite of the shaky police and DA work, just as the filmmakers didn't know for sure over those ten years, as I watched I always kept alive the possibility Darryl was not completely innocent. Despite what an odd and not particularly accessible character the victim's mother was, I never forgot what it must have been like to be her (or worse yet, the victim), nor the incredibly tough job of a DA and police department to make their community feel that they can not only catch but convict the criminals who harm their citizens. I was glad the film included the mother's last speech in the court, where she looks Darryl and the judge in the eye and expresses her total conviction that no matter what the DNA evidence says or the court does, she's certain Darryl raped and killed her daughter. It's a brutal, harrowing moment no fictional feature can hope to match. Darryl's response and the very ending of the film are powerful, too, and while you can probably guess what happens, you can't guess exactly, and I won't spoil it.

    The film struck me in a broader, deeper sense, too. Daryl and his wife and everyone involved in contesting the verdict over nineteen years, including the filmmakers, beautifully illustrated how when people endure hardship and injustice, events can and often do align in profound, amazing ways, too. Living proof of MLK's adage that unearned suffering can be redemptive for the soul. (Spoiler alert: if you're worried, skip the rest of this paragraph) A young white legal team loses the case but decides to make it the focus of their professional lives. A former Black Panther decides to organize the community in protest and begins a defense fund which sustains the nearly twenty year effort. After ten years in jail, Darryl gets a brief furlough and on his first day of freedom, meets the woman who becomes his wife and his rock through the hard times to come. Darryl is partially exonerated by a DNA test and offered his freedom if he'll plea bargain down to a lesser crime but decides to go back to jail rather than admit any guilt. Fifteen years and many unsuccessful appeals later, out of the blue, a local reporter decides to do an 8-part front-page series on the case, which turns up new leads. Two young filmmakers are on hand to capture these events as they happen, live, and stick it out ten years wondering whether the convict they're hoping is innocent actually is.

    It was also powerful to see the people who the documentary is about and the filmmakers together at the Q&A after the screening, seeing what they are doing with their lives now. What for Darryl (and his family and supporters) was a 20-year tragedy has blossomed into a better, more purposeful, fulfilling life than he'd have probably ever known, and the same is true of all who helped see this through. The story is a testament to Darryl and his supporters' courage, determination and faith. The whole incredible sequence of events encouraged in me a knowledge so oft-forgot (or trivialized) it cannot be overstated, in the goodness of life and our fellow human beings. After an emotional Q&A, rather than ask a question, the last audience member, an older woman, offered her gratitude to all of the participants and filmmakers for who they were and what they were doing with their lives. It was simple and moving. She spoke for me and I think everyone. That the film evoked such generosity of spirit perfectly illustrated what we'd already received from it.

    The film-making is excellent, too. Great music, on purpose, clear, dramatic and human. One of the best documentaries of this type I've seen, seriously. I can't imagine what Darryl went through, nor what his friends and family and the filmmakers went through as this all played out, disappointment after hopeless disappointment. And let's never forget the victims and the wreckage left behind, either. Disturbing, yet inspiring, check it out.
    7jordondave-28085

    Another actual depiction of unfair justice

    (2007) The Trials of Darryl Hunt DOCUMENTARY

    Centered on an actual case when an innocent civilian was locked up and prosecuted just because DNA wasn't used to clear him is the focus here and is done by racial profiling instead, just because he's an African American who appear to look like a criminal but is not one in real life! Documentary displays the travesty in some US states which is not unusual, but that Darryl Hunt represents every other person who is falsely convicted just because he "appear" to look like someone who'd commit such a heinous act when the real culprit is still walking on the streets can be explained in 60 minutes than to be shown as an almost 2 hour documentary! People who want to prosecute people without the use of DNA should see this!
    9Tom Murray

    Justice Can Be Very Slow

    This is a very special trial movie, focussing on racial prejudice in the North Carolina "Justice" System in the 1980's. Darryl Hunt was accused of a crime that he did not commit. The black community rallied behind Darryl, supplying money for his defence and giving moral support. The NorthCarolina "Justice" System is shown as incompetent, uncaring and corrupt.

    Darryl Hunt is a very honourable man. He accepted that police can make mistakes, because he is a forgiving person. He made an honourable decision, which made it more difficult for him, because he believed that it was the right thing to do. I could see no bitterness in Darryl, although there must have been times when he was very tempted.

