Double Jeopardy Movie Review
Double Jeopardy Review

"Double Jeopardy" Overview

Rating: R
1999
Cast and Crew
Director : Bruce BeresfordProducer : Leonard Goldberg
Screenwiter : David Weisberg,Douglas Cook
Starring : Tommy Lee Jones,Ashley Judd,Annabeth Gish,Bruce Greenwood
Double Jeopardy does not take place during the latter half of a game show.
However, it has a similar amount of credibility.
There’s an old adage in screenwriting: You can make something up, and it doesn’
t have to be real. It just has to be believable. In other words, you can make
up the lines for a priest to read at a wedding, as long as they sound
plausible. No one’s going to know if you miss a few “Amens.” However, this
liberty does not extend to making up laws on which to base the premise of your
film.
Double Jeopardy has the bizarre distinction of probably being the first movie
to completely rest its fortunes on the fact that you’ll buy make-believe
legislation. And if you believe the filmmakers, you simply can’t be tried for
the same crime twice. So if your husband (Greenwood) fakes his death and
frames you (Judd) for it, and then you get convicted, and then six years later
you stalk him down to kill him, then you can’t be found guilty of murder,
because you were already tried (and convicted) for that.
Right? Wrong. Very wrong. Wrong to the point that it’s scary to think that
maybe the filmmakers maybe didn’t realize it at any point during the production.
The plot of Double Jeopardy is very plain and obvious (Tommy Lee Jones chases
vengeance-obsessed Judd for an hour while she tracks down hubby, just like in
The Fugitive). And while the thriller is pedestrian and straightforward and
otherwise dull, the theater erupts in laughter every time that “double
jeopardy” clause is trotted out. You keep expecting for someone on screen to
explain to Judd how the law works, but they never do, and Jones’s character is
an ex-law professor!
Not that I should feel surprised. Bruce Beresford hasn’t made a good movie
since 1989 (Driving Miss Daisy). While Jones is campy and fun to watch, and I
could be entertained watching Ashley Judd make toast for two hours, the film
does not redeem itself with these minimal, guilty pleasures (see also:
Entrapment). This isn’t Double Jeopardy. It’s a $100 warm-up question.
Question: What film are you going to look back at with remorse, Ashley (you
know, besides Kuffs)?
Reviewer: Christopher Null





