理查德·朱维尔的哀歌

Richard Jewell,李察朱维尔:惊世疑案(港),李察朱威尔事件(台),美国噩梦,理查德·朱厄尔,理查德·朱厄尔的悲歌,理查德·朱厄尔的歌谣,理查德·朱维尔的歌谣

主演:保罗·沃尔特·豪泽,山姆·洛克威尔,凯西·贝茨,奥利维亚·王尔德,乔恩·哈姆,妮娜·阿里安达,伊恩·戈麦斯,兰德尔·P·海文斯,韦恩·杜瓦尔,亚历克斯·柯林

类型:电影地区:美国语言:英语年份:2019

《理查德·朱维尔的哀歌》剧照

理查德·朱维尔的哀歌 剧照 NO.1理查德·朱维尔的哀歌 剧照 NO.2理查德·朱维尔的哀歌 剧照 NO.3理查德·朱维尔的哀歌 剧照 NO.4理查德·朱维尔的哀歌 剧照 NO.5理查德·朱维尔的哀歌 剧照 NO.6理查德·朱维尔的哀歌 剧照 NO.13理查德·朱维尔的哀歌 剧照 NO.14理查德·朱维尔的哀歌 剧照 NO.15理查德·朱维尔的哀歌 剧照 NO.16理查德·朱维尔的哀歌 剧照 NO.17理查德·朱维尔的哀歌 剧照 NO.18理查德·朱维尔的哀歌 剧照 NO.19理查德·朱维尔的哀歌 剧照 NO.20

《理查德·朱维尔的哀歌》剧情介绍

理查德·朱维尔的哀歌电影免费高清在线观看全集。
影片改编自真实事件,理查德·朱维尔作为1996年亚特兰大奥运会爆炸案中发现炸弹装置的保安,而被全世界所熟知。当时他迅速采取行动,拯救了无数生命而成为英雄。但在几天之内,情况就急转直下,梦想成为执法者的他遭受媒体和公众的诽谤,竟成为联邦调查局的头号嫌疑犯,陷入了前所未有的 困境。朱维尔向独立律师沃森·布莱恩特寻求帮助,坚定地宣称自己无罪。然而,在为朱维尔洗脱罪名的过程中,布莱恩特发现自己对抗的是联邦调查局、佐治亚州调查局和警方的联合阻力;与此同时,他也不断提醒理查德不要相信任何试图毁灭他的人……热播电视剧最新电影青春训练班奇异世界历险记BanGDream!EpisodeofRoseliaⅡ:SongIam.如果声音不记得恋人们凉宫春日的忧郁2009巴斯克维尔的猎犬夏洛克剧场版青春之歌忠者无敌纸兵蔬菜宝贝历险记怪物弹珠THEMOVIE空之彼方头号前妻小镇大明星福运之人杨光的快乐生活血色土地第一季石雕宅邸杀人案甲贺忍法帖竹叶青传奇蓝水-天堂梦魇决不让步深夜食堂正确的卡多假面骑士×假面骑士W(Double)&DecadeMOVIE大战2010他来了,请闭眼暖暖遇见你恋上喵星人醉侠张三你和我

《理查德·朱维尔的哀歌》长篇影评

 1 ) 是社会的哀歌

又是一部堪称经典传播学教材的新闻事件类影片,尽管是20多年前的事件,放在今天也十分具有现世意义。

舆论所导向的往往并不是“应该相信的”,而成为了“愿意相信的”,更绝对一点,甚至成为了“有利可图的”。

人们需要一个英雄时,就创造一个英雄,然后再压榨这个英雄的可用利益;人们需要一个罪人时,便创造一个罪人,再用一切可以想象的恶言去发泄轰击。

很悲哀的一件事,即使是《理查德·朱维尔的哀歌》这个电影本身也是对主人公的又一次消费。

可这就是这个世界样子,从不完美。

理查德在最后获得结案书的时候,他肥胖的脸上挤出难看的皱纹笑着,他赢了,他真的赢了吗?

他已经被这个社会消磨得失去了原本的自我。

他一口咬下的那个甜甜圈,我相信,是苦的。

说说剧作方面的缺点,演讲抒情的情绪渲染过多。

说教味还是太重了,老是借角色之口对社会进行直接性的质问。

还有角色形象塑造,FBI的形象还是太过呆板了,一味的丑化政府部门,多处关于FBI取证的细节在后续并没有对剧作造成实质性的影响,而成了为了丑化而丑化的设定,有点毁坏剧本条理性,把剧本严谨的逻辑性消解了。

以及凯西所代表的无良新闻传媒业,前期剧本将其塑造成了为了消息不惜出卖色相的唯利是图传媒业符号,其实是很能继续造作的一条线,却在电影一半的时候因为被骂了一顿就出现反转,实在是有毁角色的人物弧光,而在凯西良心发现之后也并没有对理查德的脱罪起到任何舆论导向上的帮助,而是角色直接凭空消失,实在是太浪费太浪费!

可惜了好好的这一条线。

 2 ) 还是要保持表面的普通正常较好

一直以来以成为警长探员为目标的男主,生活里做了很多越界的事情,高速上抓酒驾这种,做着一系列正义的事情,但是收到的却是数不清的投诉。

也因为这份正义,他发现了一个可疑包裹,于是拯救了很多性命。

他成了英雄,但却遭受举报,怀疑,调查。

他的母亲只为他骄傲了三天。

他的墨镜也只带了三天。

即使如此,在被调查的过程里仍然对企图欺骗他获取将他送去电击的探员们以尊重与配合。

即使遭受委屈之下还表示他们代表着美国政府。

但是日积月累之下,他终于在某一刻他发起了质问,警探们所花费的时间有获取到任何证据吗?

在警探们全力追究他的时间里,真正的嫌犯是否还会制造第二次爆炸,以后任何的保安在看到可疑包裹时还会上报吗?

不会,他们不想成为下一个朱维尔。

可是,六年后,朱维尔肩上佩戴了一枚有权威的标志,他曾经向往的,又失望了的标志。

生活可能就是这个样子哦,无论遭受了多少,生活还是要继续,以自己也不确定的方式生活。

两大权威,政府和媒体,都使出了强大的火力射向了这个挽救了很多条性命的英雄身上。

那时的媒体还很少,网络信息流转还没有那么快,导向性书写新闻的媒体人还很少,当时为了销量,她会不惜一起去寻找头版。

但最后她还会去验证真实性,还会流下眼泪。

可是,她确实毁了一个男人的生活。

如今呢,新闻已经不是真正媒体人在写了,我们看到的更不见的是什么真实了,那些为了流量而引导性的文字,真的是一把把匕首,不知道无意间就刺向了何人。

不知道会坏到什么程度呢?

再说男主的性格,一根筋的正义,毫无怀疑的相信着那个圆形的标志及其背后。

善解人意到善解要将他推向万劫不复之地的人。

律师和他的妈妈一定都有一种怒其不争之感,可是最后的质问还是很意外闪光的。

电影节奏还不错,穿插着幽默,不会一直沉重沉闷,但是有些情节有些让我觉得混乱,那个安装窃听以及第一次被安排来窃听的人物的身份直到那么久远才弄清楚。

有一点我怀疑,警察用欺骗的方式抓走嫌疑人?

真的可以这样子吗?

我旁边的女士一开始就睡着了,好像是爆炸声把她弄醒了。

这一次只有一个人拿起了手机,但是有着听起来像是五十岁或以上的女士在讲解。

不过算是我还比较不错的一次观影体验了。

PS:幸好没耽误董老师进场。

再一次掉了手机又从原地儿找回来了。

😂

 3 ) 真实历史事件拍成了三流家庭剧

整部电影看下来,我都不知道电影的重点实在表现什么。

现在老美因为言论自由也仅仅敢通过几个玩笑调侃了是吗?

电影花了大量的篇幅将朱维儿刻画为一个人畜无害的傻白甜,而联邦调查机构却花费花费大量精力对其进行调查,片中却只通过喜剧的桥段来表现将其列为嫌疑人的原因,这无疑造成了观众在这一事件中对政府部门的偏见。

其次就是剧情方面对人物和事件的表现有问题,演员的表演在这种剧情框架下变得尴尬无比,包括一些喜剧情节。

片中几个部分情感转换问题很大,比如说律师和朱维尔之间的友谊、女记者的洗白、朱维儿在最后的突然硬气以及接下来强行上配乐煽情,都很突兀。

其中法庭上朱维儿母亲那一段将全局的尴尬推向极点,如此尴尬不合理的情节强行飙泪,本届奥斯卡最佳女配角的提名当之无愧。

 4 ) 罪人?圣人?正因为他,好莱坞才保有了真正意义上的“多元”

文/铃鼓先生公众号:抛开书本(paokaisb)毫无疑问,克林特·伊斯特伍德是高龄高产高质量的导演,近年来以每年一部的速度产出优篇佳作,称其为“活着的传奇”毫不为过。

作为“好莱坞最后的右派”,也许正因为他,好莱坞才保有了真正意义上的“多元”。

去年的《骡子》,实在抱歉,理应是进入各种年度榜单前列的作品,老年的伊斯特伍德对剧本、镜头以及导演相关的一切的控制已经达到了炉火纯青的地步,他精通用电影讲述故事的技艺。

他并不试图追求新奇的形式,炫目的镜头,或者是故作深沉的艺术式的表达,他更看重通过电影来言说,他保持着对现实的关切,并始终有着呼之欲出的态度。

因此,看完老爷子的电影有种令人惬意的“饱腹感”,不仅所有期待都被满足,但同时需要时间来消化它们理解它们。

1月10日上映的《理查德·朱维尔》,国内译名自作多情的对主题进行了解释——《理查德·朱维尔的哀歌》。

这真是愚蠢至极的行为——原本的片名并没有“哀歌”,整个电影看完似乎理查德并没有多么哀伤,也没有谁为他唱响哀歌。

我不得不展开这样的推测——自《萨利机长》后,国内不断上映老爷子的作品,而其它优秀的导演鲜有这样的待遇,是不是恰好是因为影片中透露出的“保守”的立场是“安全”的。

值得指出的是,这样的作品针对的是大洋彼岸的现实状况,是对此对的某种“修正”,在国内的语境当中则完全是另一回事。

但不管怎么说,能在银幕上看到这样的佳作,的确是观众的福分。

《理查德·朱维尔》讲述的是一个真实的故事——第一个发现在亚特兰大奥运会期间百年公园内的炸弹的人,从英雄到嫌疑犯,最后洗清罪名。

令人惊讶的是,这样一个几乎可以说是平淡的剧情,观众能够从好几个角度去理解去获得启示。

显而易见的是,体制的腐败与媒体的进击,正如影片中母亲哽咽着所说“过去的一段时间里,我们对抗着世界上最强大的两股力量:美国政府与媒体”。

前者几乎可以说是“老生常谈”——大量的影片把这作为一个元素,这在荧幕上并不少见,不过值得注意的是这是真实事件改编,当庞大的利维坦想要碾压个体时,其结果是可想而知的。

而后者关于媒体的探讨,也不乏佳作,比如《夜行者》,它们都揭示了这样一个事实——媒体追去的不是真相,而是热点流量。

而真相总在各种信息的激荡中慢慢沉淀,这也就是常说的“让子弹飞一会儿”。

那么,在事件爆发后不久的时间里,各种流言实际上是正常的情况,也是挖掘真相的必由之路。

这似乎并没有什么问题,但媒体争相的报道引导的舆论如果给调查施加了外力,这可能产生连带的伤害。

《理查德·朱维尔》很好地展现了舆论胁迫权力机关的后果,后果便是对个体的侵犯。

媒体、舆论、权力机关,通过层层的传递,等到调查出现纰漏时,早以无路可退。

记者与调查人员的交易,不管真实与否,可以视为戏剧化的处理,它们成为了共犯与同盟。

我们从影片中看到FBI明明发现了问题,却也不得不要一股脑地一股脑地调查下去,一方面是要掩盖交易这回事,另一方面,承认自己错了是多么困难的一件事,对一个人来说况且不易,何况是一个臃肿的机构。

这并不是在为之开脱罪责,个人无论怎么做那叫做自由,而权力机关则不能。

本片最大的看点是具有强大的移情作用的主人公。

这个人物高度还原,据说连走路的姿态也是模仿了原型人物的。

片中在快速剪辑的镜头中,有一份报纸的标题为“罪人?

圣人?

”,这几乎是这个人物最为核心的描述。

我们回到他的嫌疑被洗清前,这不像是一个正常人,说理查德劣迹斑斑也毫不为过。

这是他被怀疑的理由,但也是他能够发现炸弹的原因——一个爱管闲事的人,一个过于热心的人,一个践行正义的人,哪怕这有所冒犯。

我不禁感叹,蝙蝠侠一样的人物是真的存在啊,理查德和蝙蝠侠的精神气质是一脉相承的,打破边界又捍卫秩序,背负骂名却坚守希望。

他虽然没办法解释自己为什么离开离开了辖区而毫发无损,而自己的同事却受伤,但以他的人物性格,遭受如此的怀疑,如果可能,他甚至可以牺牲自己而换取别人的周全。

可惜他不能。

罪人!

理查德这一人物形象最最动人的地方在于,任你如何诋毁他,戏弄他,他始终在对正义对权力机构抱有希望,甚至是到了偏执的程度。

调查人员想方设法地想要诓骗理查德,而他基本上是完全配合的。

影片最后,哪怕他经历了如此荒唐的一切,仍然披上了制服,成为了警察。

真正的信仰不是坚如磐石,而是久经风浪而不倒。

圣人!

为此,他和律师发生了分歧,而理查德给出了他自己“不长记性”的原因——我就是我,你就是你,我不是你,所以我没法闭嘴。

自此,律师不再为此阻拦他说话了,因为他道出了这个国家赖以强大的原因——尊重个体,包容异类。

毫无疑问,理查德是罕见的极有说服了的自由主义荧幕形象。

影片虽然说着要“反击”,但似乎并没有什么高明的手段,这是尊重现实的表现,弱化了戏剧性。

而影片的高潮,是理查德一段直击人心的质问,这显然是要满足观众对于胜利的期待。

而事实上真正的胜利是很多年后,多年后的真相揭晓成为了影片的尾声,可见导演也并非是对事实的简单罗列,这种创造性的事件选择,正是导演最为核心的能力。

最后,祝福东木老爷子!

