Connect with us

Entertainment

Judge sentences ‘profoundly arrogant’ Jussie Smollett to 150 days in jail

Published

on

Judge sentences ‘profoundly arrogant’ Jussie Smollett to 150 days in jail

“Empire” star Jussie Smollett was sentenced Thursday to 150 days in jail for mendacity to police a couple of racist and homophobic assault that he orchestrated in 2019, which brought on a nationwide uproar because it unfolded.

Describing Smollett’s crime as “against the law of alternative” and a “crime of premeditation,” Cook dinner County Choose James Linn additionally sentenced the actor to 30 months of felony probation and ordered him to pay greater than $120,000 in restitution to the town of Chicago and a most high quality of $25,000.

The 39-year-old actor shall be allowed to journey throughout his probation and won’t be required to reside in Illinois throughout that interval. Linn will enable him to report for probation by cellphone.

When requested if he had something so as to add, Smollett, who had sat quietly by way of Thursday’s hours-long listening to, had an outburst within the Chicago courtroom and repeatedly yelled, “I’m not suicidal, and I’m harmless.”

“If I did this, then it signifies that I caught my fist within the fears of Black People on this nation for over 400 years. And the fears of the LGBT neighborhood,” Smollett mentioned, rising more and more upset and ultimately elevating his fist within the air.

Advertisement

“Your Honor, I respect you and I respect the jury, however I didn’t do that,” he added. “And I’m not suicidal. And if something occurs to me once I go in there, I didn’t do it to myself and you should all know that.”

He was ultimately taken away in handcuffs.

Smollett, who has weathered private {and professional} fallout during the last three years, arrived on the courthouse Thursday afternoon flanked by members of the family. A few of them, together with his brother Joel and his 92-year-old grandmother, supplied character-witness statements in the course of the mitigating-factors section of sentencing.

Taking the witness stand, Molly Smollett appeared straight into the courtroom digicam and referred to as the media portrayal of her grandson a “betrayal” that doesn’t match up with the person she is aware of. “If you happen to ship him to jail, ship me together with him,” she mentioned.

Social justice and civil rights organizations Black Lives Matter, the Rainbow PUSH Coalition and the NAACP, in addition to actors LaTanya and Samuel L. Jackson and Smollett’s “Empire” co-star Alfre Woodard, additionally supplied statements of help that had been learn aloud in courtroom. They requested that Smollett’s historical past of neighborhood service, lack of legal report and unlikelihood for recidivism be weighed throughout sentencing for his nonviolent offense.

Advertisement

The Jacksons, who’ve identified Smollett since he was a child, requested “for mercy” and an alternative choice to incarceration for Smollett for the low-level Class 4 felony. Rev. Jesse L. Jackson wrote the assertion for RPC.

Actor Jussie Smollett and his authorized group seem at his sentencing listening to Thursday on the Leighton Legal Courtroom Constructing in Chicago.

(Brian Cassella / Related Press)

“There’s nothing I can do right here right now that may examine to the injury you’ve already finished to your personal life,” Linn mentioned earlier, including that he didn’t consider Smollett dedicated the crime for cash however for consideration.

Advertisement

“The one factor that I can discover is that you just actually craved the eye … You knew that this was a rustic slowly making an attempt to heal and also you took some scabs off some therapeutic wounds.”

Linn added that he noticed the great sides of Smollett in the course of the trial but in addition noticed his darkish facet, one which was “throwing a nationwide pity social gathering” for himself and finally harm victims of actual hate crimes. He referred to as Smollett “profoundly smug and egocentric and narcissistic” in finishing up the 2019 incident and mendacity to authorities about it.

“You’re only a charlatan pretending to be a sufferer to a hate crime, and that’s shameful,” Linn mentioned.

