Doing Life (TV Movie 1986) Poster

(1986 TV Movie)

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7/10
Tony Danza Debut as An Dramatic Actor
shelbythuylinh24 January 2022
Warning: Spoilers
He plays small town hood Jerry Rosenberg whom he and an accomplice would be sentence to death by electrocution there at Sing Sing Prison due to killing two cops.

But before he is about to be put to death, NY abandoned the death penalty all together. Jerry would be called the first and only so far jailhouse lawyer to earn a college degree and law degree.

He helped to negotiate the Attica prison uprising and that sadly he never got to taste freedom due to his criminal ways and despite his proclaims of innocence in the two murders of the cops.

Really Danza's performance proves he is not just a comedic performance.
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4/10
CHRONICLE OF A PRISONER RIGHTS SPOKESMAN.
rsoonsa10 December 2003
A book by Steve Bello is the basis for this product that relates of the incarceration in New York State prisons of Jerome "Jerry" Rosenberg, convicted for the homicide of two New York City policeman during a holdup, but who denies guilt as he was committing another robbery at the time, and of his refusal to be silenced that resulted in his being released from death row thanks to his discovery of a litigatory loophole. Rosenberg, a self-obsessed career criminal, refers to himself as "America's Greatest Jailhouse Lawyer", and although this will strike many as a somewhat dubious distinction, prisons are heavily populated with individuals poring over publications of the law, while Rosenberg actually does manage to catalogue specific abuses and instances of corruption within New York's justice and prison systems. Also released as TRUTH OR DIE, this Canadian-made film stars Tony Danza as the self-educated Rosenberg, and he tries hard to create a part, but he is worsted by general weakness in production values that bring forth a shallowly episodic structure marked by attempts to cover too many events and relationships while minimizing Rosenberg's legal strategies that save him from the electric chair, as well as his effort to arbitrate the 1971 Attica rebellion. There are good turns from Jon De Vries as a prison warden and Dan Lauria as a corrections officer supervisor, Gene Reynolds directs capably and is lent solid support from the camerawork of Miklos Lente, the editing of Christopher Nelson and polished sound mixing is supplied by Douglas Ganton; therefore, accountability for the piece's overweening triteness must be attributed to a script that simply endeavours to cram too much into a documentary flavoured time component hampered by obvious budgetary limitations.
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