添加微信paokaishubenxbb加入全国影迷群

 5 ) 原报道:AMERICAN NIGHTMARE: THE BALLAD OF RICHARD JEWELL

On July 30, 1996, the media identified Richard Jewell as the F.B.I.'s prime suspect in the Olympic Park bombing. For the first time, the 34-year-old security guard tells his extraordinary story, to MARIE BRENNER: his brief moment as a national hero, his hounding by the Feds and the press, and his eccentric friendship with the unknown southern lawyer who helped him through his public torment.FEBRUARY 1997 MARIE BRENNERDAN WINTERSThe search warrant was short and succinct, dated August 3, 9:41 A.M. F.B.I. special agent Diader Rosario was instructed to produce "hair samples (twenty-five pulled and twenty-five combed hairs from the head)" of Richard Allensworth Jewell. That Saturday, Atlanta was humid; the temperature would rise to 85 degrees. There were 34 Olympic events scheduled, including women's team handball, but Richard Jewell was in his mother's apartment playing Defender on a computer set up in the spare bedroom. Jewell hadn't slept at all the night before, or the night before that. He could hear the noise from the throng of reporters massed on the hill outside the small apartment in the suburbs. All morning long, he had been focused on the screen, trying to score off "the little guy who goes back and forth shooting the aliens," but at 12:30 the sound of the telephone disturbed his concentration. Very few people had his new number, by necessity unlisted. Since the F.B.I. had singled him out as the Olympic Park bombing suspect three days earlier, Jewell had received approximately 1,000 calls a day—someone had posted his mother's home number on the Internet."I'll be right over," his lawyer Watson Bryant told him. "They want your hair, they want your palm prints, and they want something called a voice exemplar—the goddamn bastards." The curtains were drawn in the pastel apartment filled with his mother's crafts and samplers; A HOME WITHOUT A DOG IS JUST A HOUSE, one read. By this time Bryant had a system. He would call Jewell from his car phone so that the door could be unlatched and Bryant could avoid the questions from the phalanx of reporters on the hill.Turning into the parking lot in a white Explorer, Bryant could see sound trucks parked up and down Buford Highway. The middle-class neighborhood of apartment complexes and shopping centers was near the DeKalb Peachtree Airport, where local millionaires kept their private planes. The moment Bryant got out of his car, the reporters began to shout: "Hey, Watson, do they have the murderer?" "Are they arresting Jewell?" Bryant moved quickly toward the staircase to the Jewells' apartment. He wore a baseball cap, khaki shorts, and a frayed Brooks Brothers polo shirt. He was 45 years old, with strong features and thinning hair, a southern preppy from a country-club family. Bryant had a stern demeanor lightened by a contrarian's sense of the absurd. He was often distracted—from time to time he would miss his exits on the highway—and he had the regional tendency of defining himself by explaining what he was not. "I am not a Democrat, because they want your money. I am not a Republican, because they take your rights away," he told me soon after I met him. Bryant can talk your ear off about the Bill of Rights, ending with a flourish: "I think everyone ought to have the right to be stupid. I am a Libertarian."At the time Richard Jewell was named as a suspect by the F.B.I., Watson Bryant made a modest living by doing real-estate closings in the suburbs, but Jewell and his lawyer had formed an unusual friendship a decade earlier, when Jewell worked as a mailroom clerk at a federal disaster-relief agency where Bryant practiced law. Jewell was then a stocky kid without a father, who had trained as an auto mechanic but dreamed of being a policeman; Bryant had always had a soft spot for oddballs and strays, a personality quirk which annoyed his then wife no end.The serendipity of this friendship, an alliance particularly southern in its eccentricity, would bring Watson Bryant to the immense task of attempting to save Richard Jewell from the murky quagmire of a national terrorism case. The simple fact was that Bryant had no qualifications for the job. He had no legal staff except for his assistant, Nadya Light, no contacts in the press, and no history in Washington. He was the opposite of media-savvy; he rarely read the papers and never watched the nightly news, preferring the Discovery Channel's shows on dog psychology. Now that Richard Jewell was his client, he had entered a zone of worldwide media hysteria fraught with potential peril. Jewell suspected that his pickup truck had been flown in a C-130 transport plane to the F.B.I. unit at Quantico in Virginia, and Bryant worried that his friend would be arrested any minute. Worse, Bryant knew that he had nothing going for him, no levers anywhere. His only asset was his personality; he had the bravado and profane hyperbole of a southern rich boy, but he was in way over his head.For hours that Saturday, Bryant and Jewell sat and waited for the F.B.I. From time to time Jewell would put binoculars under the drawn curtain in his mother's bedroom to peer at the reporters on the hill. Bryant was nervous that Jewell's mother, Bobi, would return from baby-sitting and see her son having hairs pulled out of his head. Bryant stalked around the apartment complaining about the F.B.I. "The sons of bitches did not show up until three P.M.," he later recalled, and when they did, there were five of them. The F.B.I. medic was tall and muscular and wore rubber gloves. He asked Jewell to sit at a small round table in the living room, where his mother puts her holiday-theme displays. Bryant stood by the sofa next to a portrait of Jewell in his Habersham County deputy's uniform. He watched the F.B.I. procedure carefully. The medic, who had huge hands, used tiny drugstore tweezers. "He eyeballed his scalp and took his hair in sections. First he ran a comb through it, and then he took these hairs and plucked them out one by one."Jewell "went stone-cold," but Bryant could not contain his temper. "I am his lawyer. I know you can have this, I know you have a search warrant, but I tell you this: If you were doing this to me, you would have to fight me. You would have to beat the shit out of me," Bryant recalled telling the case agent Ed Bazar. Bazar, Bryant later said, was apologetic. "He seemed almost embarrassed to be there." As he counted out the hairs, he placed them in an envelope. The irony of the situation was not lost on Bryant. He was a lawyer, an officer of the court, but he had a disdain for authority, and he was representing a former deputy who read the Georgia law code for fun in his spare time.It took 10 minutes to pluck Jewell's thick auburn hair. Then the F.B.I. agents led him into the kitchen and took his palm prints on the table. "That took 30 minutes, and they got ink all over the table," Bryant said. Then Bazar told Bryant they wanted Jewell to sit on the sofa and say into the telephone, "There is a bomb in Centennial Park. You have 30 minutes." That was the message given by the 911 caller on the night of the bombing. He was to repeat the message 12 times. Bryant saw the possibility of phony evidence and of his client's going to jail. "I said, 'I am not sure about this. Maybe you can do this, maybe you can't, but you are not doing this today.'"All afternoon, Jewell was strangely quiet. He had a sophisticated knowledge of police work and believed, he later said, "they must have had some evidence if they wanted my hair. ... I knew their game was intimidation. That is why they brought five agents instead of two." He felt "violated and humiliated," he told me, but he was passive, even docile, through Bryant's outburst. He thought of the bombing victims— Alice Hawthorne, the 44-year-old mother from Albany, Georgia, at the park with her stepdaughter; Melih Uzunyol, the Turkish cameraman who died of a heart attack; the more than 100 people taken to area hospitals, some of whom were his friends. "I kept thinking, These guys think I did this. These guys were accusing me of murder. This was the biggest case in the nation and the world. If they could pin it on me, they were going to put me in the electric chair."I met Richard Jewell three months later, on October 28, a few hours before a press conference called by his lawyers to allow Jewell to speak publicly for the first time since the F.B.I. had cleared him. Jewell's lawyers also intended to announce that they would file damage suits against NBC and The Atlanta Journal-Constitution. It was a Monday, and that weekend the local U.S. attorney had delivered a letter to one of the lawyers stating Jewell was no longer a suspect. "Goddamn it," Bryant had told me on the phone, "the sons of bitches did not even have the decency to address it to Richard Jewell."I had been instructed to come early to the offices of Wood & Grant, the flashy plaintiff lawyers Bryant had pulled in to help him with Jewell's civil suits. When I arrived, I was alone in the office with Sharon Anderson, the redheaded assistant answering the phones. "Wood & Grant . . . Wood & Grant . . . Wood & Grant"—the calls overwhelmed her. Lin Wood and Wayne Grant were rushing from CNN to the local NBC and ABC affiliates, working the shows. "Everyone has theories of who the real bomber is," Sharon said. "I just write it all down and give it to the boys."When Lin Wood arrived, he was still in full makeup. Movie-star handsome with green eyes and styled hair, Wood has the heated oratory of a trial lawyer. "It's a war! Why in this bevy of stories does not anyone point out the fact that Richard was a hero one day and a demon the next? They have destroyed this man's life!"Watson Bryant had worked with Wood and Grant years before in a local law firm. He admired Wayne Grant for his methodical sense of detail; Grant, a New Yorker, had once forced the city of Atlanta to pay large damages to a man injured while illegally digging for antique bottles in a park. But Lin Wood's suppressed rage was a marvel to Bryant. "He is so tough he could make people cry in depositions when we were kids," Bryant told me. Wood possessed the smooth style of a member of the Atlanta establishment, but he had a hardscrabble past. He was a boy from "the wrong side of the tracks" in Macon who at age 17 discovered his mother's body after his father had murdered her. His father went to jail, and Wood wound up as a lawyer. He went through college and law school on scholarships and with part-time jobs. I could hear Wood on Sharon's telephone: "He's more than innocent. He's a goddamn hero. . . . Everyone is going to pay who wronged Richard Jewell. Besides NBC and The A.J.C., we are going to look into suing CNN and Jay Leno."Through the large picture window, I had a clear view of the remains of the Centennial Olympic Park, where the bomb had exploded on the night of July 26. Where the sound-and-light tower had once been, there was now a flattened dirt field. It was possible to see the Greek commemorative sculpture that Richard Jewell used to describe for tourists at the AT&T pavilion, where he worked as a security guard.Suddenly, Jewell was in the room. "Hi. I'm Richard. I'm a little late. I don't want you to think I am rude. I am not like that." He had an open face, a bland pleasantness, an eagerness to please. "Can I get you a Coke?" he asked me. "How about some coffee?" Jewell wore a blue-and-white striped shirt and chinos. He occupied physical space like a teenager; he sprawled, he lumbered, he pawed through Sharon's candy bowl. On TV his face had a porcine blankness; he appeared suspicious. In person, Jewell has a hard time disguising his emotions.We were alone in the conference room; I noticed that Jewell avoided looking out the window toward the park. He shifted his glance nervously away from the view. He often awakens in the middle of the night, drenched in sweat, thinking of the events in the park in the early morning hours of July 27. "It took me days before I could even come in here," he said anxiously.The newsroom atmosphere resembled that at F.B.I. headquarters; there was a frenzy to be first.When Jewell noticed a local ABC reporter outside near Sharon's desk, his face darkened. "I don't want to be around reporters right now. I guess I am a little nervous. What is he doing here?" The atmosphere was now filled with tension; the reporter was escorted out.Moments later, we gathered in the hallway. Wood was steely: "We are going in two cars. Richard, you drive with me. Your mother will go with Wayne. As we walk down the hall right now, if the ABC people are outside, I will tap you on the shoulder and I will say, 'How are you doing?' You will say, 'Fine.' Is that understood?" "O.K., Lin. I understand," Jewell said quietly, head bowed.As Jewell walked down the hall, an ABC cameraman photographed him looking grim. Seconds after the elevator doors closed, Jewell exploded: "What are they doing here, Lin? Did you invite them? They are animals. Why didn't you get them out of here?""ABC has been good to you. How do I get them out of the office on the day of your press conference?""That is what security is for!" Jewell said, quivering with rage. "Where is Watson?" he asked in the garage. "I told you: he's at a real-estate closing. He will meet you at the press conference," Wood said. Jewell moved to his mother's side, as solicitous as a child. "Are you all right, Mother?" he asked. "It is all I am going to be able to do not to do something!" she said angrily.When we arrived at the Marriott hotel on 1-75, there was another discussion in the parking lot, about who would walk with whom in front of the cameras. Jewell turned to his close friend Dave Dutchess: "Are you all right, man?" Dutchess, a truckdriver who worked with Jewell years ago, has long hair and a tattoo of a panther on his forearm. "Richard and I are like brothers," he told me. "I would die for him." As the cameras closed in on them, the group fled to a private room in the Marriott. The auditorium was filled with reporters. "Showtime! Showtime!" the cameramen yelled when Jewell, his mother, and all the lawyers took the stage."I hope and pray that no one else is ever subjected to the pain and the ordeal that I have gone through," Jewell said, his voice breaking. "The authorities should keep in mind the rights of the citizens. I thank God it is ended and that you now know what I have known all along: I am an innocent man."After the press conference, Bobi and Richard Jewell remained in a private room. The bookers from Good Morning America and the Today show pressed Jewell to step before their cameras, and when Watson Bryant told them no, Monica, the G.M.A. booker, began to cry, "I'll lose my job." Then Yael, the Today-show booker, cornered Nadya Light: "Is Richard doing something with G.M.A.?'Upstairs, Jewell and his mother were being filmed by a CBS camera crew for a 60 Minutes news update. "Well, Bobi, did you get your Tupperware back?" Mike Wallace asked by phone from New York. "Richard, you need to lose some more weight." Despite Wallace's festive spirit, the atmosphere was curiously flat. Bryant urged Jewell to talk to a USA Today reporter. Jewell balked: "They can all go suck wind."In the car on the way back to Wood & Grant, Bobi was angry. All of her possessions had come back from the F.B.I. marked up with ink. "Every piece of Tupperware I own is ruined, thank you very much. They wrote numbers all over it, and I have tried everything to clean it—Comet and Brillo—but nothing works."Back at the office, she sat on the sofa and listened as Bryant negotiated with Yael for a flight to New York— Delta, first-class, 9:30 P.M. Jewell was scheduled to appear on three shows in New York, visit the American Museum of Natural History, and then fly to Washington, D.C., for Larry King Live. "I would like to go home, put on my outfit, and walk in the woods," Bobi said. "Richard, we are leaving.""Yes, ma'am," Richard said.One hour later, a telephone call came in to the offices of Wood & Grant. The lawyers had the call on speaker, and it blared through the room. "Goddamn it, Lin. When will this be over?" In the background, you could hear Bobi sobbing. "What in the world?" Wood asked. Jewell explained that a sound truck from ABC had been waiting in the parking lot when the Jewells got home. There had been words and threats, and Dave Dutchess had taken his stun gun off his motorcycle and waved it at the ABC van. The cameraman yelled: Stop harassing us! Dave yelled back: You are harassing us! Now get your ass out of here!Wood shouted into the speakerphone: "Do not meddle! You cannot jeopardize where you have gotten to and what you want to do! All you have to do is put up with this for one more day and the damn thing is over. Bobi, there is nothing you can do about it; you have to stay cool." Bobi cried back, "They are going to destroy me!"The moment they hung up, Wood turned to Bryant. "New York is canceled. No Katie Couric. No Good Morning America. They are losing it. You better call Yael." "No," Bryant said, "they have lost it. All of the above: their patience, their temper and heart."That evening a very testy Katie Couric tracked Bryant down at Nadya Light's apartment, where we had gone to watch the news. "I want you to know that I canceled interviewing Barbra Streisand in L.A. for Richard Jewell. Don't think he is always going to be a news story. No one will care about him in three days," she said, according to Bryant. "Look, Katie, I am sorry. But Richard is in no condition to talk to the press. He is worn out," Bryant told her.Later, Jewell would tell me that that day, which should have been one of his most satisfying, was actually his worst. His notoriety had tainted the triumph; everything positive had become negative. "I was in despair," he said. As he had for most of the previous 88 days, he spent the night confined in the Buford Highway apartment, a prisoner of his circumstances, with his mother, Dave Dutchess, and Dave's fiancee, Beatty, eating Domino's Pizza and watching himself lead the newscasts on NBC, CBS, and ABC."This case has everything—the F.B.I., the press, the violation of the Bill of Rights from the First to the Sixth Amendment." 