Regardless of Linn’s sharp phrases, the sentencing was anticipated to be considerably lenient towards the actor as a result of he doesn’t have an intensive legal historical past and since he was convicted of a low-level, nonviolent crime, Related Press reported. Smollett had confronted a penalty of as much as three years in jail for 5 felony counts of disorderly conduct. Nonetheless, Linn described Smollett’s efficiency on the witness stand in the course of the trial as “pure perjury” and as an ample aggravating issue to harshen the sentence.

And whereas that seems to conclude the protracted case, Smollett’s lawyer has mentioned they plan to attraction the conviction.

Advertisement

Smollett’s protection lawyer, Tina Glandian, on Thursday first sought to have the jury’s verdict overturned and filed a movement final month for a brand new trial. Glandian argued that there have been 13 errors within the earlier trial that missed exculpatory proof and “constituted reversible error” that “undoubtedly affected the decision.”

Prosecutors in courtroom Thursday mentioned that they “universally disagree” that there was any error in these prior rulings and that the proof “overwhelmingly established Mr. Smollett’s guilt past an inexpensive doubt.” Additionally they offered a victim-impact assertion on behalf of the town of Chicago and the Chicago Police Division that mentioned Smollett’s actions harm “precise victims” of hate crimes.

In the course of the aggravating-factors section of the proceedings, prosecutor Dan Webb argued that Smollett faked a hate crime “to profit himself as a result of he’s Black and homosexual after which he made a option to report it to the Chicago Police Division to carry public consideration to it.” Webb mentioned that Smollett additionally obstructed justice by mendacity to police and by no means confirmed contrition or apologized after the alleged incident.

The choose denied the movement for a brand new trial and upheld the jury’s verdict practically two hours into the proceedings Thursday.

“I’ve by no means had a case that has been pled as exhaustively as this one,” Linn mentioned. Later, he mentioned that he discovered Smollett’s “excessive meditation within the case to be an aggravating issue.”

Advertisement

The protection group had declined having cameras within the courtroom up till Thursday’s listening to, when a reside feed of the proceedings was accessible to the general public.

After an almost two-week trial, which happened on the cusp of the Omicron surge of the COVID-19 pandemic, Smollett was convicted in Chicago in December on prices that he staged an antigay, racist assault on himself practically three years in the past after which lied to police about it. The actor-singer has maintained his innocence all through the case and mentioned in courtroom testimony that “there was no hoax.”

He was discovered responsible on 5 of six counts of disorderly conduct — one rely for every time he allegedly lied to police within the days instantly after he alleged the hate crime. He was acquitted on a sixth rely. Smollett claimed to police that on that frigid night time, two assailants beat him, put a rope round his neck and splashed him with a liquid chemical.

Brothers Olabinjo and Abimbola Osundairo had been initially suspected to be the assailants; nevertheless, they claimed that Smollett, whom one of many brothers knew from work, paid them $3,500 to stage the assault.

The trial included the testimony of 5 Chicago Police Division officers, the Osundairo brothers and Smollett himself, in addition to six of his witnesses.

Advertisement

Smollett wasn’t taken into custody when the decision was returned in December however remained free till Thursday’s sentencing.

Continue Reading
Advertisement
Click to comment

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.

Movie Reviews

Movie Review: All the World’s a Gamescape — “Grand Theft Hamlet”

Published

on

Movie Review: All the World’s a Gamescape — “Grand Theft Hamlet”

Making art in the middle of the apocalypse is the literal and figurative ethos of “Grand Theft Hamlet,” one of the cleverest “What can we do during lockdown?” pandemic picture projects.

A couple of British actors — Sam Crane and Mark Ooosterveen –– stared into the same gutting void of everybody who was unable to work during the pandemic lockdowns. As they killed some time meeting in the online gamescape of “Grand Theft Auto,” they stumbled into the Vinewood (Hollywood) Bowl setting of that Greater L.A. killing zone. And like actors since the beginning of time, thought they’d put on a play.