    Eventually the truth started to become more widely known and Darryl had broader support, including the white community. Against all odds, he finally gained his freedom. I was very inspired by those who supported Darry and by Darryl himself. He is a man I would like to know personally.
    8Buddy-51

    Depressing and uplifting documentary

    On August 10, 1984, Deborah Sykes, a young, white newspaper editor living in Winston-Salem, North Carolina, was brutally raped and murdered by an unknown assailant. Suspicion quickly fell on a black man by the name of Darryl Hunt, even though no weapon or physical evidence linking him to the crime was ever brought forth by the police investigating the case. This meant that Hunt was essentially convicted of 1st degree murder and sentenced to life imprisonment solely on the basis of what even the most disinterested of observers would conclude was eyewitness testimony of a shockingly shoddy nature. Due to the racist overtones that inevitably attach themselves to such a crime, the case quickly became a political cause celebre in the press, leading to stark racial divisions in the community and to various retrials over the years.

    Ricki Stern and Anne Sundberg, the makers of "The Trials of Darryl Hunt," began actively chronicling the events of this story at around the time of the second trial. They've combined file footage - i.e. news reports and interviews - from the time of the original trial with what they themselves have filmed over a decade and a half of involvement with the case. The result is an eye-opening but often depressing look at the sorry state of the legal system in this country. Yet, the movie is also a celebration of those who never gave up fighting for the cause of justice not merely for this one man and others like him but for the system itself.

    Most impressive of all is Hunt himself, who despite being incarcerated for a crime he didn't commit, has managed to hold onto a purity of spirit that shines forth through his every word and action. I doubt many of us could endure such an ordeal and still emerge this untainted and optimistic about life. But somehow Hunt has.

    This tremendously moving film will have you thinking long and hard about just how difficult it can be for a single individual to achieve true justice in this world, but it will also leave you with the hope that, thanks to people like Darryl Hunt and those - both black and white - who have stood and fought alongside him for so long now, the situation just might get a whole lot better in the future.
    10staubin

    heartfelt and comprehensive picture of one man's legal struggles

    At the North Carolina Public Defender's conference, I had the pleasure of watching this film and meeting Mr. Hunt and his attorneys in person. The film is a well articulated synopsis of the various legal and personal challenges faced by Mr. Hunt during his 19 and a half years in a North Carolina prison for a rape and murder which he never committed.

    As a film watcher, I really enjoyed the linearity and breadth of the narrative as well as the compelling players involved. The movie is able to explore all of the complexities of the legal procedures without getting bogged down or tedious. The filmmakers followed the case for well over a decade, and at many times in the movie the audience sees events as they unfold in real time. Every lost appeal, every new piece of evidence, and key hearings are well documented and the immediacy of the emotions involved really hits home. Mr. Hunt's case attracted dedicated attorneys and colorful and interesting supporters like Larry Little, who invested their heart and soul into his struggles. The movie refuses to over-sentimentalize Mr. Hunt, instead focusing more upon the systematic forces at work in his case. In fact, no over-sentimentalizing has to be done in this movie. Very few people would have accepted their situation with as much grace or courage as Mr. Hunt did and it shows from the few parts of contemporaneous and recorded dialogue we hear from him.

    As a lawyer, it's a case like this that makes me realize why I sit at the defendant's table. It's idealistic to think that everybody has rights, that at any time a vindictive prosecutor backed by unsympathetic individuals can rob someone of their freedom even in the United States. But it's those very ideals, that conception of rights, that makes criminal defendants worthy of our care and protection.

    Storyline

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    Did you know

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    • Connections
      Referenced in Late Show with David Letterman: Joan Rivers/Bill Burr/Steve Winwood (2010)
    • Soundtracks
      Ras Kass
      (featuring Kev Nice)

      Written by Ras Kass

      Performed by Ras Kass featuring Kev Nice

      Courtesy of Young American Recordings

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    Details

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    • Release date
      • January 2006 (United States)
    • Country of origin
      • United States
    • Official site
      • Official site
    • Language
      • English
    • Also known as
      • Испытания Дэррила Ханта
    • Filming locations
      • Winston-Salem, North Carolina, USA
    • Production company
      • Break Thru Films
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Box office

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    • Budget
      • $200,000 (estimated)
    • Gross US & Canada
      • $1,217
    • Opening weekend US & Canada
      • $619
      • Jun 17, 2007
    • Gross worldwide
      • $1,217
    See detailed box office info on IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      1 hour 46 minutes
    • Color
      • Color
    • Sound mix
      • Stereo
    • Aspect ratio
      • 1.66 : 1

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