USA TODAY International Edition

Stars pack ‘ Chicago’ courtroom

Sorkin and cast bring wit to timely true story

- Brian Truitt Columnist USA TODAY

Aaron Sorkin’s superb “The Trial of the Chicago 7” is a period piece but also a piece for multiple periods: The drama takes place in the ’ 60s, has the rousing flavor of a ’ 90s popcorn thriller ( like, say, the Sorkin- penned “A Few Good Men”) and also feels relevant and urgent in 2020.

Featuring a stellar cast, “Chicago 7” ( eeeg; rated R; in select theaters and streaming Oct. 16 on Netflix) takes audiences back to the tumultuous late

’ 60s, where Vietnam and the assassinat­ions of Martin Luther King Jr. and Robert Kennedy were the cultural sparks that helped ignite a violent clash between Chicago police and protesters at the 1968 Democratic National Convention. Written and directed by Sorkin in his inimitable style, the story fleshes out the characters blamed by the government for that bloody event and examines a period of rancor between the people and the state that reflects our own divided times.

“The whole world is watching!” chants the crowd gathered in 1969 outside the courtroom building where eight men – including “Yippies” Abbie Hoffman ( Sacha Baron Cohen) and Jerry Rubin ( Jeremy Strong), Democratic student activists Tom Hayden ( Eddie Redmayne) and Rennie Davis ( Alex Sharp), and Black Panther party head Bobby Seale ( Yahya Abdul- Mateen II) – are charged with conspiracy to incite a riot by President Richard Nixon’s new Justice Department.

Each character gets his own opening introducti­on, which is key to keeping them all straight when the very obviously political trial begins – though there are

ideologica­l differences even among the defendants, as Tom and Abbie come to words often over their beliefs about the legal process. ( Tom argues for capturing electoral power, while Abbie’s more of a revolution­ary). Bobby, who was only in Chicago for four hours on the fateful day, insists he was a Black guy thrown in to “scare” the jury, though Judge Julius Hoffman ( a fantastic Frank Langella) won’t let Bobby represent himself when his lawyer is in the hospital.

Sorkin’s second outing as director is a more confident and well- executed affair than his first, the solid “Molly’s Game,” and he’s interspers­ed real black- andwhite footage of the riots with his filmed versions to capture a visceral authentici­ty that’s eerily reminiscen­t of the civil unrest we’ve been watching on the news the last few months.

The courtroom and legal- eagle stuff, however, is where he truly shines as an all- around filmmaker. That snappy repartee and witty zingers folks loved from “The West Wing” and “The Newsroom” are here in spades, often involving Cohen. “Mr. Hoffman, are you familiar with contempt of court?” the supremely unqualified judge levels at Abbie. His retort: “It’s practicall­y a religion for me, sir.”

There’s enough outstandin­g acting going on that audiences will most likely come away with different favorites. Abbie and Jerry, who teaches people how to

make Molotov cocktails and cherry bombs, are the resident comic relief, though there’s a definite depth and passion to their righteous cause that are all Cohen and Strong. ( And if you’re familiar only with Cohen’s comedy bits and “Borat,” there’s a scene with Redmayne that showcases his considerab­le dramatic chops.)

Abdul- Mateen, who just won an Emmy for “Watchmen,” deserves some serious Oscar considerat­ion as Bobby, a man discrimina­ted against pretty much every time he stands up. Mark Rylance does his best work since his Oscar- winning “Bridge of Spies” turn as quiet but furious defense attorney William Kunstler, Joseph Gordon- Levitt is effective as federal prosecutor Richard Schultz and Michael Keaton is delightful dropping in for only a couple scenes yet almost hijacks the whole shebang as former attorney general Ramsey Clark.

While character developmen­t is a bit of an issue with so many personalit­ies rioting, arguing and bantering, it doesn’t impede the thought- provoking nature of “Chicago 7” or parallels that Sorkin draws between the ’ 60s and now. The filmmaker crafts an entertaini­ng, immersive and ultimately optimistic spectacle that never forgets that humanity should always trump the system.

 ?? NIKO TAVERNISE/ NETFLIX ?? Yahya Abdul- Mateen II stars as Bobby Seale, one of the defendants in “The Trial of the Chicago 7.”
NIKO TAVERNISE/ NETFLIX Yahya Abdul- Mateen II stars as Bobby Seale, one of the defendants in “The Trial of the Chicago 7.”
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 ?? NIKO TAVERNISE/ NETFLIX ?? Abbie Hoffman ( Sacha Baron Cohen, left) and Jerry Rubin ( Jeremy Strong) star in “Chicago 7.”
NIKO TAVERNISE/ NETFLIX Abbie Hoffman ( Sacha Baron Cohen, left) and Jerry Rubin ( Jeremy Strong) star in “Chicago 7.”

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