The life of David Gale Universal Pictures and International Films present a Saturn Films, Dirty Hands production ; directed by Alan Parker ; producers, Nicolas Cage, Alan Parker ; written by Charles Randolph.
Material type: FilmPublication details: c2002Description: 2 videodisc (130 min.) sd.col. 35 mmOther title:- Working title Leben des David Gale
- 791.4372 LI
- Executive producers, Moritz Borman, Guy East, Nigel Sinclair ; music by Alex Parker, Jake Parker ; cinematography by Michael Seresin ; editing by Gerry Hambling.
Item type | Home library | Collection | Call number | Copy number | Status | Date due | Barcode | |
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Multimedia | OPJGU Sonepat- Campus Central Library | Special collection- CD/DVD (Multimedia) | 791.4372 LI (Browse shelf(Opens below)) | 1 | Available | 300228 |
Summary taken from Internet movie database.
The Life of David Gale is a 2003 dramatic crime thriller film directed by Alan Parker and written by Charles Randolph. David Gale is a former professor on death row in Texas. With only a few days until his execution, his lawyer negotiates a half-million dollar fee to tell his story to Bitsey Bloom, a journalist from a major news network. She has a reputation of keeping secrets and protecting her sources. He tells her his story revealed through a series of flashbacks. In 1995, Gale is a successful intellectual and the head of the philosophy department at the University of Texas at Austin. He is an active member of DeathWatch, an advocacy group campaigning against capital punishment. At a graduation party, he encounters Berlin, a graduate student who has been expelled from the school. When Gale gets drunk, she seduces him and they have rough sex. She then falsely accuses Gale of rape. The next day, he loses a televised debate with the Governor of Texas when he is unable to name any innocent people executed during the governor's term. Gale is arrested, but the charge is dropped when Berlin disappears. However, his marriage, career, and reputation are all destroyed. Gale struggles with alcoholism after his wife takes their son with her to Spain and disallows contact. Constance Harraway, a fellow DeathWatch activist, is a close friend of Gale who consoles him after his life falls apart. However, Harraway is discovered raped and murdered, suffocated by a plastic bag taped over her head. An autopsy reveals Gale's semen in her body and that she had been forced to swallow the key to the handcuffs, a torture technique which Gale previously wrote about. The physical evidence at the crime scene points to Gale, who is convicted of rape and murder and is sentenced to death. In the present, Bloom investigates the case in between her visits with Gale. Gale maintains his innocence, claiming he and Harraway had consensual sex the night before her murder. Bloom comes to believe that the apparent evidence against Gale does not add up. She is tailed several times in her car by Dusty Wright, an alleged one-time lover and colleague of Harraway, whom she suspects was the real killer. Wright slips evidence to Bloom that suggests Gale has been framed, implying that the actual murderer videotaped the crime. Bloom pursues this lead until she finds a tape revealing that Harraway, who was suffering from terminal leukemia, had committed an elaborate suicide made to look like murder. Wright is seen on the videotape, acting as her accomplice, implying that they framed Gale as part of a plan to discredit the death penalty by conspiring to execute an innocent person, and subsequently releasing evidence of the actual circumstances.
Executive producers, Moritz Borman, Guy East, Nigel Sinclair ; music by Alex Parker, Jake Parker ; cinematography by Michael Seresin ; editing by Gerry Hambling.
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