'This case has everything— the F.B.I., the press, the violation of the Bill of Rights, from the First to the Sixth Amendment," Watson Bryant told me in one of our first conversations. It has become common to characterize the F.B.I.'s investigation of Richard Jewell as the epitome of false accusation. The phrase "the Jewell syndrome," a rush to judgment, has entered the language of newsrooms and First Amendment forums. On the night of Jewell's press conference, a commentator on CNN's Crossfire compared Jewell's situation to "Kafka in Prague." The case became an investigative catastrophe, which laid bare long-simmering resentments of many F.B.I. career professionals regarding the micromanagement style and imperious attitude of Louis Freeh and his inner circle of former New York prosecutors, who have worked together since their days at the U.S. Attorney's Office in the Southern District. Within the bureau, the beleaguered director now has a new nickname: J. Edgar Hoover with children. Like Freeh, those near him have also acquired a nickname: Louie's yes-men. Two of Freeh's closest associates, F.B.I. general counsel Howard Shapiro and former deputy director Larry Potts, have been severely criticized, respectively, for advising the White House of confidential F.B.I. material and for an alleged cover-up of the mishandling of the 1992 standoff at Ruby Ridge, where F.B.I. agents killed the wife and son of Randy Weaver, a white supremacist.In November and December, the Office of Professional Responsibility conducted an exhaustive investigation into the Jewell affair. Responding to an attempt by headquarters and certain officials to distance themselves, according to F.B.I. sources, several agents, including a senior F.B.I. supervisor in Atlanta, have provided the O.P.R. with signed statements insisting that Freeh himself was responsible for "oversight" during the crisis. These agents "shocked the investigators" because they reiterated, when asked who was in charge of the overall command of the investigation, that it was the director himself.What happened to Richard Jewell raises an important question central to Freeh's future tenure: in the midst of a media frenzy, does the F.B.I. have any responsibility to protect the privacy of an innocent man? Over the last year, this concept was broached with Bob Bucknam, Louis Freeh's chief of staff. During the long Pizza Connection trial in the 1980s, it was Bucknam who handed Freeh files at the prosecutor's table. According to highly placed sources in the bureau, Bucknam's answer was immediate: the F.B.I. has no responsibility to correct information in the public domain.Richard Jewell had a reverence for authority that blinded him to the paradox of his situation. He idealized the investigative skills of the F.B.I. and could not understand that he had become ensnared in a web fraught with the weaknesses of a self-protective bureaucracy. Pennsylvania senator Arlen Specter has invited Jewell to Washington to testify at congressional hearings on the F.B.I.'s conduct in the Atlanta bombing. Ironically, the bungling of the investigation might lead to the reshuffling of personalities at the top of the bureau and threaten Freeh's reputation. In October, according to The Washington Post, Freeh sent an unusual memo to all 25,000 F.B.I. personnel: He would not be abandoning his post amid reports of problems with the Jewell case and Filegate, and of a growing dissatisfaction inside the bureau. "I am proud to be the F.B.I. director," Freeh wrote.From the beginning, Jewell was perceived in the public imagination as a hapless dummy, a plodding misfit, a Forrest Gump. On one of the first days he worked as a security guard at the AT&T pavilion, he noticed that his co-workers were covering the steps inside the sound tower with graffiti. On one step Jewell scrawled with a flourish two bromides: IF YOU DIDN'T GO PAST ME, YOU ARE NOT SUPPOSED TO BE HERE and LIFE IS TOUGH. TOUGHER WHEN YOU ARE STUPID. Soon after he was targeted as a suspect in the Olympics bombing, the F.B.I. confiscated the step. Analysts appeared to believe that the graffiti contained a clue to his character. "They told the lawyers the statement was an obvious taunt," Jewell said. In fact, the second line was an expression he had cribbed from one of his favorite actors, John Wayne.Within the F.B.I., the beleaguered director has a new nickname: J. Edgar Hoover with children."To understand Richard Jewell, you have to be aware that he is a cop. He talks like a cop and thinks like a cop," his criminal lawyer, Jack Martin, told me. The tone of Jewell's voice drops noticeably when he says the word "officer," and his conversation is filled with observations about traffic patterns, security devices, and car wrecks. Even the vocabulary he uses to describe the 88 days he was a suspect is out of the lexicon of police work, and he continues to talk about his situation then in the present tense: "This is an out-and-out ambush, and I am a hostage."Jewell has a need to accommodate. He can be startlingly opaque. On the afternoon of July 30, Jewell answered the door of his mother's apartment to Don Johnson and Diader Rosario from the F.B.I. "We need your help making a training film," they told him. "I never questioned it," he told me. The next day Rosario appeared again with a search warrant. "The weird thing was that when they were searching my apartment I was, like, 'Take everything. Take the carpet. I am law enforcement. I am just like you. Guys, take whatever you are going to take, because it is going to prove that I didn't do anything.' And a couple of them were looking at me like I was crazy."Leaving the apartment on one occasion, he told the agents, "I am wearing a bright shirt so y'all can see me easier." He recalled feeling anger when he read descriptions of himself as a child-man, a mama's boy, and "a wannabe policeman," but he said, "If I was in the place of everybody else and I saw a 34-year-old guy living with his mother, I would have reservations about that, too. I would think, Why is he doing that?"The December issue of Atlanta magazine reported that there was no record of a Jewell family in Danville, Virginia, where Richard Jewell was born. Atlanta referred to an article in the Danville Register & Bee which asked, "Did Richard Jewell ever sleep here?" "This is a part of my life Richard and I do not like to speak about," Bobi Jewell told me one night at dinner. Richard was born in Danville, but his name was Richard White; his father was Bobi's first husband, Robert Earl White, who worked for Chevrolet. According to Bobi, Richard's father, who died recently, was "irresponsible and a ladies' man." When Richard was four, the marriage broke up. Bobi found work as an insurance-agency claims coordinator and soon met John Jewell, an executive in the same business. Shortly after John Jewell married Bobi, he adopted Richard.From the time Richard was a child, he and his mother were a unit. Bobi, a woman of intelligence and disciplined work habits, is both tender and tough on the subject of her son. She still calls Richard "my boy," but she has a peppery disposition. Richard was brought up in a strict Baptist home. "If I didn't say 'Yes, ma'am' or 'No, ma'am' and get it out quick enough, I would be on the ground," he said. When he was six, the family moved to Atlanta. Richard was the boy who helped the teachers and worked as a school crossing guard, but he had few friends in high school. "I was a wannabe athlete, but I wasn't good enough," he said. He ran the movie projector in the library. A military-history buff, he liked to talk about Napoleon and the Vietnam War and read books on both World Wars.Jewell's ambition was to work on cars, so he enrolled in a technical school in southern Georgia. On his third day there, Bobi discovered that her husband had packed a suitcase. "He left a note saying that he was a failure and no good for us," Jewell said. Almost immediately, Richard moved back home and took a job repairing cars. "My mom and I tried to take care of each other," he said. "I think I handled it pretty much better than she did." Richard took the brunt of his father's abandonment; Bobi pulled even closer to her son. "She hated all men for about three years after that, and she became overly protective of me. She looked at it that I was going to do the same thing that my dad did. I was 18 or 19. I was working. She never liked my dates, but I never held that against her. We have always been able to lean on each other."Richard managed a local TCBY yogurt shop and once stopped a burglary in progress. At the age of 22, he was hired as a clerk at the Small Business Administration, and he impressed Watson Bryant and the other lawyers in the office with his personable nature. They called him Radar because of his efficiency. "You could say, 'I'm hungry,' and suddenly this kid would be by your side with a Snickers bar," Bryant recalled. When Jewell's contract with the S.B.A. ran out, he moved on to be a Marriott house detective. In 1990 he was hired as a jailer in the Habersham County Sheriff's Office, and in 1991 he became a deputy. As part of his training, he was sent to the Northeast Georgia Police Academy, where he finished in the upper 25 percent of his class. He finally had an identity; he was a law-enforcement officer.Jewell was unlucky in love. He presented one woman with an engagement ring, and later, in Habersham County, he would give another a large wooden key with a sign that read, THIS IS THE KEY TO UNLOCK YOUR HEART, but both relationships came apart. In northern Georgia, Jewell worked nights and became wedded to his job. By his own description, he was methodical. "I am the kind of person who plans everything. I like to go from A to B to C to D. This going from A to D and arguing over everything—I say no." Habersham County, a scenic part of the piney woods in Georgia's Bible Belt, was for Jewell like "leaving the 1990s and going into the 1970s in terms of law enforcement." Many rich Atlantans have country houses in the mountains, but the small towns of Demorest and Charlottesville are relatively undeveloped, reminding one of Jewell's lawyers of the scenery in the movie Deliverance. "If you get lost up there, you might find a guy with a bow and arrow," the lawyer said.Recently, Jewell and I took the 90-minute drive from Atlanta to Habersham County, which has acres of apple orchards. The leaves were turning, and the roads were mostly deserted. In the towns, however, were stores, apple stands, and even a good Chinese restaurant. As Jewell's blue pickup truck turned into the parking lot of a shopping center, several people came out to greet him.Jewell had lived in a small yellow house up a steep rocky driveway. On the day we visited, the current resident's Halloween decorations were still up, as were faded white satin ribbons hanging from many trees, remnants of a campaign to clear Richard Jewell organized by area friends. Jewell had lived 50 yards from the Chattahoochee River near a kayak-and-canoe tourist concession on a main road—not in a "cabin in the woods," as several reports stated after the bombing. He worked the night shift, and when he would arrive home at dawn, he told me, he could look up and "see a sky filled with stars."He was not a loner; he made friends with several local families. He would often leave a box of Dunkin' Donuts on friends' porches at four A.M. During the O. J. Simpson trial, he and the other deputies would meet in the turnaround on Highway 985 in the middle of the night and review the day's events and the bungling by the Los Angeles Police Department. Jewell would later be annoyed that the F.B.I. confiscated his copy of former prosecutor Vincent Bugliosi's account of the trial. Jewell dated a local girl, Sheree Chastain, and had a close relationship with her family.Jewell had a complex history working at the Habersham County Sheriff's Office. When he was still a jailer, he arrested a couple making too much noise in a hot tub at an apartment building where he did part-time security work. He was arrested for impersonating an officer and, after pleading guilty to a lesser charge, was placed on probation on the condition that he seek psychological counseling.By his own estimation, Jewell's strength as a cop was "working car wrecks." He had his mother's diligence; he worked 14 hours a day and organized a safety fair. Later in 1995 he wrecked his patrol car and was demoted to working in the jail. Rick Moore, a local deputy, advised him to accept the job, but Jewell despised the jailhouse atmosphere. He told me, "It was a small room filled with cigarette smoke. I couldn't take it." He resigned, and in a short time he moved to a police job at Piedmont College, a liberal-arts school with approximately 1,000 students on the main road in Demorest. The college police had jurisdiction only on campus and in an area extending out 500 feet. Jewell chased cars speeding down the highway and had arguments over turf with other officers. He was instrumental in several arrests, including that of a suspected burglar he discovered hiding at the top of a tree. For his work on a volunteer rescue squad, he was named a citizen of the year.According to Brad Mattear, a former resident director, Piedmont was a school of "P.K.'s"—preachers' kids. It was 80 percent Baptist with a strict no-drinking rule. The college had many rebellious students, according to Mattear, kids who were "away from home for the first time and wanted to party and drink." Mattear knew Jewell well and recalled his good manners and playful nature. "It was always 'Yes, sir' and 'Yes, ma'am.'" Jewell would tell students, "I know y'all are going to drink. Don't do it on campus."Jewell felt confined by his boundaries and could be heavy-handed when it came to writing out reports on minor infractions. Once when we were driving by the campus, he pointed to a small brick dormitory. "That was where all the partying would go on," he told me. Jewell would raid dorm rooms and report drinking violations. "I did not hesitate to tell the parents—in no uncertain terms—what their kids were up to," he said.He soon made enemies at the school. "Three or four times a week," Mattear said, Piedmont students were in the office of Ray Cleere, the president of the college, complaining about Jewell and other Piedmont police. After Jewell was admonished for a number of controversial arrests, he resigned.Jewell had an out: his mother was going to have an operation on her foot. He would go home to Atlanta for the Olympics and look for a new job. He called his mother: "Is it all right with you if I stay with you while you have your surgery?" He hoped he might get a job with the Atlanta police or, failing that, work security at the Olympics. "I thought, Working at the Centennial Olympic Park will look really good on my resume."At the age of 33, back in his mother's apartment, he was at first treated like a wayward teenager. Bobi was sharp with him about his slovenly habits, his weight, and his driving. Bobi had carved out a life for herself; she arrived at work by eight A.M. each morning and had many friends. Trim, with short-cropped hair, Bobi Jewell is the kind of woman who labels her clothes and spices and spends much of her spare time baking cakes and babysitting for extra money. She carries on telephone friendships with claim adjusters at other companies. It was somewhat unsettling for her, she told me, to have Richard at home after she had grown used to living with only her dog, Brandi, and her cat, Boots. Bobi was annoyed that he had wrecked a patrol car, and worried about his safety. "Every time he leaves the apartment, I'll say, 'Richard . . . ' And he'll say, 'Yes, ma'am. I know. The person that I am going to see will be there when I get there,'" she said. On one occasion Bobi talked about Richard's return to Atlanta. "What is wrong with trying to revamp your life?" she asked me. Her eyes filled with tears. "Why does everyone in the media think it is so strange?"On Friday, July 26, Bobi Jewell was home waiting for her niece to arrive from Virginia for the Olympic softball competition the following week. In preparation, she had stocked her apartment with food. It was a clear Georgia evening, not as hot as had been expected. As usual, Richard left for the park at 4:45 P.M. and arrived at the AT&T pavilion about 5:30. His stomach was bothering him; he was convinced that he had eaten a bad hamburger the day before. Lin Wood and Wayne Grant had arranged to take their children to Centennial Park that night. The park, in downtown Atlanta, stretches over 21 acres. There were air-conditioned tents, concerts on the stage, and hot-dog and souvenir stands. Downtown Atlanta was usually deserted in the oppressively hot, humid summer, but this year thousands of tourists filled the sidewalks, or sat on benches in the shade of some crape-myrtle trees, or cooled off by a fountain. Tour buses clogged the main arteries, and everyone complained that it took hours to get anywhere; stories were traded about athletes' getting to their competitions late because of the poor planning of the Atlanta Committee for the Olympic Games.As always, Jewell was working the 12-hour night shift near the sound-and-light tower by the stage. He was pleased because one of his favorite groups—Jack Mack and the Heart Attack—was going to perform at 12:45. Jewell had a routine: he would check in and fill the ice chest he kept by a bench at his station. Jewell liked to offer water and Cokes to pregnant women or policemen who stopped to rest.After he arrived at the park, his stomach cramps grew worse and he had a bout of diarrhea. At approximately 10 P.M. he took a break to go to the bathroom. The closest one was by the stage, but the security staff was not allowed to use it. "I really have to go," Jewell says he told the stage manager. "And he said, 'Well, O.K. this time.'"When Jewell came out, he noticed that it was "real calm" and there wasn't much wind blowing. At that time of night, the crowd from Bud World became a little more raucous. Jewell was annoyed when he saw a group of drunks near his bench and beer cans littering the area beside the fence nearby. As he went to report the trash and the group that was carousing, he spotted a large olive-green military-style backpack, known as an Alice pack, under the bench. There had been a similar bag found the week before. Jewell later told an F.B.I. agent that he was annoyed that one of the drunks had tried to get into the lens of a camera crew. Jewell had told them to cut it out. "They were running off at the mouth," Jewell would later tell Larry Landers of the Georgia Bureau of Investigation (G.B.I.)."I was light about the package at first," he told me, "kidding around with Tom Davis from the G.B.I.: 'Well, are you going to open it?' At that point, it was not a concern. I was thinking to myself, Well, I am sure one of these people left it on the ground. When Davis came back and said, 'Nobody said it was theirs,' that is when the little hairs on the back of my head began to stand up. I thought, Uh-oh. This is not good."I never really had time to be frightened. My law-enforcement background paid off here. What went through my head was like a computer screen of this list I had to do. I had to call my supervisor. I have to tell people in the tower that something was going on. I have to be firm with them, stay calm, and be professional."Almost immediately, Jewell and Tom Davis cleared a 25-foot-square area around the backpack; Jewell made two trips into the tower to warn the technicians. "I want y'all out now. This is serious."Two blocks away on Marietta Street, approximately 300 editors, copywriters, and reporters from Cox newspapers around the country had taken over the extra desks in the new eighth-floor newsroom at The Atlanta Journal-Constitution to prepare the special Olympics edition they put out each afternoon. The paper had gone "Olympics-crazy," according to one reporter. The editor, Ron Martin, and the managing editor, John Walter—"WalMart," as they were called—had let it be known that no expense would be spared. Ann Hardie, who normally covers science, had been sent around the world to master the fine points of beach volleyball; Bill Rankin, officially on the federal-court beat, was assigned table tennis. The paper intended to set new standards in its hometown during the games, but in addition there was a hint of redemption in the air.Since Cox newspaper executives had forced the resignation of the distinguished editor Bill Kovach in 1988, the paper had suffered a severe loss of reputation. "We all felt just kind of beaten down," one reporter said. Kovach had been brought to Atlanta from The New York Times to elevate The A.J.C. into being the definitive paper of the New South, but eventually he irritated the local powers. Atlanta was inbred, a city of deals, and he resigned in a blaze of press outrage. Kovach now ran the Nieman journalism-fellowship program at Harvard, and the movie rights to his turbulent years in Atlanta—reported in these pages by Peter J. Boyer—had been sold to Warner Bros.Within the profession, The A.J.C. had become something of a joke. More and more, its emphasis was on what John Walter called "chunklets"—short bits in a soft-news style known as eye-candy. The paper published features on couples massage and how mushrooms grow in the rain. Walter had fired off several terse memos to ensure that there would be no more jumps of news stories to back pages and no more unsourced news stories, except on rare occasions. "I don't see any reason why you can't report hard news in a short form," one editor told me.The A.J. C. style of reporting in declarative sentences had a name, too: the voice of God. It was omniscient, because it allowed no references to unattributed sources. Subjects such as AIDS, which often required confidentiality, could not be covered properly in the paper, in the opinion of several reporters. The A.J.C. picked up news stories with unnamed sources from The New York Times, however, and reporters groused about the hypocrisy of the double standard.On Saturday morning, July 27, Bob Johnson, the night metro editor, left the newsroom at one A.M. The sidewalks were still crowded; Johnson sat on a wall outside waiting for an A.J.C. shuttle bus to pick him up. About 1:25 he heard a strange noise. "It sounded like an aerial bomb at a fireworks show," he said. He recalled thinking, Damn, that is sort of foolish. Then he heard screams and saw people running. Johnson rushed back upstairs to the almost deserted sixth-floor newsroom. Lyda Longa, a night police reporter, was still there. Johnson sent her down to the park and turned on the news, but nothing had moved across the wires. Just after two A.M., Longa called from the park. She told Johnson that one person had been killed and dozens were down—it was absolute chaos. Johnson could hear the sirens and the screams through the telephone; he began to type into his computer. "We were trying to get a bullet into the street edition," Johnson recalled. In the crisis, it took only minutes for reporters to return to the newsroom; several had been at the park when the bomb went off. Rochelle Bozman, an Olympics editor, appeared and took over for Johnson. Soon John Walter was there, as was Bert Roughton, who would assist him in supervising the A.J.C. coverage of the bombing.At the park, Jewell spoke with the first F.B.I. agents to arrive on the scene. The smell and the noise, he remembered, were overwhelming, and sensations blurred together. "It was hard to describe the sound," he said. "It was like what you hear in the movies. It was, like, KABOOM. I had seen an explosion in police training. We had ear protection when it went off. It smelled like a flash-bang grenade. The sky was not filled with black smoke, but grayish-white. All the shrapnel that was inside the package kept flying around, and some of the people got hit from the bench and some with metal."Bobi Jewell had just gone to sleep when the telephone rang. It was Richard. "Mom, they had a bomb go off down here, but I am O.K. regardless of what the TV says." He could hardly speak; he seemed paralyzed. Jewell did not mention to his mother that he had found the backpack and alerted Tom Davis. Bobi was perplexed. "I thought, What does he mean?"All night long she stayed on the foldout sofa watching the news reports. She was frightened by the ambulances, the noise, the bodies in the park.Soon veteran homicide detectives in the Atlanta police arrived at the bomb site. One sergeant was trying to make his way