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The Thin Blue Line

Play trailer Poster for The Thin Blue Line 1988 1h 46m Documentary Play Trailer Watchlist
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100% Tomatometer 19 Reviews 90% Popcornmeter 5,000+ Ratings
One night in November 1976, after his car breaks down on a road outside Dallas, Randall Dale Adams accepts a ride from teenager David Harris. Harris is driving a stolen vehicle and, later that night, when Dallas police officer Robert Wood pulls the car over to check its headlights, he is shot and killed. A jury believes Adams is the killer, but Errol Morris' classic documentary explores the role of Harris' perjured testimony, misleading witness accounts and police misconduct in the verdict.

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The Thin Blue Line

Critics Reviews

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Olivia B. Waxman TIME Magazine 09/19/2024
The film pioneered reenactments and demonstrated the use of true crime documentaries to point out and correct issues in the criminal justice system. Go to Full Review
Noel Murray The Dissolve 03/23/2015
5/5
The Thin Blue Line is one of the films that helped make documentaries a viable entertainment option for arthouse moviegoers during the indie-film boom of the 1980s and '90s. Go to Full Review
Roger Ebert Chicago Sun-Times 01/01/2000
3.5/4
Although The Thin Blue Line assembles an almost inassailable case... it is not a conventional documentary -- not a feature-length version of one of those 60 Minutes segments in which innocent men are rescued from Death Row. Go to Full Review
Vadim Rizov Filmmaker Magazine 01/24/2023
Noted as the investigative documentary that actually got a wrongly convicted man off of death row, Blue Line also inaugurated Morris’ extreme-slo-mo and exploratory lyricism modes. Go to Full Review
Brian Eggert Deep Focus Review 02/14/2022
4/4
A film that provides an exhilarating study into the subjectivity of its interviewees, and by proxy, or perhaps more intentionally so, the subjectivity of documentaries. Go to Full Review
Sean Axmaker Stream on Demand 02/04/2018
Documentaries have changed minds, championed causes, and even reversed policy, but The Thin Blue Line (1988) may be the first film to free a man from prison. Go to Full Review
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Audience Reviews

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Graham M @Greyzer Apr 18 This is dark, intriguing film. Massively entertaining in so many ways. See more 09/16/2021 Because I'm the one that knows See more William L @RT77267842 08/25/2021 "When I was a kid I used to want to be a detective all the time because I used to watch all the detective shows on TV. ... I'm always looking because I never know what might come up or how I can help. I like to help, y'know, in situations like that. I really do. You know, it's always happening to me, everywhere I go. Lots of times there's killings, or anything, y'know, even around my house, wherever. And I'm always looking or getting involved, y'know, finding out who did it or what's going on. I listen to people, and I'm always trying to decide who's lying, or who killed who before the police do, see if I could beat 'em." Jury in Dallas: Seems like a reliable witness. How can you not love a documentary that so convincingly outlines major shortcomings and corruption in supposedly unquestionable legal systems? So many similar films today go beyond grounded storytelling in some attempt to suggest higher-level connections (which may be valid, but get more tenuous the further you get from verifiable fact), but Morris innovated by not only sticking to the known details of the case and period interviews with those involved, but by also introducing an innovative design and tight editing style that emphasized visual flair and entertainment value with a series of reenactments that highlight the erratic nature of the hodgepodge of shaky testimony that saw a man sentenced to death. The pacing could use some tweaking; so much time is spent compelling building up the original conviction, then appeals are roughly summarized before a ruling by the US Supreme Court is introduced without fanfare and little detail, feeling almost tacked on. But when a documentarian manages to capture content that seems almost parodical in nature, that allows for genuine criticism through sheer absurdity, it's hard to argue against it sincerely. Morris indirectly inspired a slew of true crime imitators that largely continue unabated to the present, often more concerned with pulp than content; few can match this early iteration for power and clever design. This documentary has some of the snarkiest court paintings you'll ever see, they're fantastic. (4/5) See more Leaburn O @RT35452347 08/19/2020 I'm a sucker for a death row documentary, I watch them all. This is another brilliant example of the injustice and corruption that is rife in the US police and judicial system. It's not like there are just a handful of cases like this, they seem to be repeated constantly. A good documentary for sure and led to the conviction being overturned. See more 01/02/2019 A film that successfully argued that a man was wrongly convicted for murder by a corrupt justice system in Dallas County, Texas. See more 11/06/2018 A fascinating documentary that only has become more relevant with age. What we don’t see in the legal system can be terrifying. See more Read all reviews
The Thin Blue Line

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Movie Info

Synopsis One night in November 1976, after his car breaks down on a road outside Dallas, Randall Dale Adams accepts a ride from teenager David Harris. Harris is driving a stolen vehicle and, later that night, when Dallas police officer Robert Wood pulls the car over to check its headlights, he is shot and killed. A jury believes Adams is the killer, but Errol Morris' classic documentary explores the role of Harris' perjured testimony, misleading witness accounts and police misconduct in the verdict.
Director
Errol Morris
Producer
Mark Lipson
Screenwriter
Errol Morris
Distributor
Miramax Films
Genre
Documentary
Original Language
English
Release Date (Theaters)
Aug 25, 1988, Original
Release Date (Streaming)
Apr 28, 2016
Box Office (Gross USA)
$17.8K
Runtime
1h 46m
Sound Mix
Surround