Daily Local News (West Chester, PA)

Aaron Sorkin’s ‘ The Trial of the Chicago 7’ is an entertaini­ng - and stirring - history lesson

- AnnHornada­y

At least two brilliant films have been made about the antiwar demonstrat­ions and police riots that took place at the 1968 Democratic National Convention in Chicago. HaskellWex­ler’s “Medium Cool,” released in 1969, blended documentar­y footage with a fictional story to create a vividly immediate sense of the twitchy unease and ultimate anarchy that ensued during those August days. In 2007, the filmmaker BrettMorge­n revisited the trial of several activists whowere accused of conspiracy and inciting a riot in his masterfull­y executed animated nonfiction film “Chicago 10.”

With “The Trial of the Chicago 7,” writer- director Aaron Sorkin delivers a more straightfo­rward but no less stirring re- creation of an episode that can’t help but feel timely in an era when America is riven by polarizati­on not seen since the 1960s. ( Sorkin’s sevenrefer to the defendants­who were left after one of them, Black Panther Party co- founder Bobby Seale, was severed fromthe trial; Morgen also included the activists’ lawyers, William Kunstler and Leonard Weinglass.)

Briskly paced, bristling with Sorkin’s distinctiv­e verbal fusillades, seamlessly blending convention­al courtroom procedural with protest re- enactments and documentar­y footage ( including Wexler’s), “The Trial of the Chicago 7” offers an absorbing primer in a chapter of American history that was both bizarre and ruefully meaningful. The fact that it’s also a showcase for some of the most dazzling performanc­es on screen this year elevates it beyond mere history lesson and into something far more animated, exciting and viscerally entertaini­ng.

Echoing Spike Lee’s “Da 5 Bloods” this summer, “The Trial of the Chicago 7” opens with a helpful refresher course on why 1968 was such a pivotal year:

With Lyndon Johnson having increased troops in Vietnam and casualties growing by the day, a loose coalition of groups - including the Students for a Democratic Society, the Yippies, theNationa­l Mobilizati­on Committee to End the War in Vietnam and others - descended on Chicago to protest the presumed Democratic nominee, Hubert Humphrey, who had supported Johnson’s escalation. Thankfully, Sorkin doesn’t dive right in to the bloody clashes between demonstrat­ors and Chicago police that left hundreds seriously injured. Rather, he begins in the office of U. S. Attorney General JohnMitche­ll ( John Doman) who, a year after the events, is determined to punish the subversive­s by way of a federal trial.

What transpired over the next five months was an almost surreal piece of long- playing political theater, as Yippies Abbie Hoffman and Jerry Rubin ( Sacha BaronCohen­and Jeremy Strong), SDS leaders Tom Hayden and Rennie Davis ( Eddie Redmayne and Alex Sharp), veteran peace activist David Dellinger ( John Carroll Lynch) and the now almostforg­otten Lee Weiner and John Froines ( Noah Robbins, Danny Flaherty) watched as an addled judge named Julius Hoffman ( Frank Langella) heaped contempt charge upon contempt charge on them and Kunstler ( Mark Rylance).

Not that Judge Hoffman wasn’t often provoked: While Hayden tried his best to play it straight, believing reason and rectitude could win over the jury, Abbie Hoffman and Rubin used the courtroom as a backdrop for profane improv and antic agitprop, arriving one day in judicial robes ( under which they wore Chicago police uniforms), and on another with a birthday cake. As if the obvious bias of the judge wasn’t challengin­g enough, the defendants - especially Hayden and Hoffman - were squabbling among themselves over tone, tactics and revolution­ary bona fides.

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