through the crowd when an Olympics official stopped him. "Tell these cops to get the hell out of here," he said, according to a captain in the homicide division. "Well, you get the fuck out of here. Who are you?" the sergeant demanded. Agents from the Atlanta F.B.I. office and the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco and Firearms were in a shouting match over jurisdiction. "We are handling this!" one said. "No, this is ours!" an F.B.I. agent snapped.In the command center at F.B.I. headquarters in northeastern Atlanta, there was complete pandemonium. The Olympics were a national convention for law enforcement. Some 30,000 security personnel were on hand. Over the next few days, there would be an internal debate: Who was going to be in charge of the bombing investigation? In Atlanta at that time were three veteran investigators with executive experience: Tom Fuentes, who is credited with helping to bring John Gotti to heel; Barry Mawn, who has worked extensively in organized-crime probes; and Robin Montgomery, the head of the critical-incident unit at Quantico, who at Ruby Ridge in 1992 questioned the disastrous "rules of engagement" which led to tragedy.In the early-morning hours, F.B.I. agents picked up several suspects, including one referred to as "the drunk in the bar." According to F.B.I. sources, Louis Freeh himself got on the telephone to Barry Mawn. Freeh, a former F.B.I. agent, was personally monitoring the initial investigation by means of a series of conference calls from the command post at F.B.I. headquarters. He focused on "the drunk in the bar," who had been making threats the night before, and within hours the information was leaked that the F.B.I. had a suspect. From Atlanta, Barry Mawn contacted his superiors in Washington. "This suspect is not the bomber," he reportedly said, according to a former highlevel F.B.I. executive. Freeh allegedly lost his temper and belittled Mawn's professional abilities. He is said to have told Mawn that he "had handled this all wrong." The words one hears characterizing Freeh's telephone calls to the agents on duty in Atlanta are "abusive," "condescending," and "dismissive." A story went around the command center that Freeh was already saying, "We have our man," according to a source in the bureau.Watson Bryant was thinking, I cannot believe that I know anyone who throws pipe bombs into gopher holes.Freeh made a decision: however experienced Montgomery, Fuentes, and Mawn were, this investigation would be run by Division 5 of the F.B.I., the National Security Division, a former counterintelligence unit that has been looking for a purpose since the Cold War ended. Trained in observation, division members rarely made a criminal case—their strength was intimidation and manipulation rather than the deliberate gathering of evidence to be presented in court. The F.B.I. promptly declared the bombing a terrorism case and placed it under the authority of Bob Bryant, head of the division. David Tubbs of Division 5 was sent to Atlanta to be the spokesman and to augment Woody Johnson, the Atlanta special agent in charge (S.A.C.), who had been trained in hostage rescue and who was awkward in press briefings. Tubbs was not as experienced in criminal cases as Mawn or Montgomery, who returned to Newark and Quantico, respectively, "to get out of the line of fire," according to numerous F.B.I. sources. But Bryant and Freeh were reportedly micromanaging the S.A.C.'s and, later, the case agents Don Johnson and Diader Rosario. 106107 VIEW ARTICLE PAGESOn the morning of the bombing, Watson Bryant's alarm went off at six A.M. He was going to the Olympic kayak competition on the Ocoee River with Andy Currie, a friend from his Vanderbilt University days. He learned of the bombing on the radio as he was getting ready to go to Currie's house. "Whoever has done this should be skinned alive," he told Currie. He spent the day in the country, and on Sunday he went out to run errands. When he got home, there was a message on his answering machine: "Watson, this is Richard Jewell. You may have heard that I found the bomb and people are calling me a hero. Somebody told me I might get a book contract." It had been years since Bryant had spoken to Jewell, but he did not immediately return the call; he was busy finishing up some contracts so that he could take a few days off to enjoy the Olympics.In addition, Bryant was annoyed with Jewell. After Bryant had befriended him in their days at the Small Business Administration, Jewell had borrowed his new, $250 radar detector and never returned it. He had promised to pay him $100 for it, but he never had. In the meantime, Bryant's life had changed; he had set up an office as a solo practitioner. Bryant despised corporate politics and had no gift for them. His penchant for taking on pro-bono work for friends annoyed his wife, however. Bryant believed that Richard Jewell had attached himself to him years earlier because he lacked a father, but nevertheless Jewell could get on his nerves. By the summer of 1996, Bryant was preoccupied; his marriage had come apart two years earlier, and he was trying to sort out his life.When he finally returned Jewell's phone call, he said, "Well, damn it, where's my $100?" Jewell laughed uneasily and told him about discovering the green backpack that contained the bomb. "Didn't you see me on the news?" Bryant reminded him that he rarely watched TV. "I am proud of you, Richard," he said. "About this book contract, I think it's far-fetched, but don't sign anything unless I see it first."In the Newsweek cover story detailing the bombing, published Monday, July 29, there was no mention of Richard Jewell. It said only that "a security guard" had alerted Tom Davis of the G.B.I. that no one had claimed the backpack under his bench. By the time Newsweek was on the stands, however, Jewell had been interviewed on CNN. The AT&T publicity department had booked him on TV and told him to wear the shirt with the AT&T logo. Jewell reluctantly agreed. "The idea of going on TV made me nervous," he told me. "I was not the hero. There were so many others who saved lives."In Demorest, Ray Cleere, the president of Piedmont College, was home on Saturday, July 27, watching CNN. Cleere had at one time been Mississippi's commissioner of higher education, but he was now posted at the rural Baptist mountain school. He was said to feel that he had suffered a loss of status in the boondocks, where he was out of the academic mainstream. He called Dick Martin, his chief of campus police. Shouldn't they call the F.B.I. and tell them about Richard Jewell? he asked. Cleere had had a strong disagreement with Jewell when one of the students was caught smoking pot. Jewell wanted to arrest him; Cleere said no. Cleere, Brad Mattear recalled, "worried constantly about the image of the college." According to Mattear, "Cleere loved the limelight. He wanted public attention"—the very trait he reportedly ascribed to Richard Jewell.Dick Martin, who was fond of Jewell, suggested a compromise, according to Lin Wood: he would call a friend in the G.B.I. Cleere then called the F.B.I. hot line in Washington himself. Wood says Cleere later complained that no one had seemed to want to listen to what he had to say about Richard Jewell. But his telephone call would trigger a complex set of circumstances in Habersham County, where F.B.I. investigators fanned out over the hills, attempting to uncover evidence that could lead to Jewell's arrest. "The F.B.I. took his word, and what it actually did was get them both in a bunch of trouble," Mattear said. (Cleere has declined to comment.)For Richard Jewell, Tuesday, July 30, would become a haze in which his life was turned upside down. "The hours of the day ran so fast it is hard to remember what all happened," he told me. He started the day early at the Atlanta studio of the Today show. He was tired; the evening before he had had his friend Tim Attaway, a G.B.I. agent, for dinner. He had made lasagna and had drawn Attaway a diagram of the sound-and-light tower. Jewell had talked into the night about the bombing; only later would he learn that Attaway was wearing a wire.Despite the late evening, Jewell was excited at the thought of meeting Katie Couric and being interviewed about finding the Alice pack in the park. His mother asked him to try to get Tom Brokaw's autograph. "He was a man my mom respected a great deal," he said.When he got back to the apartment, he was surprised to see a cluster of reporters in the parking lot. "Do you think you are a suspect?" one asked. Jewell laughed. "I know they'll investigate anyone who was at the park that night," he said. "That includes you-all too." Jewell did not turn on the TV, but he noticed that the group outside the door continued to grow. At four that afternoon, Jewell received a phone call from Anthony Davis, the head of the security company Jewell worked for at AT&T. "Have you seen the news?" Davis asked. "They are saying you are a suspect." Jewell said, "They are talking to everybody." According to Jewell, Davis said, "They are zeroing in on you. To keep the publicity down, don't go to work."Within minutes, Don Johnson and Diader Rosario knocked on Jewell's door. They exuded sincerity, Jewell recalled. "They told me they wanted me to come with them to headquarters to help them make a training film to be used at Quantico," he said. Johnson played to Jewell's pride. Despite the reporters in the parking lot and the call from Anthony Davis, Jewell had no doubt that they were telling the truth. He drove the short distance to F.B.I. headquarters in Buckhead in his own truck, but he noticed that four cars were following him. "The press is on us," Jewell told Johnson when they arrived. "No, those are our guys," Johnson told him. This tactic would continue through the next 88 days and be severely criticized: Why would you have an armada of surveillance vehicles stacked up on a suspected bomber?It was then that Jewell started to wonder why he was at the F.B.I., but he followed Johnson and Rosario inside. Rosario was known for his skills as a negotiator; he had once helped calm a riot of Cuban prisoners in Atlanta. Johnson, however, had a reputation for overreaching. In Albany, New York, in 1987, he had pursued an investigation of then mayor Thomas Whalen. According to Whalen, the local U.S. attorney found no evidence to support Johnson's assertions and issued a letter to Whalen exonerating him completely, but Whalen believed it cost him an appointment as a federal judge.As Jewell sat in a small office, he wondered why the cameraman recording the interview was staring at him so intently. After an hour, Johnson was called out of the room. When he returned, he said to Jewell, "Let's pretend that none of this happened. You are going to come in and start over, and by the way, we want you to fill out this waiver of rights.""At that moment a million things were going through my head," Jewell told me. "You don't give anyone a waiver of rights unless they are being investigated. I said, 'I need to contact my attorney,' and then all of a sudden it was an instant change. 'What do you need to contact your attorney for? You didn't do anything. We thought you were a hero. Is there something you want to tell us about?'" Jewell grew increasingly apprehensive and later recalled thinking, These guys think I did this.When the agents took a break, Jewell asked to use the phone. "I called Watson four times. I called his brother. I told his parents that I had to get hold of Watson—it was urgent. I was, like, 'I have to speak to him right now.' What was going on was that Washington was on the phone with Atlanta. The people in Washington were giving them questions." Jewell said he knew this because the videotapes in the cameras were two hours long and "Johnson and Rosario would leave every 30 minutes, like they had to speak on the phone." The O.RR. report, however, would assert that no one at headquarters knew about the videotaping or the training-film ruse. Lying to get a statement out of a suspect is, in fact, not illegal, but clearly Johnson and Rosario were not making decisions on their own. Even the procedure of having a fleet of cars follow a suspect was an intimidation tactic used by the F.B.I. Later, according to Jewell, Johnson and Rosario would both tell him privately that they believed he was innocent, but that the investigation was being run by the "highest levels in Washington."Within the bureau, the belief is that during one of the telephone calls Freeh instructed Johnson and Rosario to read Jewell his Miranda rights. Freeh is said to have learned of Johnson's history from a member of his security detail, who had worked in Atlanta. He told Freeh that "Johnson had a reputation for being obnoxious and a problem." In addition, a week after Jewell's interview, Freeh reportedly received a call from Janet Reno, who had learned about the ruse from Kent Alexander, the local U.S. attorney, and Deputy Attorney General Jamie Gorelick. Freeh wondered aloud how it was that, of all the agents in Atlanta, Johnson had been selected to work on the Jewell case. Like Jewell, Johnson had wound up in Atlanta because of his overzealous behavior—according to an F.B.I. source, the Whalen episode had resulted in a "loss-of-effectiveness transfer," an F.B.I. euphemism. (Johnson declined to respond.)On that same Tuesday, Watson Bryant and Nadya Light closed the office early and went to Centennial Park. Light, 35, a pretty Russian immigrant, had never met Radar, Bryant's old friend, and wanted to buy him a celebratory meal. Killing time until Jewell came on duty, they went into the House of Blues and then bought some hot sauce. Walking toward his car, Bryant saw newsboys hawking the afternoon edition of The Atlanta Journal-Constitution. "It was like out of a cartoon. They were all yelling!" he recalled. "I caught the headline out of the corner of my eye." The headline read: FBI SUSPECTS 'HERO' GUARD MAY HAVE PLANTED BOMB.Bryant borrowed 50 cents from Light to buy the paper and began to read: '"Richard Jewell, 33 . . . fits the profile of the lone bomber.' I could not believe it."At that moment, Bryant's brother, Bruce, who was on his way to the diving competition, got a call from Jewell. "Where is Watson?" As Bruce Bryant walked past a Speedo billboard with a TV screen, he saw Richard Jewell's face filling the screen. "Oh, my God," he said to his wife. At the same moment, Watson was in his car a block away on Northside Drive when he too noticed the Speedo screen. He could not get back to his house—the streets were blocked off for the cycling competition. From his car he called F.B.I. headquarters and demanded to speak to Jewell. "He is not here," the operator said. From his home phone, he picked up his messages and heard Jewell's low, urgent tones. "He didn't leave a number," Bryant told Light. "Call Star 69," she said. The number came back: 679-9000, the number for F.B.I. headquarters, which he had just dialed. Within minutes, Bryant had Jewell on the phone. Jewell told him he was making a training film. "You idiot! You are a suspect. Get your ass out of there now!" Bryant told him.Before The Atlanta Journal-Constitution broke the story of Richard Jewell, there had been a debate in the newsroom over whether or not to name him. One block away, CNN's Art Harris and Henry Schuster had alerted the network's president that Jewell was targeted, but they held the story, because they understood its potential magnitude. At The A.J.C., Kathy Scruggs, a police reporter, who had allegedly gotten a tip from a close friend in the F.B.I., got a confirmation from someone in the Atlanta police. According to the managing editor, John Walter, the first edition of the paper that Tuesday had a brief profile of Jewell. It was dropped in later editions as Walter questioned whether the paper had enough facts to support the scoop. Because of the voice-of-God style, the paper ended up making a flat-out statement: "Richard Jewell . . . fits the profile of the lone bomber."When I asked John Walter about the lone-bomber sentence, he said, "I ultimately edited it. . . . One of the tests we put to the material is, is it a verifiable fact?" One editor added, "The whole story is voice-of-God. . . . Because we see this event taking place, the need to attribute it to sources—F.B.I. or law enforcement—is less than if there is no public acknowledgment." John Walter indicated that he had not seen a lone-bomber profile. I asked him, "Whose profile of a lone bomber does Richard Jewell fit? Where is the 'says who' in this sentence?" Walter said that he felt comfortable with the assertion.The page-one story had a double byline: Kathy Scruggs and Ron Martz. Walter had told these two early on that they would be the reporters assigned to any Olympic catastrophe. Martz, who had covered the Gulf War, had been assigned the security beat for the Olympics; Scruggs routinely covered local crime. Scruggs had good contacts in the Atlanta police, and she was tough. She was characterized as "a police groupie" by one former staff member. "Kathy has a hard edge that some people find offensive," one of her editors told me, but he praised her skills. Police reporters are often "dictation pads" for local law enforcement; recently the American Journalism Review sharply criticized The A.J. C. for the scanty confirmation and lack of skepticism in its coverage of Jewell.The newsroom atmosphere resembled that at F.B.I. headquarters; there was a frenzy to be first. Kent Walker, a newsroom intern, published a story in the same edition, with a glaring mistake in the headline: BOMB SUSPECT HAD SOUGHT LIMELIGHT, PRESS INTERVIEWS. Since Ray Cleere's tip to the F.B.I., the "hero bomber" theory had been circulating among Atlanta law enforcement officers. Maria Elena Fernandez, a reporter, was sent to Habersham County on July 29. By coincidence, William Rathburn, the head of security for the Olympics, had been at the Los Angeles Olympics in 1984 when a fake bomb was found on a bus—left by a policeman who sought attention.On the surface, the story had an irresistible newsroom logic: Jewell was clearly looking for recognition. Bert Roughton, the city editor, had answered the telephone when a representative from AT&T called to ask if the paper would like a Jewell interview. According to Walter, Roughton himself typed a sentence in the Scruggs-and-Martz piece: "He [Jewell] also has approached newspapers, including The Atlanta JournalConstitution, seeking publicity for his actions." But he hadn't. Walter explained, "There was nothing wrong with that sentence. That's journalistically proper. It is not common practice, to my knowledge, to ask someone you are interviewing . . . 'Are you here of your own free will?'" Jewell had not contacted the paper—a fact which would have been easy enough to check. Walter became snappish when I described the sentence as "a mistake." "It was not a mistake," he said angrily. Scruggs and Martz quoted Piedmont College president Ray Cleere as backup. According to Cleere, Jewell had been "a little erratic" and "almost too excitable."There was no doubt raised by The A.J.C. about the value of Cleere's information or the fragility of the F.B.I.'s potential case. On Tuesday morning, July 30, Christina Headrick, a young intern on the paper, was sent to Buford Highway to stake out Richard Jewell's apartment. She phoned in that there were men doing surveillance. By deadline, John Walter had made a decision: he would tear up the afternoon Olympics edition and lead with Jewell.Several states away, Colonel Robert Ressler was watching CNN when the A.J.C. extra edition was shown. Ressler, who was retired from the behavioral-science unit of the F.B.I., had, along with John Douglas, developed the concept of criminal-personality profiling. He was the co-author of the Crime Classification Manual, which is used by the F.B.I. He had interviewed Ted Bundy, Jeffrey Dahmer, and John Wayne Gacy, and as he watched the TV report, he was mystified. "They were talking about an F.B.I. profile of a hero bomber, and I thought, What F.B.I. profile? It rather surprised me." According to Ressler, the definition of "hero homicide"—a person looking for recognition without an intent to kill— perhaps emerged as "hero bomber." "There is no such classification as the hero bomber," he told me recently. "This was a myth." Later he said, "It occurred to me that there was no database of any bomber who lived with his mother, was a security guard and unmarried. How many hero bombers had we ever encountered? Only one that I know of, in Los Angeles, and his bomb did not go off." Ressler knew that something was off; profiles are developed from a complex set of evidence and facts derived only in part from a crime scene. The bomb had been deadly, which was not consistent with the "hero complex." Furthermore, he wondered, where did they get the information to put the profile together that fast? He asked himself, What came first here, the chicken or the egg? Was the so-called profile actually developed from the circumstances, or was it invented for Richard Jewell?When Jewell returned home from F.B.I. headquarters just before eight P.M., NBC was showing special Olympic coverage. He sat on the sofa and watched Tom Brokaw say, "They probably have enough to arrest him right now, probably enough to prosecute him, but you always want to have enough to convict him as well. There are still holes in this case."Jewell knew that Brokaw was his mother's favorite newsman; he looked at her and noticed "the color and the blood flow out of her face when she heard that." Bobi turned to him and asked, "What is he talking about?" Jewell later recalled, "Brokaw was talking about her son as a murderer. . . . She started crying, and what am I going to say to her? 