DEMOCRACY
Red Corner (shows how extralegal considerations
endemic in crony rule within China prevent the criminal justice
system from producing a just outcome)
The Rainmaker (portrays the elusiveness of justice
in the cases of a battered wife who fears revenge or poverty
if she divorces, a wealthy widow dazzled by a televangelist
who needs money for his private jet, and an accident victim
who cannot get an insurance company to pay for urgent medical
treatment because it prefers to defraud insurees in various
ways, including "tort reform legislation")
EXPOSÉ
Amistad (brings to light a hitherto obscure
trial about the fate of mutinous African slaves before federal
courts, resulting in their release after an eloquent Supreme
Court plea by John Quincy Adams)
The Peacemaker (presents a plausible scenario
in which renegade Russians could smuggle nuclear weapons to
Iran, Iraq, or other countries; the film prompted Congress
to study the issue)
Rosewood (portrays the massacre of Blacks in
a Florida town just after World War I, an event nearly unknown
until release of the film)
Seven Years in Tibet (shows the way in which
China has stamped out religious and other freedoms in Tibet)
PEACE
Seven Years in Tibet (contrasts the peaceloving
culture of the Tibetans with the militaristic Chinese, who
reportedly are responsible for the deaths of one million Tibetans
and displacement of many more)