The three individuals (OJ, Nicole, Ron) directly involved in the case are no longer important, because the life, death and suffering of the three of them are not worth mentioning in front of the whole. However, it is ridiculous that the overall freedom is constituted by the freedom of each individual. In the United States, the foundation of this "democratic" and "free" society is individual freedom, individual justice and fairness. Johnnie as a legal practitioner is a complete cockroach, tarnishing the law, tarnishing this court - he doesn't care about his client nor Nicole and Ron, only more "noble" causes. He is more of an activist than a lawyer. He put the rights of his race above other causes. From a personal point of view, there may be nothing wrong with this, and empathy can even understand him. But he failed the law, the true meaning of justice and freedom. In the face of the paradox brought by justice, he chose to turn the court into a political field, into his personal stage, using the legal system and media exposure to promote the black affirmative movement that he cares about most.
But the problem of racism still exists to this day, and the blm continues. Did we make mistakes in the process of promoting this sport? When a person abandons the injured individual and the maintenance of justice they need to repair the injustice to the "whole", does he or she do something wrong? Are the suffering of Nicole and Ron and their families worthless in front of the entire black community and can be sacrificed at will? Looking back at the Simpson case now, what impact will it have on the social status of black people? Emotionally, I hate OJ, and I can't help but blame the people who ruined this case for their affirmative action. I don't know what other people think about these people.
A technical short on the show: everyone in the film has their own agenda and motive, and of all the OJ films so far this is the one that captures that best.
Everyone on the Dream Team has different pursuits, although there seems to be a common goal: not to get OJ to be publicly convicted. Shapiro worries about another Riot outbreak in LA, Kardashian is hesitating between his own reputation and justice, and Lee just wants a win to put himself back in the spotlight...but Johnnie, no one can stop him. He pushes the black man, and the black man pushes him in turn.
OJ and Johnnie were the heroes of many affirmative action blacks, but who were they? Two oppressors who abuse their wives domestically and abuse the rights of men.
Justice, fairness, freedom. We are always fighting for it, winning and always losing.
Finally, a little chat, this portrayal of the Kardashians made me mistakenly think that I was going to go the comedy line, and the part about Faye was inexplicable. Fortunately, the back feature is exciting enough, and the flaws do not hide the beauty.
View more about American Crime Story reviews