'Mom, Watson is going to fix this'? What do you say? She doesn't hear anything anyway—she was in hysterics." At that point, Jewell said, he broke down as well.The day Watson Bryant inadvertently became the lead lawyer for Richard Jewell, he was an attorney whom almost no one in the Atlanta legal establishment had ever heard of. "Who the hell is Watson Bryant?" a caption in the daily legal sheet, the Fulton County Daily Report, would read after he had appeared on the Today show. Bryant understood Jewell's vulnerability and decided on a strategy: he would treat him as a member of his own family. In Atlanta, the Bryants were a clan: Watson's father, Goble Bryant, had been a West Point tackle, on the 1949 college all-star team; his grandfather had invented a process for putting handles on paper bags. Watson had partied through Vanderbilt University and had barely gotten accepted to law school at the University of South Carolina. He had a close relationship with his brother, Bruce, and their sister, Barbara Ann, and if he lacked staff at his office, he knew he could count on his family to pick up the slack. Bruce enlisted Jewell to help coach his junior football team; Watson had a picnic for Richard and Bobi at his parents' house at the Atlanta Country Club.When Bryant arrived at the Jewells' apartment that night, he pushed his way through the crowd standing outside in the spongy Atlanta humidity. Microphones were shoved in his face. "What is happening, Watson?" Bobi asked him. Bryant asked Jewell to speak to him alone. "I want to know if you can tell me, without any hesitation at all, if you had anything to do with the bombing," he said. "I didn't," Jewell told him. "I said, 'I am going to ask you again.' He would not look me in the eye. I said, 'Don't give me this "sir" shit.' I said, 'Richard, these people want to kill you. I cannot help you unless you tell me the absolute, unequivocal truth.' I was in his face. He said he did not have anything to do with it." Jewell was bewildered and numb, said Bryant, who left at 10:30 P.M. At midnight, Jewell called him to say, "They are massing outside the apartment, Watson."The next morning, Bryant went from talk show to talk show, starting with NBC. With the notable exception of The New York Times, virtually every newspaper in the country had picked up the A.J.C. story and run it as front-page news. There were 10,000 reporters in Atlanta; the Los Angeles Times would later call the squad bearing down on the Jewells "a massive strike force . . . Tora! Tora! Tora!" Bryant was in a daze, but he held his own. "Is it true that Jewell was at some time ordered to seek psychological counseling?" Bryant Gumbel asked him. "I know a lot of people that ought to have psychological counseling," Watson Bryant replied.By 10 A.M. he was back at the Jewells' apartment, studying a search warrant that had been delivered that day. The F.B.I., Jewell recalled, said that he could not be inside the apartment during the search. Bryant called F.B.I. headquarters: "What the hell is this? Why can't he be there?" Within an hour, at least 40 members of the F.B.I. had arrived, with dogs. "There was a physical-evidence team. There was a scientific team. There was a team for the bomb-squad people, and then the A.T.F. . . . They all had different-color shirts. Light blue for bombs, dark blue for evidence protection, red and yellow." Bryant could not believe what he was seeing. "This is like damn Six Flags over Georgia," he told them."I kept saying to Watson, 'I didn't do this.' And he said, 'Hey, kid, I believe you—we are doing what we can.'" Jewell was a gun collector. Bryant was sharp with him: "You get all those guns out of your closets and put them on your bed. We don't want any trouble."For seven hours, Jewell sat outside on the staircase in what has become one of the most famous images of last summer. Bryant had to take his daughter, Meredith, to the Olympic equestrian competition, a once-in-a-lifetime opportunity for her. As he left, he said, "Don't do anything stupid. Just shut up and let them do what they have to do." Hours passed as Jewell sat in the heat. "Finally I decided I would ask them if I could go in and use the rest room. They said, 'We got the order a couple of hours ago you could come in; you just can't get in our way.'" Jewell was told he had to wear rubber socks and gloves in order not to contaminate the site. The Jewell apartment is small—two bedrooms with a bathroom in between, a living room, an alcove dining room that has been turned into a den. As Jewell sat on the sofa, he thought he heard a crash in his bedroom. "I thought my CD player was on the floor, and I said, 'What are you-all tearing up?' and they said, 'You can't go in there right now; we are searching.' I said, 'I want to know what you-all just broke.'" One search warrant listed some 200 items the F.B.I. could confiscate, including "magazines, books . . . and photographs which would include descriptive information such as telephone numbers, addresses, affiliations and contact points of individuals involved in a conspiracy to manufacture, transport and . . . detonate . . . the explosive device used in the bombing at the Olympic Centennial Park on July 27, 1996.""They had all my pictures, all the stuff that was in the drawers. My personal things. How would you like to know that 12 different guys had been in your underwear, laid it out on the floor, probably walked on it and then folded it back up like nothing ever happened and put it in your drawer? So then Mom got to go and watch it on TV: 'Live from the Jewell house, the search continues. . . . We are expecting an arrest any minute.'"When Bobi Jewell returned home, the apartment appeared neat, until she walked into her kitchen. She looked down at her counters, where all her condiments, dog biscuits, spices, and crackers had been taken out of their Tupperware containers and placed in Ziploc bags. She began to cry. And then she went into the bedroom and "immediately started washing clothes," Jewell said.Driving home from the equestrian events, Bryant heard the live coverage of the search on the radio. "Why are you helping this guy if he's guilty?" Meredith asked.The next morning, Bryant received a copy of the F.B.I. inventory of articles confiscated in the apartment. On the list he was stunned to see "one hollowed-out hand grenade, ball-shaped" and "one hollowed-out hand grenade, pinecone-shaped." "What the hell is this?" he asked Jewell. "They were paperweights," Jewell said. "I bought them at a military store." "Oh, shit," Bryant said.For the first few days, the Jewells lived on ham omelettes; a neighbor had brought them half a ham from the Honey Baked Ham Company on Buford Highway. Bobi Jewell had a vacation scheduled, so she remained at home, lying on the bed and "listening to the ball game if it was on." For two weeks, she cleaned out her bureau drawers. Richard would spend the day watching CNN or movies such as Backdraft and Midnight Run. "I would look out the window and see about 150 to 200 press people. Then it would drop to five or six on the hill. They had one person sitting up there at all times with their binoculars." Richard believed they were being monitored. "They heard everything that was going on. They were over there with high-intensity zoom lenses. They had people over there who could read lips. They had a sound dish. They could hear everything that we said. They had a person writing down everything we said. I saw them."When Bobi walked out the door, Jewell said, they would holler obscenities and yell, 'You should both die'Once, Bobi's cat jumped on the window ledge under the curtain and the photographers began frenetically shooting pictures, believing that one of the Jewells was in the window. Sound trucks and boom microphones prevented the neighbors from getting near the apartment. Three F.B.I. agents were usually sitting near the tiny swimming pool; each time Jewell or his mother left the house, a cavalcade of unmarked cars would follow. Richard soon began to write a speech describing the horror he felt at being falsely accused. He ate grilled-cheese sandwiches, huge pans of lasagna, and can after can of Campbell's tomato soup."If my mom and I had something we wanted to talk about that we didn't want anyone to hear, we wrote it on pieces of paper. When she left to go to work the next day, she would take it with her, tear it up, and put it in the trash! That is how I kept my mother informed about what was going on with the case." The notes were specific: "What the Justice Department was saying, what my attorneys were hearing through the grapevine that I could tell my mom that was not privileged. It was mainly stuff like 'Keep the faith' and 'Can I borrow $10 for gas in the truck?' "Jewell described how, when his mother would walk out the door, "they would holler obscenities at her. They would yell, 'Did he do it? Did he blow those people up?' They would yell, 'You should both die.'" According to Jewell, "The cameramen were just trying to get us aggravated so they could get it on camera. You don't know how hard it is when they are saying stuff about my mother and me. . . . All she was trying to do was walk her dog. And she cannot do that without hearing that yelling. When someone did that to my mother, I would want to be up on the hill calling the police, because I would want them arrested. I was going to say, 'Mom, tell me which one said that!' And I was going to walk up to that person and introduce myself and say, 'Hi, my name is Richard Jewell. What is yours? Who do you work for? Who is your supervisor?' And I was going to go home and call 911 to get a warrant."By disposition, Jewell is a night person, but he would get up early when his mother went back to work and make her breakfast. By 11 A.M. he would be playing Mortal Kombat II and listening to 96 Rock on the radio, where one of his friends is a disc jockey. Four days into his period of captivity, he called the DeKalb County police. He recalled telling a Mr. Brown, "'This is Richard Jewell. I am sure you are aware of my situation over on Buford Highway.' He said, 'Yes, Richard, I know.' I said, 'I just want to tell you my situation. Number one: I did not do this. Number two: I am here and I am not leaving the apartment for any reason at all.' I said that all the press was doing right now was aggravating my mother and disturbing my neighbors, and I would really appreciate it if the neighbors could return to a normal life."On Saturday, August 3, as Bryant stared at the F.B.I. agent plucking Jewell's hair, he had already made a decision. "It was, like, screw it. I had had it." The next day was the closing ceremony of the Olympics; Bryant imagined that that would be the day the government might choose to arrest Jewell. "Who is the best criminal lawyer in Georgia?" he asked a state lawyers' association. Within a day, he had brought in Jack Martin, an expert on the federal death penalty and a Harvard law school graduate with close ties to the local U.S. attorney, Kent Alexander. "Let me tell you something about myself," Jewell told him in their first meeting. "I hate criminal lawyers." "Well, Richard," Martin said, "I don't much like cops, but sometimes I need one, and this is a time you sure need a criminal lawyer."That weekend, watching the Olympic basketball finals, Bryant had an idea: he wanted to be prepared with his own polygraph test of Jewell if the F.B.I. arrested him. From the game, Bryant called a close friend who was a former federal prosecutor. "Try Richard Rackleff," he said. "We worked together on the Walter Moody bombing case." Rackleff had recently set up a private practice, and he agreed to test Jewell the next day. On Sunday morning, Bryant was up early, unable to sleep. He drove around town, making calls from his cell phone. He dialed 679-9000—the F.B.I. "This is Watson Bryant. I am going to pick up Richard Jewell. I just want you to know that. I don't have a white Bronco. I don't have a wig, and I don't have cash in my car. We are just going to my office."Watson had coordinated an elaborate plan with his brother to dodge reporters; he would use a decoy and snake through a parking garage. Rackleff had been instructed to park blocks from Bryant's office, because his car could be identified easily, since he was well known in Atlanta law enforcement.When Rackleff sat down with Richard Jewell in the conference room, he later told me, he sensed almost immediately that Jewell was innocent. Rackleff had tested many bombers before, including Walter Moody, who was convicted of killing a federal judge. "They are strange ducks—they leave their attorneys cold," Rackleff said. Although no one knew Rackleff was in the building, more than 100 reporters gathered outside to get a look at Jewell. Inside, Jack Martin, Bryant, Nadya Light, and Jewell spent 12 hours in Bryant's office. Rackleff asked Jewell a series of questions, but the test was inconclusive. "Richard is tormented. He is exploding on the inside," Rackleff said. While he was testing him, CNN's Art Harris was visible through the window of Bryant's office, but he could not see inside. Bryant was thoroughly deflated, close to despair. "You have got to try to buck Richard up," Rackleff told him. "Who is going to buck me up?" Bryant asked.'We are not in missile range of arresting Richard Jewell, but we want him to take our own polygraph," Kent Alexander told Bryant and Jack Martin in their first meeting on the case. In the meantime, Rackleff had tested Jewell again, and he had passed with "no deception," the highest rating. By this time, it was clear that there was no damning evidence against Jewell discovered at the apartment or in his old house in Habersham County.Alexander was only 38, but he had been groomed for politics in a fancy local family. His father was a senior partner in a good Atlanta law firm, and he had worked as an intern for Senator Sam Nunn. Bryant worried about Alexander's lack of experience, but Alexander told colleagues that he was disturbed by the lack of substantial evidence against Jewell. He was trying to operate with decency, but he was cautious and had to check every detail with Washington.Bryant, however, didn't trust Alexander; he had had a bad experience with Alexander's predecessor. In 1990, Bryant had almost been put out of business in a tussle with the then U.S. attorney. The local Small Business Administration accused a bank Bryant represented of improper use of funds; the bank blamed Bryant, who was brought before a grand jury and over the next two years almost lost his practice. He spent $50,000 defending himself, and Nadya Light had to take another job, but eventually the case was settled with Bryant's agreeing not to do business with the S.B.A. for 18 months. Bryant had always felt that he had been manhandled by the office. "I learned everything I needed to know about dealing with this office in 1990," Bryant recalled telling Alexander. "No polygraph for Richard."At the meeting, Alexander told Bryant and Martin, "This is all off-the-record. This is a request that is strictly confidential." Weeks later, Louis Freeh came to town to address a breakfast of former F.B.I. agents. Almost immediately, the polygraph request was reported on CNN. "Kent, I thought we had an agreement," Bryant told him. "I cannot control Washington," Alexander said.When two of the bomb-blast victims sued Richard Jewell, Bryant brought in Wood and Grant to handle the civil litigation. Martin opposed the move. He believed in the cone of silence: "Circle the wagons and don't speak." He said that Wood and Grant had a different perspective: Attack, attack, and if you give any quarter, it is a sign of weakness. Martin had been reassured in private by Kent Alexander that Jewell was not in any immediate danger of being arrested, but the team disagreed about press tactics. Martin worked through the Atlanta-establishment back channels; Lin Wood was a rhetoric man. He favored "one big newsbreak a week." "You know who wrote the book Masters of Deceit? J. Edgar Hoover! And that was about the Communist Party in America. So now they have gone from masters of investigation to masters of deceit!" he would routinely tell reporters who called.Three days after Wood and Grant surfaced as the two new civil lawyers, a Ford van with a tinted bubble-shaped window appeared on the top level of the Macy's parking garage which faced the conference-room windows of their offices. According to Wood, the van did not move for 10 days. "We used to sit there and wave at it." Then the lawyers placed a camera in the window, and the next day the vehicle was gone. "For sure that van had laser sound-detecting equipment," Wood said.Jewell was annoyed that press descriptions of him always emphasized his "overzealousness"; he considers himself a man of details. Often, when he's watching movies at home, he freeze-frames in order to study props in scenes. The second weekend he was considered a suspect, he told me, "I walked in and I noticed white powder all over the telephone table in the conference room." It was a Saturday morning, and Jewell had been with his lawyers until late the night before. He told me he was convinced that the F.B.I. "had lifted a ceiling tile," and that the white powder was "dust that came down." Bryant and Jewell made light of it and did not sweep their phones, believing that any tap the F.B.I. would use would be of a laser or satellite variety and impossible to trace. "In the beginning of every conversation, Watson would curse for about a minute and tell them what lowlives they were. And then he would say, 'By the way, this is Richard's lawyer. Y'all can cut your tape players off,"' Jewell said. "I would call them dirty scumbags," said Bryant. But the local U.S. attorney, Kent Alexander, insisted that their phones were not tapped. "There are no wiretap warrants," he said.The F.B.I. did turn up one bit of potentially troublesome evidence in the Jewells' apartment—fragments of a fence that had been blown up in the explosion. After a telephone conversation with Watson Bryant, Kathy Scruggs quoted him saying, "Yes, he did have a sample of the blown-up bomb." Bryant accused her of egregiously misquoting him. He remembered saying to her, "Yes, Richard had souvenirs of the bombing." Scruggs had not taped their conversation. "She cut the 'ing' off of 'bomb,'" Bryant later told me, but Scruggs strongly denies this. The day the story broke, Bryant criticized Scruggs on local radio. That afternoon she appeared at his office to attempt to clear up the misunderstanding. "I don't like your reporting," Bryant recalled telling her. "I'm human, too," she said. The next day, Ron Martz inserted a quote from Bryant in an unrelated news story: "Oh, man, it's not even a scrap of the bomb—it's a piece of damned fence, for God's sake." But the quote would have little impact. Scruggs's version had been picked up; gathering force, it was eventually related by Bill Press on Crossfire on the evening of October 28: "The guy was seen with a homemade bomb at his home a few days before." (The next day CNN would be forced to apologize for the mistake.)By this time Bryant had grown enraged by the media coverage. The New York Post had called Jewell "a Village Rambo" and "a fat, failed former sheriff's deputy." Jay Leno had said that Jewell "had a scary resemblance to the guy who whacked Nancy Kerrigan," and asked, "What is it about the Olympic Games that brings out big fat stupid guys?" The A.J. C. s star columnist, Dave Kindred, had compared Jewell to serial murderer Wayne Williams: "Like this one, that suspect was drawn to the blue lights and sirens of police work. Like this one, he became famous in the aftermath of murder."Television journalism was also a revelation to Bryant; he felt he had "landed on Mars," and spent hours channel-surfing. On CNN, one criminologist said "it was possible" that Jewell had a hero complex. Bryant told his brother, Bruce, "I know I am going to sue someone. I just don't know who." Bruce Bryant searched for Jewell's name on the Internet three weeks into his ordeal and found 10,000 stories. The tone many of the journalists took was accusatory and pre-determined, with a few rare exceptions, such as that of CBS correspondent Jim Stewart. "Don't jump to any conclusion yet," he said sharply in a broadcast at the height of the frenzy.In his first week as Jewell's lawyer, Bryant went to the CNN studio to be interviewed by Larry King. After the broadcast, he was asked to stop in at the office of CNN president Tom Johnson. "They wanted to know what I thought of their reporting so far." Art Harris was in the room. "I turned around and I said to Art Harris, 'Who the hell are you and the rest of the media to make fun of how Richard Jewell and his mother live? Who are you to make fun of working people who live in a $470-a-month apartment? Is there something wrong with that? Who are you to say that he is a weirdo because he lives with his mother?' "According to Jack Martin, the