Let Him Have It [DVD] [1991]
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Average customer review:Product Details
- Amazon Sales Rank: #7190 in DVD
- Released on: 2004-06-28
- Rating: Suitable for 15 years and over
- Format: PAL
- Original language: English
- Number of discs: 1
Editorial Reviews
Synopsis
Two teenagers are surprised by police during a break-in. One, epileptic with the mental age of 11 and IQ of 66 is arrested, the other, a gun-toting hood refuses to give up his weapon. Shouting Let Him Have It! to his friend, he fires, wounding one officer and killing another. Both boys face the death penalty. Did the boy mean shoot him or give him the gun
Customer Reviews
Powerful
Such a powerful film that won't fail to twang on your emotions. I found myself almost in tears at the whole injustice of Derek Bentley's sentence. Very well acted, Christopher Eccleston does a very good job. Recommended for an interesting and thought provoking evening-in viewing.
Powerful, issues-led film
Powerful film about one of the greatest miscarriages of justice in modern British history - the hanging of Derek Bentley. It's 1952 and the easily-led 19-year-old Bentley has fallen in with 16 year old Christopher Craig and his south London hoodlums. The pair rather haphazardly decide to rob a local butchers but are apprehended by the police. Bentley immediately gives himself up but Craig, full of anger after his brother's recent imprisonment, pulls out a gun and starts firing at the officers. The captured Bentley screams "let him have it Chris" but is he imploring Craig to hand over his gun or continue shooting? Craig fires the gun seriously wounding one officer and half-an-hour later kills another policeman before his capture.
Cue to the trial, Christopher Craig is found guilty of murder but is too young to hang whereas Bentley is astonishingly found guilty for his "let him have it" plea and a capital sentence is passed. Despite the jury's recommendation for leniency and a massive public outcry, the 19 year old with the IQ of a boy of 11 is sent to the gallows just one month later at Wandsworth prison.
Let Him Have It powerfully tells the story of this terrible travesty with a young Christopher Eccleston in the lead role. Some of the acting is a bit hammy but this doesn't really matter when the main purpose of the film is its message. The film also presents an interesting historical picture of life in urban Britain in the rationing years after the Second World War.
Derek Bentley's parents campaigned for his official pardon till their deaths in the 70s and, at the time of the movie's release in 1991, this still wasn't forthcoming. Finally Derek's beloved sister Iris received the state's acceptance of the mistake which she had fought all her life for in the 2000s, at last bringing to a close one of the greatest miscarriages of justice in the UK in the 20th Century.
Let Him Have It is a strong, well-produced, issues-led narrative and is well worth seeing.
A Thought Provoking Film
Christopher Eccleston makes his film debut here portraying Derek Bentley, a retarded teenager who somehow became involved in a break in and attempted robbery at a warehouse with his friend Christopher Craig (played by Paul Reynolds)resulting in the death of a policeman (PC Miles) and another who is wounded (played by the late Tom Bell). The Derek Bentley case shocked a nation since Christopher Craig who actually fired the shots which killed the policeman and wounded another, was too young to hang. Therefore since the Establishment wanted its revenge, hanged Derek Bentley instead, despite the fact that he was already in police custody when the fatal shots were fired and that he had a mental age of 11 years. It is extremely difficult not to become emotionally involved watching this film since it was indeed one of those rare occasions in British Law that the law itself succeeded in making two wrongs make a right which of course should not have been so.
The film is also a tribute to Iris Bentley, Derek's sister (played by the lovely Claire Holman) who campaigned for many years to secure a pardon for Derek. The fact that she eventually succeeded before her own death from cancer should never be forgotten.
A thought provoking film, wonderfully acted and directed which needs to be seen.
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