As they wander and ponder this brilliant conceit, they wrestle with whether to attempt casting, setting and directing this play amidst a sea of first-person shooters/stabbers/run-you-over-with-their car. They face fascinating theatrical problem solving. How DO you make art and recruit an online in-the-game audience for Shakespeare in a world of self-absorbed, bloody-minded avatars, some of whom stumble upon their efforts and ignore their “Please don’t shoot me” pleas?

Crane and Oosterveen, both white 40somethings Brits, grapple with “what people are like in here,” as in “people are violent in the game.” VERY violent. But “people are violent in Shakespeare.” Pretty much “everybody dies in ‘Hamlet,’” after all.

Putting on a play in the middle of a real apocalypse set in a CGI generated apocalypse is “a terrible idea,” Oosterveen confesses (in avatar form). “But I definitely want to try to do it.”

Advertisement

Crane, struggling with the same mental health issues tens of millions faced during lockdown, enlists his documentary filmmaker wife Pinny Grylls to enter the game and film all this.

And as their endeavors progress, through trial and many many deaths (“WASTED,” the game’s graphics remind you), everybody interested in their idea trots out favorite couplets from Shakespeare as “auditions.” They round up “actors” from all over (mostly Brits, though), they remind us of the power of Shakespeare’s words.

“To be, or not to be, that is the question. Whether ’tis nobler in the mind to suffer The slings and arrows of outrageous fortune, Or to take arms against a sea of troubles And by opposing end them. To die—to sleep…”

Dodging would-be gamer/killers and recruiting others, they will see how a marriage can be strained by work or video game addiction and fret over the futility of it all.

The film, co-scripted and directed by Crane and Grylls, with Crane playing Hamlet, and narrated and somewhat driven by Oosterveen, who portrays Polonius, is a mad idea but a great gimmick, one that occasionally transcends that gimmick.

Advertisement

We’re reminded of the visual sophistication of CGI landscapes — they try out a lot of settings, and use more than one, a scene staged on top of a blimp, seaside for a soliloquy. The limitations of jerky-movement video game characters, lips-moving but not syncing up to dialogue, are just as obvious.

And if all the gamescape’s “a stage, and all the men and women merely players,” some folks — MANY folks — need to buy better headset microphones. The distorted audio and staticky dynamic range of such gear spoils a lot of the dialogue.

In a production where the words matter as much as this, as “acting” in avatar form is a catalog of limitless limitations, one becomes ever more grateful that the film is a documentary of the “making” of a “Grand Theft Auto” “Hamlet,” and not merely the play. Because inventive settings and occasional murderous “distractions” aside, that leaves a lot to be desired.

Rating: R, video game violence, profanity

Cast: The voices/avatars of Sam Crane,
Mark Oosterveen, Pinny Grylls, Jen Cohn, Tilly Steele, Lizzie Wofford, Dilo Opa, Sam Forster, Jeremiah O’Connor and Gareth Turkington

Advertisement

Credits: Scripted and directed by Sam Crane and Pinny Grylls, based on “Hamlet” by William Shakespeare. A Mubi release.

Running time: 1:29

About Roger Moore

Movie Critic, formerly with McClatchy-Tribune News Service, Orlando Sentinel, published in Spin Magazine, The World and now published here, Orlando Magazine, Autoweek Magazine

Continue Reading

Entertainment

'Shifting Gears' brings Tim Allen back to TV, along with some familial political differences

Published

on

'Shifting Gears' brings Tim Allen back to TV, along with some familial political differences

Welcome Tim Allen back to the land of multicamera sitcom, for a third run in a form that has treated him well. “Home Improvement” ran for eight seasons on ABC and is arguably what allowed him to become a film star; “Last Man Standing,” which returned him to television after a decade in the movies, finished a nine-season run (six on ABC, three on Fox) in 2021. And here he is again, once more on ABC, with “Shifting Gears,” premiering Wednesday, which, if past is prelude, should just about see Allen — a fit 71, his tight T-shirt would like you to know — into his 80s.