F.B.I. spent weeks on one erroneous early theory—that Richard Jewell was an enraged homosexual cop-hater who had been aided in the bombing by his lover. Jewell had purportedly planted the bomb; the lover then made the 911 phone call warning that it would go off in Centennial Park. The rationale behind this idea was that Jewell was "mad at the cops and wanted to kill other cops," Martin told me.The rumor began at Piedmont College, perhaps invented by several of the students Jewell had turned in for smoking pot, but it had a chilling consequence. In mid-August, three agents appeared at the Curtis Mathes video store in Cornelia, where Chris Simmons, a senior at Piedmont, worked part-time. Simmons, a friend of Jewell's, who was engaged to be married, was a B student, but he displayed the same porcine blankness as Jewell and spoke in a slow drawl. He had a deep distrust of the government and carried a card in his pocket that read: CHRISTOPHER DWAYNE SIMMONS-CAMPAIGN SUPPORT FOR CONSERVATIVE CANDIDATES.The agents questioned Simmons in the store for one and a half hours. "They asked me if I was a homosexual. They asked me if I had accessed the Internet. . . . They later wanted to wire me. They said, 'If he is really a hero, we will find out, and if not, he has killed someone and injured a lot of people.' " Simmons was short with the agents and denied everything. They accused him of lying and said they could take him to Atlanta. The agents told someone Simmons had once worked with that Simmons might be involved in the bombing. "They kept wording questions differently. They kept saying: Do you think Richard Jewell could have done this if he believed that he could get people out in time and nobody would get hurt?" Simmons later called one of the F.B.I. agents and said, "I hear you don't believe my story." He recalled their conversation: " 'I think you are sugarcoating your answers,' he said. I said, 'Next time I talk with you, it will be with a lawyer.' And he asked me if I was threatening him. Then he hung up on me." Ultimately, Simmons volunteered to take a polygraph, which he says he passed. "I was a nervous wreck," he said. "I had only seen this on TV."What was not known outside a small circle of investigators was how deadly the Centennial Park bomb really was. It was well constructed, with a piece of metal shaped like a V, and inside, it had canisters filled with nails and screws. Jack Martin, who had spent time in Vietnam, compared its construction to that of a claymore mine, a sophisticated and lethal device. The bomb weighed more than 40 pounds. It was "a shaped charge," F.B.I. deputy director Weldon Kennedy would announce in December. It could blast out fragments from three separate canisters, but only one of the canisters exploded on July 27. Someone had moved the Alice pack slightly before the bomb detonated, causing most of the shrapnel to shoot into the sky. The composition of the bomb did not suggest the work of an amateur, Kathy Scruggs would ironically later report, after interviewing an A.T.F. chemist.As the weeks went by, Richard Jewell withdrew into a state of psychological limbo; he began to try to analyze what the agents might think of his behavior within the small apartment. "I would be watching a spy show on TV or something like a John Wayne movie. Someone would be talking about blowing something up, and I would think to myself, My God, that is going to sound really bad if they think I am listening to that." He worried that "they would think I was some kind of a nut," and often, when he could not sleep, he would find himself consciously switching to exercise videos and soap operas.Over Labor Day weekend, he drove up to Habersham County for a picnic with his ex-girlfriend's family, the Chastains. As usual, three F.B.I. cars followed him, but he had gotten adept at picking out the unmarked vehicles. As Jewell drove into town, he noticed that white ribbons hung from hundreds of trees; the Chastains had organized a campaign in his behalf. On the way home, Jewell drove with his friend Dave Dutchess. For the first time, he did not see an F.B.I. car following him, but he noticed an airplane flying low overhead. He drove another 20 miles, and the plane was still on him. "I said, 'Dave, do you think the F.B.I. would be following us in an airplane? It wouldn't be that hard to do, if they put some kind of beeper on the car.'" The plane followed them through Gainesville all the way to Atlanta—an hour's drive. "Just to make sure, we got off on an exit ramp and went about five miles back north. And I got out and took a picture. They followed us all the way back to the apartment! And they circled the apartment for about 15 minutes, until the F.B.I. car showed back up. I got very emotional. My cheeks got beet red. And Mom came home and said, 'What is going on? What is the matter?' It just destroyed the whole day."On September 2, Dave Dutchess and his fiancee, Beatty, were driving to their house in Tennessee. It was raining hard, and they noticed they were being followed by several F.B.I. cars. The storm grew worse, and they stopped at a hotel for the night. The next day, while getting coffee at a McDonald's, they were surrounded by F.B.I. agents. "We just want to talk to you. We are trying to be discreet." One agent, Dutchess recalled, spoke into his radio: "We have the suspect in hand." As they walked back toward their car, Dutchess said to Beatty, "They think I am his accomplice. I heard on the news they were looking for his accomplice!"After the interview, which lasted several hours, Dutchess spoke to Watson Bryant. "What did they ask you that concerns you?" Bryant asked him. "Well, I decided that I had to tell them the truth. Me and one of my friends used to set off pipe bombs for fun," Dutchess told him. "What?" Bryant exclaimed, incredulous. "Yeah, I told them we liked to throw pipe bombs down gopher holes when we lived out in West Virginia.""Did Richard know this friend?" Bryant asked apprehensively. "Hell, no. He never met him," Dutchess said, but Bryant knew that this could prolong the F.B.I.'s investigation perhaps by months. "I hung up and I was thinking, I cannot believe that I even know anyone who throws pipe bombs into gopher holes."As part of their strategy, Wood and Grant decided to mount a strong counterattack against the government. Wayne Grant had come up with the idea: Bobi Jewell should hold a press conference during the Democratic convention and make a direct plea to Bill Clinton. The day before she was to appear, Grant rehearsed her. It was difficult to work with Bobi; she was exhausted and could not stop crying. Confined under siege for almost a month, she could not see an end to it, since every day brought a new humiliation. The resident manager had threatened to take away their lease, and the manager's son was out selling pictures he took of them. A close friend from church was dying, Bobi said, and Richard could not go to see him, because of the swarm of F.B.I. agents and reporters who followed him everywhere. All of it came out in a rush in the conference room with Wayne Grant: Bobi had even had to give Bryant and Nadya Light the Olympic-basketball tickets she had won as colleague of the year, and every night she and her son were stuck together, staring at each other across the kitchen table. They were often irritable, and Richard sometimes lost his temper. "Mother, just shut up," he would tell her when she nagged him about the case. Then, Bobi later recalled, she would go into her bedroom and lie on the four-poster bed hoping that the photographers who rented an apartment across the way for $1,000 a day had no way of knowing what was going on.Grant kept careful notes on the session. Bobi was terrified about appearing in front of cameras. She sobbed and told him, "If I go on TV Monday, I'll be embarrassed. It will be, like, whenever I go anywhere, people will be looking at me: 'Did he do it or didn't he do it?' ""If you talked to the person who is in charge of the investigation, what would you say?" Grant asked her calmly. Bobi's voice was halting, but she was firm: "He is innocent. Clear his name and let us get back to a life that is normal."A few weeks later, Wayne Grant went to a party for a Bar Mitzvah, and a guest cornered him. She asked him if he had told Bobi Jewell to cry at the end of her press conference, and then added coldly, "Nice touch."The lawyers' strategy worked: after Bobi's press conference, the Jewells were deluged with interview requests. Bryant often received 100 phone calls a day. Bobi soon developed a system: letters from Oprah Winfrey, Sally Jessy Raphael, and TV producers were stacked on the console in the living room; flowers and baskets of Godiva chocolates and cheese and crackers from the networks were sent to the offices of Wood & Grant and then on to a children's hospital.At the U.S. Attorney's Office, it had become increasingly clear to Kent Alexander that something had to be done about Richard Jewell. Janet Reno had seen Bobi Jewell on TV and was moved by her sincerity. Privately, Reno and Deputy Attorney General Jamie Gorelick were said to be concerned about the heavy-handed tactics of the F.B.I. "The case had become a total embarrassment," a Justice Department official told me, but Alexander was in a complicated situation. He was working closely with the F.B.I., and there was no sign that the bureau was ready to let go, despite growing consternation among the local agents that the Washington command center had mishandled the case. And there was another problem: Alexander did not trust Lin Wood.By late September, there was a tremendous strain within the team Bryant had hastily assembled. The other lawyers accused Jack Martin of cutting private deals with his friend Kent Alexander, pulling focus, and not being tough enough. For his part, Alexander, according to Martin, admired Bryant even though he believed he was a loose cannon, but he was fed up with Lin Wood."Alexander would say something fairly candid to me, and I would report it to the attorneys, and the next day he would see it on TV," said Jack Martin. "Alexander had checked out Lin, and he knew that he was a take-no-prisoners guy." The lawyers often argued among themselves. Wood insisted on a full-blowout press-attack strategy. Bryant had mastered his sound bite: "The F.B.I. is a 500-pound gorilla who will kick the shit out of anyone." Martin wanted the lawyers to ease up on the hyperbole: "I would say, 'We do not need to do this.' And Lin would say, 'Let's go public with this.' He was manic about it." In one argument, Wood told him, "Goddamn it, Martin, you're like my ex-wives. There isn't anything you can say I won't object to."There was an atmosphere of extreme apprehension between Bryant and Jewell as they drove to F.B.I. headquarters on the afternoon of October 6. They were on their way to what would seemingly be a session with conclusional overtones, but Jewell was worried: What if this meeting was a trick? It was difficult to believe that the bureau was really ending its two-month-long investigation into his life. For weeks, Jack Martin and Bryant had been going back and forth with Kent Alexander. Finally, Jewell had agreed to an unusual suggestion: if he submitted to a lengthy voluntary interview with the bureau, and if Division 5 was satisfied, then perhaps the Justice Department could issue a letter publicly stating that he was no longer a suspect. Jewell tried to imagine the questions he would be asked. "I wanted to look at everything from their angle," he told me, "trying to assess it and reassess it in my head."On the day of Jewell's exoneration, Jay Leno apologized for having called him a Unadoofus.Kent Alexander had set a firm ground rule: Only one lawyer representing Jewell could be in the room. It had been agreed that Jack Martin, the criminal specialist, would be the man, which enraged Lin Wood. "You could really see how these guys did not like each other," Jewell said."I am not comfortable with the one-lawyer agreement," Wood told John Davis, Kent Alexander's second-in-command, when they were assembled. "We have an agreement. If you attempt to renegotiate it, I will have egg on my face," Davis said, adding, "You are not a man of your word." With that, Wood recalled, he rose from his chair and started screaming, "You are not going to say that to me, you son of a bitch!" Kent Alexander interrupted, saying, "This is deteriorating. We aim to stop this. Let's just regroup."When Jewell, Davis, and Martin finally sat down for the interview, Larry Landers, a special agent with the G.B.I., and F.B.I. special agent Bill Lewis had lists of questions with blank space for answers in front of them. On the wall of the windowless room, there were extensive aerial photographs of the park and, as a prop, an actual park bench was later brought in. Martin believed that the agents intended to resolve areas in the affidavits and other questions: Had Richard ever accessed Candyman's Candyland for information on the Anarchists' Cookbook? Had Richard picked up any pieces of pipe when the park was under construction? Had he told anyone, "Take my picture now, because I am going to be famous"? None of this had happened, Jewell said. All he could remember telling someone was that he was off to Atlanta and "going to be in that mess down there," meaning the traffic jams. They pressed him about seemingly inconsistent statements he had made on the morning of the bombing: Why had he told Agent Poor everything was normal when he checked the perimeter of the fence? Jewell explained that he had been walking the "inside of the fence." He once again explained that he had wanted to work the sound-and-light tower so that he could watch the entertainment; he had arranged for his mother to hear Kenny Rogers four days before the explosion.The area, he told Landers, was "a sweet site" and a great place to look at girls. During a break, Martin asked about all his references to women. Jewell said he wanted them to know he wasn't gay. On several occasions, Landers became annoyed: Why couldn't Jewell pin down the times? Had he seen the drunks on the bench between 10:30 and 11 or between 11 and 11:30? Why hadn't he looked at his watch? Jewell later recalled, "I said, 'I don't go through my life looking at my watch. I don't care about time. When the bomb went off, I did not look at my watch.' They were wanting to know what time I went to the bathroom and stuff like that. When you have the runs, you are not really concerned about what time it is. You are concerned with getting to the bathroom."On the day after the F.B.I. meeting, Jack Martin dictated a 27-page account of everything that had been said during the six-hour interview. In the last moments, Davis said, "he wanted to give Richard the opportunity once and for all to say that he didn't do it." Jewell, Martin wrote, "unequivocally and fortunately said that he had nothing to do with the bomb and didn't know anything about the bomb and if he did he would be the first to deliver the bastard to their door." When Martin walked out, he thought to himself, This really was a formality. They had nothing.In November a rumor swept through the newsroom of The A.J.C. that Cox newspaper executives were rethinking their news policies. According to one reporter, "The sloppiness of the Jewell reporting and the lack of sources was the last straw." A reporter named Carrie Teegardin was assigned to write a piece examining how the media spotlight was turned on Richard Jewell. In large part, her article wound up being an examination of the role of The A.J.C. After Wood and Grant threatened to sue, the article was killed. "We didn't get through the editing of it," John Walter said. "The Jewells' attorney began saying, 'We're thinking lawsuit' . . . and that made us more cautious." Meanwhile, Lin Wood and Wayne Grant were busy holding meetings with lawyers from NBC and Piedmont College. At NBC, Tom Brokaw's carelessness reportedly cost the network more than $500,000 to settle Jewell's claims, although Jewell's lawyers would not confirm a figure, BROKAW GOOFED AND NBC PAID, the New York Daily News would later headline. In talks with Ray Cleere, the figure of $450,000 by way of settlement was first suggested, then withdrawn when Piedmont College learned that it had insurance. "This will cost them millions now," Lin Wood believes.On one occasion I asked Richard Jewell if he had any theories about who might have placed the bomb. Jewell said he had popped "two or three theories off the top of my head" on the night he was interviewed by the F.B.I. "I have gone over that night hundreds of times in my head. You try to think, What type of person would do that? I know it is someone who wanted to hurt people. It is someone who is sick. I hope they find him so he can get the help he needs. Because I am totally torn up about what happened. Every day I think about it, and I will think about it for the rest of my life."Jewell often speaks with Bryant three times a day. As Jewell searches for a new job, he hangs around Bryant's office, and he recently studied handwriting analysis at the police academy. He has been offered several security jobs with Georgia companies, but he is hoping he will be hired as a Cobb County deputy. In the meantime, Bryant, Wood, and Grant have become sought-after speakers on the First Amendment.At F.B.I. headquarters in late October, Bobi Jewell broke down and cried as she identified their possessions—the Disney tapes, the Tupperware, Richard's AT&T uniforms, address books. It was a tableau of ordinary middle-class life, laid out on brown paper on a long conference-room table. "I just don't fucking believe this," Watson Bryant said angrily as he packed Bobi's videos into packing crates. "The agents tried to shake my hand," Bobi told me. "I wouldn't touch them." It took 10 hours to remove their possessions, Bobi recalled, and four minutes to return them.The F.B.I. is working on a new and elaborate theory of who did place the bomb in Centennial Park. There is an informed opinion that the backpack discovered a week earlier had in fact been a test run to check F.B.I. procedures, and that the bomber—perhaps a member of a militia group—was quite experienced and had struck before. After a torrent of criticism in the press, Louis Freeh announced that the F.B.I. had arrested Harold Nicholson, an alleged spy for Russia, and he used the opportunity to appear on the Today show and Good Morning America, hyping his role in what was a minor arrest, according to one former F.B.I. agent.In Australia in November, Bill Clinton was asked about his campaign contributions from Indonesia. "One of the things I would urge you to do, remembering what happened to Mr. Jewell in Atlanta, remembering what has happened to so many of the accusations . . . that have been made against me that turned out to be totally baseless, I just think that we ought to . . . get the facts out." When Jewell learned of his comment, he pulled up the transcript from the Internet and became angry: "The president is just using me, like everyone else."What rights does a private citizen have against the government? The legal precedent for suing the F.B.I., Bivens v. Six Unknown Agents, focuses on the behavior of individual agents. Wood believes that Jewell has a strong case against Johnson and Rosario. When Wood learned of Colonel Ressler, he hired him as a possible trial expert. In December, the F.B.I. announced that it would pay up to $500,000 to anyone who could lead it to the Olympic Park bomber.As Jewell and I drove back from Habersham County in November, he went over the early-morning hours of July 27: "I remember all of the people who were my responsibility. I remember the guys' faces who were flying through the air. I remember people screaming. The sirens going off. I don't think I will ever forget any of that. You just kind of wish sometimes. You think, Could I have done something else? . . . What if we only had five more minutes? Then maybe nobody would have been hurt. But you are what-if-ing. I have been over it a thousand times. I think we could not have done it any better. I think that is something I will always be wondering."He said he was not sure if he would ever get a job in law enforcement again, particularly since he had been held up as a cartoon figure. On the day of Jewell's exoneration, Jay Leno apologized for having called him a Unadoofus, and said, "If Jewell wins his lawsuit with NBC, he will be my new boss." He later said that this was "the greatest week in trailer-park history." The Atlanta radio station 96 Rock had put billboards of Jewell all over town; "Freebird," they said, a reference to the Lynyrd Skynyrd song. Jewell would later file suit against the station, but the billboard's message was clear. Jewell knows that for many people in America there will perhaps always be a subtle doubt: What if, after all, Richard Jewell really did do it? What if the government let him go simply because it could not make its case? Then he becomes not the innocent Richard Jewell, but the Richard Jewell who may be innocent. "You don't get back what you were originally," he told me. "I don't think I will ever get that back. The first three days, I was supposedly their hero—the person who saves lives. They don't refer to me that way anymore. Now I am the Olympic Park bombing suspect. That's the guy they thought did it. " February 1997 | Vanity Fair

