The death of Medgar Evers, a black civil rights activist, obsesses many people in 1963. Although there are many evidences to prove Bryan De La Beckwith is the killer, all-white juries conclude the innocence of him. 25 years later, a new evidence can change everything.
28 June 1985, Fairfax, Virginia, USA
7 May 1957, Long Island, New York, USA
16 February 1935, New York City, New York, USA
17 November 1955, Montgomery, Alabama, USA
July 2, 1925 in Decatur, Mississippi, USA
14 July 1945, Ashland, Kentucky, USA
19 September 1943, Los Angeles, California, USA
29 November 1982, Speake, Alabama, USA
5 June 1943, Queens, New York City, New York, USA
20 November 1929, Dallas, Texas, USA
13 May 1914, Lafayette, Alabama, USA
4 January 1932, Detroit, Michigan, USA
11 September 1961, Chicago, Illinois, USA
29 November 1935, Meridian, Mississippi, USA
13 November 1955, New York City, New York, USA
8 March 1984
13 November 1956, Spearman, Texas, USA
7 April 1933, Birmingham, Alabama, USA
8 January 1983, Raleigh, North Carolina, USA
November 11, 2004
Well intended film with James Woods Oscar worthy in a key role.
August 20, 2004
Strong performances but just another movie about civil rights issues that pays too much attention to the white characters.
January 01, 2000
Rob Reiner's self-congratulatory Ghosts of Mississippi portrays Medgar Evers' slaying from the viewpoint of a white guy and can't even do a capable job of that.
May 27, 2003
Reiner's intermittingly preachy but nevertheless powerful and poignant portrait of hostility and racial strife during one of the ugliest chapters in contemporary American history
December 28, 2004
Strangely devoid of any emotional weight.
August 29, 2002
Convincingly plumbs the spiritual impules behind the yearning for justice.