Allen plays Matt, who — importing Allen’s own automotive interests — runs a garage specializing in vintage and custom cars. (Working here we find Daryl Mitchell as Stitch, a wise wisecracker, and Seann William Scott as Gabriel, handsome, amiable, a little dim.) Literally driving back into Matt’s life, in a filthy Pontiac GTO she stole from him 15 years before, when taking off pregnant with a musician boyfriend, is his daughter Riley (Kat Dennings). She’s getting divorced, musicians being what they are, and needs a place to land with her two kids, moony teenager Carter (Maxwell Simkins) and cheerful little Georgia (Barrett Margolis), who has a thing for inventor and “Shark Tank” panelist Lori Greiner and dreams of becoming a billionaire. (The kids are excellent.)

“Well, good luck finding a man who’s OK with his wife making more money than him,” says Matt, an old-fashioned sort of fellow.

“I don’t need a man to feel complete,” replies Georgia.

“You want to kill a spider, a man’s going to look pretty darn good.”

Advertisement

“I have a shoe.”

Father and daughter have been estranged, more or less — the kids do know their grandfather — since the death of Riley’s mother some indefinite years before; she was the bridge that allowed them to have a relationship. Riley, a former wild child, voted “Mean for No Reason” by her high school class, is trying to raise her kids with a sensitivity that Matt, who is all “in my day we were,” regards as coddling. And so they must learn to get along under the same roof. You get the picture.

Allen plays Matt, a widowed owner of a classic car restoration shop, whose estranged daughter, Riley (Dennings), and her children come back into his life. Dennings, left, Maxwell Simkins, Barrett Margolis, Allen and Seann William Scott.

(Raymond Liu / Disney)

Advertisement

When “Last Man Standing,” in which Allen played a not dissimilar character, went on the air in 2011, we were in the third year of the first Obama administration, and a show with a volubly conservative lead character played a little differently in the TV ecosystem; now, on the verge of heaven knows what, such a character reads as something like an adorable, almost moderate curmudgeon. Matt reads the Wall Street Journal and rails against television pundits “telling you what you’re supposed to think about the news, like I‘m too stupid to form my own angry opinion.” When Stitch, anticipating one of Matt’s rants, says, “Let me guess, we’re all going to hell in a hand basket,” Matt replies, “We don’t even make hand baskets in the U.S. anymore. We do make excuses, quitters and diabetes, and celebrities that use diabetes medicine to lose weight.” He describes Gabriel’s dirty hat as looking like “a normal hat that was left in Portland too long.”

The tenor of such softball japes can make “Shifting Gears” feel behind the times. There’s something sort of dutiful about the show’s sociopolitical humor, such as it is, which exists more to give the characters something to bat around than to say anything substantial about How We Ought to Live Now. And no one is batting very hard; this is, after all, a show about loving your difficult relations and putting differences aside. (Riley: “Can we try to talk to one another like rational adults? Matt: “Have you watched the news lately? That’s not a thing anymore.”) Classic stuff.

Allen and Dennings do quickly strike a satisfying mix of antagonism and affection. Both know their way around a filmed-before-a-live-audience sitcom. (Dennings spent six seasons on “2 Broke Girls.”) They’re very good talking over one another, and very good not knowing exactly what to say. In one tender moment, side by side on a couch, unsure how to reach out, he touches her … foot. To the extent that there’s a new Tim Allen here, it’s the one who, thinking of his late wife, and the flour sifter he has taken care not to clean, he cries, almost, sort of. But there has always been a soft center to his self-important characters. (And who, really, needs a new Tim Allen?)

“It’s been really different here, alone,” he tells Riley. “I think that’s why I watch the news in the morning, so I can hear a woman’s voice — even though it’s sometimes Nancy Pelosi.”

“Yeah, it’s annoying the way she’s trying to save democracy.”