 6 ) 与萨利机长握手的朱维尔 [猫]

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-光看电影介绍,就知道《理查德·朱维尔的哀歌》和克林特·伊斯特伍德之前的《萨利机长》是一模一样的叙事路线,于是观影时我就默默等待被权力阶层诬陷的“一日英雄”朱维尔最后的爆发与逆袭,剧情果然和我的猜想一致。

但萨利机长是汤姆·汉克斯饰演的中产精英,而朱维尔却是失意、志坚的白人贫民,这就使人在观影体验和内涵获取方面产生差别。

朱维尔从外貌到言谈都看起来智力不高,但善良淳朴,毫不让人讨厌,甚至可能生出几分保护欲,所以会令山姆·洛克威尔饰演的律师布莱恩特和凯西·贝茨饰演的母亲——本片演技动人的两位——深深爱惜他,观众也认同他不会是反社会的炸弹投放者,希望看到政府和媒体还他一个清白。

但朱维尔本人却是以保护他人为己任的理想青年。

电影从一开始就塑造出他相信公共权力机构、完全按章程办事、老实到死板、忠于职守的性格特质,这既是他丢掉包括警察职位在内的一系列工作的原因,也是他发现炸弹的原因,甚至是他不受某些人欢迎并遭到联邦调查局怀疑的原因之一。

这样一个人对权威机构从完全服帖到不再相信的转变过程,作为伊斯特伍德反体制思路采用的活体例证,就十分有力。

布莱恩特的立场,或许是伊斯特伍德本人的侠义牛仔派头,专业扎实,善待弱者,自由散漫,捍卫正义。

他的感情戏拍得淡而合理,女秘书一开始看不上他懒散颓废、不思进取的现状,朱维尔案唤醒他一贯反权威的斗志、保护无辜者的良知和正义感、作为普通人的生命力,而心怀正义、爱慕英雄的秘书自然爱上他,与之组建幸福家庭。

看,这依然是大男子老牛仔的思维。

另一个女性,以身体换信息的野心勃勃女记者,王尔德演来熟门熟路。

她发现如此简单就能证明朱维尔清白无辜之后,在新闻发布会留下忏悔眼泪,与其说是老牛仔的败笔,不如说是老牛仔对那种想当男人的蠢女人根深蒂固的大男子思维。

更愚蠢的当然是唯“自我”独尊的联邦调查局探员,他死揪朱维尔不放多少有点为自己在场却没发现炸弹一事找回颜面的心理。

想反,智力不高的朱维尔的独立思考能力竟被高压激活了,律师眼里的不懂事小孩子,忽然不再“为体制着想”,能够理直气壮为自己着想,走出那个禁锢他思想的房间。

至此,在《萨利机长》之后,将匕首投向更为广目标——政府机构和全媒体——的老牛仔,也完成了他的又一次政治呼吁。

 7 ) 善良是伤害自己的最好武器

Watson生气的对Jewell说,这些破事怎么就不会让你像我这样气急败坏。

Jewell当然生气,甚至不会有人比他更生气,但他就是不会将气愤表现出来。

他两次捂住胸口甚至都没人看见,导演用片尾字幕44岁死于心脏病轻描淡写的呼应,更让他的人生令人扼腕。

Richard Jewell是个好人,彻头彻尾的好人,但人好的太彻底,就变成了烂好人。

而烂好人的最大特点就是替一切人着想,对一切人解释一切人的行为原因。

他向来抄家的警察解释东西的用处,引来Watson的白眼;对母亲解释FBI行为的原因,遭到母亲的呵斥;甚至在因电视音量过大和母亲争执,导致母亲走到厕所哭泣的时候,还要和其他人解释,母亲哭泣的原因。

他在自己糟透了的情况下,还在为让一切人能更好的理解眼前的事物而操心。

最让人窒息的不是黑暗,而是身处黑暗中的无力感。

母亲哭着从厕所出来,不是埋怨儿子对自己大小声,而是哭诉自己不知道怎么从这些人中保护儿子。

这是无能为力的绝望。

Kathy原本是个很有张力的角色,但没有设置好。

她转变的有些生硬,前期太过强硬和不择手段,后期又突然变得怜悯和多愁善感。

其实对于记者来说,第一手资料相当重要,当她得知FBI的调查对象时候,马上惊呼对就是他,我怎么没想到。

是因为的确Jewell的一切背景资料太像会这样做的人。

记者的第一职责就是报道真相。

所以她的问题不在于是否报道,而在于她如何认定真相。

她用逻辑可能推导真相属于判断能力的范畴,这和单纯的为了出名而捏造事实是不同的。

因此如果前期少些张扬,后期省去眼泪。

会让人减少一些恶的既定印象。

我觉得这样更好是因为,对比于因恶而受害,因主观非恶而造成重大伤害,更值得我们思考。

更能让人们在做出判断前更加谨慎。

在给Jewell送将他剔除出调查对象的通知时,Shaw警官依然认为Jewell就是罪犯。

他为什么这么认定?

我的感觉,是他将Jewell是调查对象透露出去的,这是严重违纪的事情。

因此在他的心理判定上,只要将罪行坐实,Jewell就是罪犯。

他还能自我安慰,我至少透露出去的是事实。

但如果不是,那他不单是泄密,还是错的。

他可能接受不了。

因此原本应该不带任何倾向性的调查,变成了想方法坐实罪行。

所以就这么一次天雷勾地火的冲动,就让一个可能原本非恶的记者,和原本可能非恶的警察,变成了恶的最大推手。

结尾,启动调查88天后,Richard Jewell被排除出调查名单,并在6年后彻底洗清。

但依然让人耿耿于怀。

并非只是他的英年早逝。

还有就是,Who Cares?

对所有人来说Richard Jewell就是一个三十多岁了还和母亲住在一起的肥宅保安。

是茶余饭后的谈资,而对于他被打得稀烂的生活,有谁在乎吗。

花絮:1.Bobbi Jewell要求将Kenny Rogers的音乐会包含在电影中,她是他的忠实粉丝。

2.影片中音乐会和爆炸现场的拍摄地点,就是当时的亚特兰大百年奥林匹克公园的原始事件地点。

3.Paul Walter Hauser为了这个角色增重25磅。

4.剧本的素材来源包括一本叫《嫌疑人》(The Suspect)的书,是由时任佐治亚州北部地区美国检察官肯特·亚历山大 (Kent Alexander) 和1990年代《华尔街日报》(Wall Street Journal) 驻亚特兰大编辑凯文·萨尔文 (Kevin Salwen) 撰写的。

记者 Kathy Scruggs 从未透露过她的消息来源。

但《嫌疑人》中指向的是首席联邦调查局特工唐·约翰逊(Don Johnson)。

在电影中,首席联邦调查局特工汤姆·肖(Tom Shaw)是虚构的名字。

5.Leonardo DiCaprio和Jonah Hill曾在某个时间点作为Watson和Richard的扮演者进入计划,但最终未能成型。

不过他俩依然都是本片的执行制片。

6.爆炸后电视采访中的Richard Jewell是现实的Richard Jewell,只是声音被Paul Walter Hauser的所取代。

7.本片因描写Kathy Scruggs是通过性服务以换取情报而备受指责。

现实中,没有证据表明她这么做了。

8.现实中,记者Kathy Scruggs一直与抑郁症与成瘾症作斗争,她于2001年因药物过量去世。

 8 ) 他只当了三天英雄,却花了三个月时间自证清白

1996年七月二十七日凌晨,成千上万的人群聚集在奥林匹克世纪公园的中广场,他们正随着歌声狂热地舞动着身躯,谁也没留意到一个不起眼的双肩包被一双罪恶的手塞进了人群后方的凳子下面。

一名保安在驱逐几名闹事的小年轻时留意到了这个无人问津的背包,出于职业敏感,他立刻通知了同事,经过专家鉴定,包里竟然被塞满了炸弹,安保人员立即疏散人群,就在这时,一声震耳欲聋的爆破声响彻天际——这是发生在亚特兰大奥运会期间一桩震惊社会的爆炸案,这名保安的名字叫做理查德朱维尔,事后,他从一个默默无闻的人一跃变成无人不知的英雄,然而,三天后,他却被列为爆炸案的嫌疑人....1997年2月,作家玛丽布伦纳根据这个事件创作并发表了《美国噩梦:理查德朱维尔》。

2019年12月,美国著名导演克林特伊斯特伍德又将这个事件改编为了电影。

这部时长129分钟的电影讲述了理查德朱维尔从英雄沦为嫌疑犯再到洗清嫌疑沉冤得雪的过程。

整个故事叙述得平静克制,配乐也仅仅用了几段柔和的钢琴旋律,一如导演惯常的写实风格,但你却总能感受到一种于无声处听惊雷的震撼,这种震撼是你惊觉主角的遭遇可能发生在任何一个尽忠职守的人身上。

一、谁是理查德朱维尔理查德是那种典型根正苗红社会主义好青年,确切的说应该是资本主义好青年,他为身为美利坚公民的身份自豪,他信任权力机关,拥护国家,尤其尊重公检法部门,他臃肿不堪的身躯里跃动着一颗惩恶扬善的心。

在佐治亚州这个对枪支管理相当宽松的地方,理查德像其他人一样爱好打猎,家里收藏了大大小小的枪支,甚至还有一枚空心手雷。

为了纪念他平凡一生中的高光时刻,他还从爆炸现场拾走一块当时被炸成碎片的木板,小心翼翼地粘在了收藏册上。

理查德做梦也想不到,这些与正常人无异的行为会在不久的将来对他产生如此不利的影响。

对于自己的一夜成名,理查德并未表现出多少兴奋,他笨拙而真诚地向电视机前的观众表明自己只是在正确的时间在正确的地点做了正确的事情而已。

当他发现自己由一个没多少存在感的小人物突然变成走在大街上人人都向他挥手致敬,出版社争相向他抛出橄榄枝的名人,理查德也开始有了自信,他开玩笑地向妈妈表示自己可能需要一个秘书了。

然而,理查德的英雄只做了三天,一条不啻于爆炸案的新闻出现在报纸头条,昔日的英雄,今日的嫌疑犯,理查德的生活一下子从天堂跌倒了地狱,他困惑地看着FBI对他露出职业性微笑,眼神却像看猎物一样冰冷,他们开始对理查德威逼利诱,试图从他嘴里套出真相,他们旁若无人地进出理查德的家,随意搬走各种私人物品,俨然一副已经掌握了理查德就是犯人的证据。

