Amanda Knox
Dir: Rod Blackhurst, Brian McGinn
2016
***
After ten years of many a film maker trying, Rod Blackhurst and Brian
McGinn finally managed to persuade Amanda Knox to speak for the first time on
camera about the murder of Meredith Kercher and her subsequent conviction. Knox
explains step by step why she went to study in Italy in the first place, how
she met boyfriend Raffaele Sollecito, what she was doing on the night of the
murder and speaks of the aftermath that propelled her into infamy. Also
interviewed are; Raffaele Sollecito, who Knox had begun a relationship just a
week before the murder; prosecutor Giuliano Mignini, who now revels in his
god-like status in Perugia and opportunistic journalist/sensationalist Nick
Pisa. All evidence aside, Knox was convicted and seen as guilty based on her
temperament and behaviour. Understandable to a degree but being a bit odd does
not make someone a murder. The same can be said for Sollecito, an awkward young
man who fell head over heels for the young American. The idea that Knox had a
spell over him isn’t unbelievable, whether it was enough to convince him of
murder however is less so. The evidence was incredibly weak and that is why
Knox and Sollecito were set free, no one’s story was beyond question but the
subsequent DNA evidence was pretty conclusive. However, the case has now gone
beyond fact. This was a trial by media. There are countless articles and books
claiming to be factual and nearly every one of them is different from each
other. Knox is a little bit odd, Sollecito is a broken man, Mignini has delusions
of grandeur and Nick Pisa and the rest of the media refuse to admit to their
interference in the case. Some of the headlines were shocking in their
absurdity and in their sensationalism. Many of the stories printed have been
proven to be lies but no one has admitted as much and the media hasn’t been
held accountable. Guilty or not, the damage is done. Knox can’t really be trusted
in what she says anymore because of all the silly things her 21 year old self
said and what has been written of her but I would argue that Rudy Guede was
less trustworthy. He admitted to killing Meredith alone and only changed his
story once he realised that the attention was on Knox and that he could reduce his
sentence. He was deemed an uninteresting criminal, he’ll serve his 16 years but
essentially he got away with murder, his life will go back to normal and he
will be forgotten. However, this film is about Knox, as indeed, the entire case
was. The media became obsessed with her and the interview suggests that she
herself has now become something of a made up character, a result of the
attention she has received for the last decade. The film sticks to certain key
details but doesn’t go into anything further, which is perhaps all they could
do. The shocking incompetence and the bizarre misplaced national pride
surrounding the case is explored and laid bare, even Mr ‘Fake news’ himself
gets a look in. The whole thing was a grubby witch hunt with the media drooling
over themselves with the thought of sexual deviancy, forgetting that a young
girl had been raped and brutally murdered. If Knox is guilty then the media
interference has let her free, if she’s innocent then the media have made sure
she’ll never be free, either way a fair hearing was never given and the world
is happy to judge her based of circumstantial evidence and unforgivable gossip alone.
Everyone involved and everyone happy to waggle their tongues about it without
full knowledge should be ashamed of themselves, and while Knox keeps the
mystery surrounding herself alive, it is Mignini and Pisa who come off worse in
this scenario. Mignini is a misogynistic fool who found himself way over his
head. He loves the attention the case has brought him and shows himself for the
idiot he is. Likewise, Pisa almost seems proud of the lies he spread during the
case, excitedly boasting about how he was first to spread the falsehoods and
point the finger at Knox. Knox’s shock and subsequent behaviour, without the
support of legal representative, was horrendously misinterpreted and small town
thinking became the global norm. Gut feeling and gossip has overtaken people’s
opinions over testimony, investigation and scientific proof, but when the legal
authorities behave in such a contemptible manner what hope is there. It reminds
me of the Memphis Three case in many respects in that the legal team and courts
are so stubborn and too proud to admit that they made mistakes that what should
have been a relatively simple murder investigation turned into an unforgivable
circus of sleaze and incompetence. Rod Blackhurst and Brian McGinn's film is no where near as compelling as Paradise Lost but they give the key
players a voice, they lay down the foundations and let the audience make up
their minds, not necessarily about the guilty/not guilty argument, but how the
case was treated in general. However, if you read the many online reviews of
the film you’ll find most are unfavourable. I thought Knox and Sollecito came
off better than the others, not through manipulation but by the fact they
admitted they made mistakes and said foolish things, however, guilty or not, they
will always be seen as guilty. The film only scratched the surface of a far
bigger problem in our society but it underlines the part of the case most
forgotten – that a young girl was beaten, raped and murdered and cannot defend
herself. The disrespect her and her family have gone through is sickening, and
I respect Blackhurst and McGinn above everything else for acknowledging this at
the film’s conclusion. This won’t be the last film made of the case, more
evidence and more lies will be released in time and I’m not sure it’ll ever end
in solid conclusion. It’s a sad day for justice, one Blackhurst and McGinn
rightfully blame the media and courts for but perhaps not vigorously enough, Knox has had her trial, it's time the media had theirs.
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