Advertisement

The series was created by Mike Scully and Julie Thacker Scully, “Simpsons” writers and co-creators with Amy Poehler of the animated series “Duncanville.” They reportedly left after the pilot (directed by John Pasquin, who directed about a fifth of “Home Improvement” and more than a third of “Last Man Standing” episodes), which is perhaps why the second episode — only two were available to watch — feels less focused.

That there is nothing new to see here is not in the series’ disfavor. Political differences among close-quartered sitcom families go back at least as far as “All in the Family,” which had been off the air nearly a decade when Dennings was born; adult children moving in with parents or parents moving in with children (see “Lopez vs Lopez,” currently in its third season on NBC) is an old theme on television, which loves to pack as many generations into a three-walled set as possible. Formulas are formulas because they give consistent, reliable, unsurprising results.

Continue Reading

Movie Reviews

A Real Pain review – Jesse Eisenberg and Kieran Culkin take a Holocaust tour of Poland

Published

on

A Real Pain review – Jesse Eisenberg and Kieran Culkin take a Holocaust tour of Poland

This isn’t the easiest moment in history to be launching a film exploring its author’s Jewish heritage, thanks to the violent repercussions of events in the Middle East, but the historical baggage that comes with that heritage is all part of Eisenberg’s theme. Set to an eloquent and frequently melancholy soundtrack of Chopin’s piano music, A Real Pain is a bittersweet story about two Jewish cousins, Benji and David Kaplan (Kieran Culkin and Eisenberg), who take a trip to Poland in memory of their beloved grandmother, a recently-deceased Holocaust survivor. Beneath the wisecracks and one-liners there’s a subtle and penetrating analysis of family bonds and the burden of shared history.

The film’s gentle ripple of underlying sadness stems from the fact that the cousins were previously very close, but have drifted apart. They’re about as dissimilar as it’s possible to be, but glimpses of their odd-couple bond gradually resurface as the narrative develops. Eisenberg’s David is quiet and introverted, but is successful as both family man and in his Manhattan-based career in computing. On the other hand, we gradually learn that Benji is drifting rootlessly through his life out in the suburbs. He’s searching desperately for something meaningful, and is struggling to keep himself on the rails. He has been hit hard by his grandmother’s death, confessing that “she was just my favourite person in the world.”

In any event, the role gives Culkin carte blanche to charge recklessly through the gears, in a bravura performance which gives the film its centrifugal force. Some of the time he’s a babbling extrovert who effortlessly dominates any social gathering, for instance persuading everybody in their touring party to pose for selfies on a statue commemorating the Warsaw Uprising, but the flipside is that he can’t tell where the boundaries are (and has little interest in finding them). David is aghast when they’re heading for the boarding gate for their flight to Poland, and Benji cheerfully announces that he’s carrying a stash of dope (“I got some good shit for when we land”.)

One moment everybody loves Benji, then suddenly he becomes an insufferable asshole. He’s prone to wildly inappropriate outbursts, like the moment when the tour party are travelling in a first class railway carriage and Benji goes into an emotionally incontinent display of guilt about the contrast with his Jewish antecedents being transported to death camps in cattle trucks.

Fortunately their travelling companions (who include Dirty Dancing veteran Jennifer Grey, pictured top, and Kurt Egyiawan as a survivor of the Rwandan genocide) show superhuman patience, not least their English tour guide James (Will Sharpe), who graciously accepts Benji’s tactless critique of his guiding technique (Sharpe and Eisenberg pictured above). The fact that James is a scholar of East European Studies from Oxford University, not Jewish himself but “fascinated by the Jewish experience”, is a crafty little comic narrative all of its own.

It’s a difficult film to categorise, being part comedy, part road movie, part psychotherapy session and part personal memoir. Perhaps Woody Allen might have called it a “situation tragedy”. It’s a clever, complex piece, but Eisenberg has made it look breezily simple.

Advertisement

Continue Reading

Trending