Genre: | Drama |
Director: | Volker Schlöndorff |
Executive Producer: | Michael Deeley |
Producer: | Gower Frost Hans Prescher |
Music: | Ron Carter |
Location: | Thibodaux, Louisiana |
Cinematography: | Edward Lachman |
Editor: | Nancy Baker Craig McKay |
Company: | CBS Bioskop Film Consolidated Productions Hessischer Rundfunk Jennie & Co. Zenith Entertainment |
Network: | CBS |
Runtime: | 91 minutes |
Country: | United States |
Language: | English |
A Gathering of Old Men is a 1987 American-German television drama film directed by Volker Schlöndorff and based on the novel of the same name. It was screened in the Un Certain Regard section at the 1987 Cannes Film Festival.[1] The film was released as television film in the US.[2] For his performance actor Louis Gossett Jr. was nominated at the Emmy Awards for "Outstanding lead actor in a miniseries or a special".[3]
A bigoted white farmer is shot in self-defense on a Louisiana sugarcane plantation. A group of old black men come forward en masse to take responsibility for the killing. As the sheriff confronts the suspects, the young plantation owner stands firm in her defense of the old men.
Mark Schwed, in his article published in the Winston-Salem Journal, said he liked it. He noted that the director "does a beautiful job of capturing the feeling of the people the place and the time as it was framed in the novel by Ernest J Gaines."[4]
Ron Weiskind in his review published in the Pittsburgh Post-Gazette thought it was stirring and thoughtful. He wrote that "the film's laconic pace seems oddly casual and desultory at first. But "Gathering" slowly peels away at scabs of anger and hurt and prejudice to reveal the effects racism has had on its characters and, by extension, on the rest of us." Of the cast he said "this gathering of old men is filled with talent."[5]
1987 Cannes Film Festival - Un Certain Regard
Emmy Awards - Nominated - Outstanding lead actor in a miniseries or a special - Louis Gossett Jr.