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IMDb > The Liberation of L.B. Jones (1970)
The Liberation of L.B. Jones
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The Liberation of L.B. Jones (1970)

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User Rating: 6.7/10 (137 votes)
Photos (see all 3 | slideshow)

Overview

Director:
William Wyler
Writers:
Jesse Hill Ford (novel)
Jesse Hill Ford (screenplay)
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Release Date:
8 July 1970 (France) more
Genre:
Drama | Crime more
Tagline:
Some of his best friends were black...some of her best friends were white. more
Plot:
A Southern lawyer uncovers the truth about a slain undertaker. full summary | full synopsis
Awards:
Nominated for Golden Globe. more
User Comments:
Black acting power more

Cast

 (Cast overview, first billed only)

Lee J. Cobb ... Oman Hedgepath
Anthony Zerbe ... Willie Joe Worth
Roscoe Lee Browne ... L.B. Jones
Lola Falana ... Emma Jones

Lee Majors ... Steve Mundine

Barbara Hershey ... Nella Mundine
Yaphet Kotto ... Sonny Boy Mosby

Arch Johnson ... Stanley Bumpas
Chill Wills ... Mr. Ike
Zara Cully ... Mama Lavorn
Fayard Nicholas ... Benny
Joseph Attles ... Henry (as Joe Attles)
Lauren Jones ... Erleen
Dub Taylor ... Mayor
Brenda Sykes ... Jelly
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Additional Details

Runtime:
102 min
Country:
USA
Language:
English
Color:
Color (Technicolor)
Sound Mix:
Mono
MOVIEmeter: ?
^ 17% since last week why?

Fun Stuff

Trivia:
William Wyler's final film. more
Quotes:
Emma Jones: It going be something. I can't let nobody rob my baby and I can't let my baby enter this world without a dime! more
Movie Connections:
Featured in Classified X (1998) (TV) more

FAQ

What happens at the end?
Why it called The Liberation of L.B. Jones?
Is this movie based on a novel?
more
7 out of 9 people found the following comment useful:-
Black acting power, 4 April 2003
Author: manuel-pestalozzi from Zurich, Switzerland

This is a sad film about personal weaknesses. The storyline has several weak points too, but on the whole I should think the movie does a great director like William Wyler justice and is still watchable today. There is a certain similarity with the Oscar winning In the Heat of the Night. The screenplay is by the same author, Stirling Silliphant.

The Liberation of L. B. Jones really belongs to the African American cast, the whites' performances do pale in comparison. Roscoe Lee Browne plays the well-to-do undertaker who is cheated by his wife with a white policeman. He gives his character a quiet dignity that lasts throughout the story, up to the bitter and sad end. Yaphet Kotto's portrayal of an angry young man who comes to town with a score to settle is equally intense and convincing. Both Browne and Kotto have a few very good scenes in which they act by themselves. They both seize the chance to give their characters real depth. Lola Falana is convincing as the amoral undertaker's wife and there is a good supporting cast. I fondly remember a small, well acted scene at the beginning with an elderly lady who regularly visits the undertaker's show room to have a look at the coffin for which she pays instalments.

The white population is, it seems to me, much more stereotypical. The only really interesting figure here is the town's most important lawyer, played somewhat stiffly by Lee J. Cobb. He is a racist against his better judgment. His unlawful actions to protect white criminals seem like a reflex, not coming from the brain but rather from the spinal cord.

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