事实真的如此吗,从影片描述来看,FBI一开始仅仅是出于以往办案经验做出了无法排除现场第一发现人的嫌疑这种猜测,而在听取了理查德前任雇主的怀疑后,他们草率地采取了将理查德认定为嫌疑人,并采取一系列举措,彻底摧毁了理查德的生活。

那么,我们是否能把理查德的悲剧的责任归咎在前任雇主这个”告密者“身上呢,我想是不能的,他只是基于理查德过往的表现合理地提出了自己的怀疑,他担心的只是如果理查德真的就是投放炸弹的凶手,而自己没有第一时间让警方知晓,会造成更严重的后果。

拥有专断判断能力的FBI是怎样做的呢,他们经过简单的调查,发现理查德在前几份工作中都表现出过人的执法欲,甚至还有一次不惜假冒交警去执法,于是他们迅速得出了理查德有立功倾向的结论,并将他和曾经一起消防员纵火案联系在一起,而理查德和妈妈居住在一起的背景越发让他们觉得理查德符合嫌疑人特征,他们甚至没有想着先去实地考察理查德是否真的有作案时间,事实上,当理查德的律师提出这个办案漏洞时,他们也只是轻描淡写用理查德通过同伙来实施犯罪的,还试图指出理查德有个同性男友。

面对FBI的蛮横无理的调查,理查德没有反抗,没有怨言,他顺从地接受了一切本该不属于他承担的刁难,甚至在FBI将他们家翻了个底朝天的时候还礼貌地提出了是否需要他帮忙,以至于律师不得不多次提醒他过多不必要的话只会加重他的麻烦,然而,这个体嫌口正直的人总是不顾律师的杀气腾腾的眼神,说了一堆又一堆....在这个基调严肃的电影中,理查德的“健谈”是难得几处能够制造点幽默感的地方。

在律师终于忍无可忍,咆哮着数落理查德各种不可理喻的行为后,这个一直以来都没有表现出多少愤怒的男人终于迎来了第一次爆发:我就是这样一个人,你却让我变成另外一个人,我不知道怎么变成另外的人。

理查德对这一切并不是无动于衷,他只是习惯了忍受被奚落、被指责、被玩弄,他仍然是一个拥有正常感情的人,只是多年的生活遭遇让他学会了逆来顺受,另一方面,他仍然在心底相信,他所敬重的FBI会在调查结束后还他一个公道。

直到他发现他FBI不仅在伤害他,还在伤害他最亲近的人。

一次口角后,妈妈躲进房间里放声大哭,他猛然醒悟,自己被FBI纠缠骚扰的时候,妈妈一直在忍受着比他还大的痛苦,而妈妈那句“我不知道要如何保护你”也使理查德清醒地意识到自己沉默的反应给对方纠缠的理由,于是在最后一次审讯中,理查德终于一反常态地向盛气凌人的探员们进行了反击:我想问你们一个问题,你们是否掌握了任何能够证明我是犯人的证据,面对这个掷地有声的提问,探员们面面相觑,这一次,换做他们沉默了。

1996年6月,FBI正式宣布理查德无罪,2003年,FBI逮捕了真正的凶手埃里克·鲁道夫,2007年,理查德死于心脏病猝死,年仅44岁。

理查德短暂的生命中大部分都是平庸的,他曾经有机会过上另一种生活,却被无情剥夺,他最后一次也是第一次为自己辩解时是这么说的:如果我仅仅是因为做了自己职责范围内的事却被当作是嫌疑犯,那么,下一个看到有可疑双肩包的保安他还会选择通知其他人吗,他可能会跑得远远的。

二、第112名受害者波比朱维尔,理查德的母亲,她只做了三天英雄的妈妈就被告知儿子变成嫌疑犯了,甚至没有时间去弄清楚到底发生了什么,突然之间,记者不分昼夜地守候在她家周边,电视上出现的不再是对儿子的溢美之词,而是各种恶意满满的中伤和诋毁,她不知道为什么FBI要三番五次的跑到自己家种,不顾自己的恳求把每件她珍视的东西从她视线中抱走,更令她难以接受的是,这些人毫不在意她的隐私,在众目睽睽之下把她的贴身衣物搜刮走,她试图去理论,却被蜂拥而至的记者吓得不知所措。

她只是一个平凡的母亲,甚至不知道该采取什么手段去帮助儿子,她唯一能做的,是在一场媒体发布会上,噙着眼泪,声音颤抖地请求他们还儿子一个公道。

理查德的律师这么形容她的,爆炸案中第112名受害者,爆炸当天她在家中逃过一劫,但是却没有逃过舆论的轰炸。

三、从士力架说开来沃森·布莱恩特,理查德的律师,他们的初识是在几年前,那时身为后勤部人员的理查德擅自把一堆士力架放进沃森办公桌的抽屉里,还颇有些得意地告诉对方他是通过观察对方的垃圾桶得出沃森喜欢吃士力架这个结论的,令沃森哭笑不得。

后来在成为理查德的律师后,他们曾经爆发过一次争吵,沃森气愤地问理查德为什么要选择他做律师,理查德回答,因为只有你像对待正常人一样对待我,没有骂我肥猪,弱智。

听到这个回答,沃森表情复杂地看着理查德。

对于沃森来说,理查德和自己算不上是交情甚笃的朋友,当初理查德从FBI本部打来的求助电话,他本可以随便找个理由搪塞过去,让他没想到的是,当他要求与理查德通话时,电话那头竟然装疯卖傻,这点燃了沃森的怒火。

他亲自与FBI对峙,拆穿他们每一个虚伪的提议,他向理查德询问每一个细节,认真思考应对的策略,他用身体替理查德的母亲挡住记者的发难,像家人一样为在他们周围铸上一道墙壁,让他们免于受到更大的伤害。

如果说理查德是爆炸案中的英雄,那么,沃森就是理查德一家的英雄,他没有屈服于权力的压力,更没有在无良记者试图勾引自己暴露出理查德隐私的时候置职业操守于不顾,和某个禁不住诱惑轻易就把对理查德的怀疑吐露给记者的探员形成鲜明对比。

在理查德被证实清白的几年后,沃森见到了如愿以偿当上警察的理查德,当他告诉真正的犯人已经被绳之以法以后,理查德的表情很平静,或许对于过去那些痛苦的折磨,淡忘才是最好的疗伤方式。

四、一些遗憾或许是导演实在太专注塑造三个当事人的形象了,以至于对站在当事人对面的FBI和媒体的刻画几近为零,以探员肖为首的FBI从头到尾都是一副自大傲慢的面孔,这个角色口口声声说要为在爆炸案中牺牲的下属讨个公道,可就我看来,在爆炸案后,肖似乎没表现出多少失去下属的悲伤,这个角色的真实内心就像真空状态一样,而那个勾引肖的女记者就更不可理喻了,前期一副可以为了得到夺人眼球的新闻不惜花费任何代价的无节操无下限的人设,在听了沃森质疑自己的话后,居然会跑去现场进行求证,还在理查德母亲的发布会上流下了感(e)动(yu)的眼泪,这种断崖式崩塌的人设实在太过刺眼。

当然,抛去这些瑕疵,这仍然是一部高质量作品,可惜的是,在上映四天后,票房成绩不及200万,对这样一部好作品来说实在不公平,宣发上的缺位,只能通过网络途径来曲线救片,真心希望还没看这部片的朋友们能够抓紧时间去影院支持一波!

 9 ) 电影一个字"稳"

《理查德朱维尔的哀歌》个人观影随笔,欢迎理性讨论,不喜勿喷 东木老爷子都快90岁了,还能拍出这样的电影,实在是令人敬佩,说来很奇怪,每次看老爷子的电影,不管是他主演还是他导演都特别稳,他拍的东西充满了一种沧桑感,对这个世界的理解和认知总是多了一层长辈的语境。

之前他拍的《萨利机长》,《换子疑云》,《骡子》都是根据真人真事改编的,似乎老爷子对现实世界有很多话想说,不管愤怒,还是感动,这些电影都代表了一种态度,或左或右,我看短评里有些人说女权人士不喜欢,说老爷子是保守派等等,好吧,这些声音当然可以有,我却有不同的看法,不过保留吧,每个人都有自己都意见,只是电影怎么拍,他只是针对角色,就像昆汀拍《好莱坞往事》,有时候界限和创作是矛盾的,大家变得严肃谨慎,在这种只有一个声音的地方,我已经受够了冠冕堂皇和条条框框,希望能有个平衡吧,不敢说了。

说说电影吧,朱维尔的演员演出了很多角色内在的东西,把一个普普通通有缺点的人刻画的惟妙惟肖,当角色不听律师的话喃喃自语时,甚至真的有种想让他闭嘴的冲动,当然越是这样想,越是因为演得传神,还有律师山姆,他的很多角色都没什么区别,从最早看他的《月球》,《火柴人》到《三块广告牌》,好像都是一种人,不过很喜欢这种表演风格,有点痞痞的,目中无人的样子,很有个人魅力的演员。

看完电影后,我一直在想,如果我是理查德朱维尔,该如何为自己辩护?

好人尽责值守,挽救生命却成了被告人,这种让好人蒙冤的情节,咱这也有,不过不能说,我可能会哭,会委屈,会咆哮,可我却不知道怎么表达,理查德朱维尔在最后对着联邦调查员说的话,其实比任何辩护都有力量,东木老爷子也在讽刺这些人,不过FBI和记者这两个角色,个人感觉不够立体,太脸谱化了,或许出了这种恐怖袭击事件,不管什么制度,都会有不负责任的各种坏人,这只跟人性有关!

 10 ) 摘个好评

摘自letterboxd用户matt lynch:“Probably my favorite from the Late-Eastwood Heroism Project, mostly because instead of focusing on the trials of law enforcement or military service or even SULLY's simple grace under fire, this is just about a culture of unending cynicism and mistrust and anger. Everyone's looking to poke holes in Richard, everyone is convinced that he's too dumb, too fat, too fucking polite to be anything other than a shifty weirdo at best, a mass-murderer at worst. Plenty of material for both sides of the Clint divide to chew on here too, including a maybe-problematic portrayal of women, a self-interested and inherently deceptive media landscape, some hypocrisy re: law enforcement, and even the prominent placement of a few Confederate flags, but I submit to you that it's all of a piece given Eastwood's career-long infatuation with subtle gradations of virtue (or lack thereof). Also Paul Walter Hauser is very goodhere.”

《理查德·朱维尔的哀歌》短评

年度最好表演,比凤凰之流好看多了,有一瞬间我甚至以为东木是在拿上一部本人出演的经验还债,后来才意识到之前看过肥宅的电影。东木都这个岁数了还在硬挺着右派,挺难得的,也确实是需要的东西。教科书好莱坞叙事,妈妈哭的时候和萨利机长一样,引发哭了

7分钟前
  • 牛奶很忙
  • 推荐

又是一部错过了大银幕的片子,悔恨得落泪。我仿佛记得这个新闻,东木选择这样的一个题材,大概就像是每个人遥远记忆里都有一小块无法忘记的片段,有一天拾起来重新清理后便闪现出光芒,也终于明白这一段怎么会在生命中挥之不去。

9分钟前
  • vivi
  • 推荐

一向不太能get到东木的直男审美加主流价值观但却喜欢他这部新作,叙事不徐不疾,人物塑造也丰满, 但却有些单调了。倘若能再把群戏做好一点,人物个性再写多面一点,可能更接近真实。山姆叔叔又回春,勇猛。

11分钟前
  • LORENZO 洛伦佐
  • 推荐

手法比纯泄愤的肯洛奇是高明不少,但依然有强烈前置导向性存在,关键一点伊斯特伍德是赞颂这体制的,自我纠正能力很强嘛,本质就是美式主旋律。一点细节的个人评判,主角的胖子形象太让人同情,过了;母亲的雨泪俱下,过了;女记者良心发现过了;FBI探员一直坚持主角有罪算拉回一些。

15分钟前
  • LOOK
  • 还行

平平无奇的,跟前几年的《萨利机长》差不多…… Clint Eastwood 的片子我还是最喜欢《百万美元宝贝》

18分钟前
  • 一只野鸡
  • 还行

李文亮的哀歌 2020.02.07

21分钟前
  • 小野爹是煤气罐
  • 力荐

有点失望,到底是现实世界就是这么魔幻,还是政治立场导致的创作动机不纯,这个平民英雄的故事总是给我一种若隐若现的正邪对立感,而非扎实而耐看的细致真实型叙事。老实说与其看这个,我还不如看达内和肯洛奇的新作。男主表演无甚亮点,山姆洛克威尔慵懒而洒脱的表演方式有点千篇一律,唯有贝茨奶奶真情流露的表演最令人惊喜,动人而丝毫不加粉饰的演讲戏,可以把今年所有颁奖季女配角的表演拉高一个档次。

23分钟前
  • 蓝河的风儿
  • 较差

气死我了

25分钟前
  • monphy
  • 较差

很多冤假错案可能比这部电影所讲述的真实事件还要惨上几百倍。几个演员的演技超棒!心疼男主的同时又莫名觉得男主有点可爱😂,他是幸运的,能遇到一个这样有责任感和理性的律师;另外,两个饰演联邦探员的演员在人物塑造上也是成功的,因为他们的所作所为能让我在看这部电影的时候恨得牙痒痒😂

28分钟前
  • 杜小德
  • 力荐

没搞清楚真相前不要轻易批判谁!!——

30分钟前
  • w2jmoe
  • 还行

反正我讨厌媒体和记者已经不是一天两天的事儿了。

33分钟前
  • S.T
  • 较差

唉,没看完,猜到后面剧情,觉得打倒一个英雄这种太悲壮了,就还是止步了。

37分钟前
  • 布鲁布鲁
  • 还行

简直看的我气不打一处来。真的,这世间有些事情就是如此,人善被人欺。但是,各位善良的人们一定要记住,你心存善念,你就什么都别怕,据理力争,随时做好反抗的准备。

42分钟前
  • 杨迪
  • 力荐

好流水账啊,各种套路,妈妈演讲那段太草了。

44分钟前
  • 月夜刺死燕尾蝶
  • 较差

很差劲的制作,一股绵软,衰弱,无力的气息,行将就木的感觉。

46分钟前
  • 记不住密码
  • 很差

很稳健平顺但没有太多惊喜,可能对于东木爷爷来说是私人政治表达大过艺术性的一个作品,把FBI如何下套坑人展现得如此详尽,这部电影可以算作“个人vs国家机器”行动指南。Oliver Wilde的女记者角色设计和表演都实在太可怕了,好久没看到这么卡通刻板的反角形象,出戏得让人倒抽凉气。演妈妈的Kathy Bates特别好,印象最深的是影片很早的一个镜头,在Richard还被视作英雄的时候,电视上放着Richard Jewell真人当年的访谈片段,切过来一个妈妈手放心口的骄傲表情,联想到之后将发生的一切太让人难受。

51分钟前
  • 店长
  • 还行

中规中矩,雷达最后在一个巧克力甜甜圈前哭的画面好像只可怜的puppy,太戳笑点了,看看我山还行。这节奏感觉老头在讲一段蒙了灰的陈年旧事,没啥滋味。

55分钟前
  • 囍弗斯
  • 还行

西方佬何时对华人的歧视能作这样的反思呢?根本就是不凭证据事实查案,只是需要个背锅的人,这个人就挑最不顺眼那位,案子成了!美国佬就像世界的FBI,自诩牛逼哄哄,我管所有,其实最懂的不过是生安白做,屈打成招那套。也是美国这种地方,养着这么多傻乎乎的可怜胖胖,诚心诚意信奉政府和执法者的正义伟岸,谨听媒体教诲与意识引导,媒体教的三观就是群众的三观。可怜胖胖也一直自以为是地做越界的事,超出自己权利范围与能力的事,源于对自身价值与地位的自知判断错误,所以案底不好,显得爱管闲事,成为了这样一个可怜人。

56分钟前
  • EeveeKu
  • 较差

男主一夜之间在无良媒体的推动下从英雄变为过街老鼠,在没有充足的证据下浪费时间调查理查德就像我浪费时间在看这部五分钟就能讲完的电影上

59分钟前
  • 何欧点益
  • 很差

老东木出手还是很稳,但总体来说属于比较一般的一部作品。

60分钟前
  • 搬砖侠
  • 还行