Status
Released
original language
English
Budget
$ 0
Revenue
$ 309776

Warden Bernadine Williams

Marty Lumetta

Anthony Woods

Jonathan Williams

Evette Wilkinson

Chaplain David Kendricks

Deputy Thomas Morgan

Major Logan Cartwright

Mrs. Collins

Mr. Collins

Officer Brooks

Victor Jimenez

Ms. Jiminez

Sonia

Death Watch Officer

Evette's Son

Paramedic

Physician

Broadcaster

Lonely Inmate

Tie-Down Team Member

Dan the Bartender

Second Shift Officer #1

Second Shift Officer #2

Protester

Protester

Protester

Protester

Senior Staff Member (uncredited)

Lauren (uncredited)

Maurice (Reporter #3) (uncredited)

Condemned Man (uncredited)

Inmate (uncredited)

Prison Guard (uncredited)

Marcus (uncredited)

Evette's Husband (uncredited)

Lisa (uncredited)

Inmate (uncredited)

Middle-Aged Woman (uncredited)

Written by Geronimo1967 on 2024-02-06
This features a really poignant and strong effort from Alfre Woodard as the warden of a prison charged with ensuring the execution of prisoners. She, "Bernadine" is finding it increasingly more difficult to reconcile the responsibilities of her job with her own conscience and her marriage. None of these demons are helped when one such "procedure" goes awry and, though not her fault, she finds herself under increased scrutiny as Aldis Hodge's "Woods" is soon to follow. The performance elements of this from Woodard and from Wendell Pierce as her loving but increasingly exasperated husband "Jonathan" work well, creating a really quite powerful vision of a woman torn between remaining objective - she is, after all, doing her job - and of a woman increasingly appreciative of the terminal nature of her task and of her own failings and religiosity. The remainder of the drama, last minute appeals etc., works less well and Richard Schiff really doesn't deliver much at all as the convicted man's attorney "Lumetta" - a man who seems to be trying to imbue hope in a man based on wishful thinking and some far-fetched technicalities. Auteur Chinonye Chukwu takes her time with this impassioned story and that's no bad thing at times, allowing us to become a little more immersed in the character of the troubled "Bernadine". At other times, though, the pace really does need a bit of a shake. The whole isn't as good as the sum of the parts, but it's still quite a thought-provoking look at just where responsibility lies in circumstances none of us would ever want to experience.