Showing 17 of 17 scenes
WAR OF THE WORMS
by Andrew Kurtzman, Anne Kurtzman
Three socially outcast friends lament their romantic failures and the perceived injustice of evolutionary attraction while sitting in a mall food court. As they navigate feelings of humiliation and intellectual superiority, they grapple with the realization that their intelligence offers no advantage in the high school social hierarchy.
The Merchant of Venice
by William Shakespeare
Disguised as a young lawyer, Portia delivers a powerful appeal for compassion during a high-stakes legal trial. She argues that mercy is a divine attribute that transcends earthly law and warns that a strict adherence to justice without pity will lead to a tragic outcome.
The Victim
by Rob Williams
A grieving mother confronts police investigators during an interview regarding the murder of her young son years prior. She expresses her profound outrage over the short sentence the killer served and the injustice of the witness protection program that allows him to live a secret life.
Nickel Boys
by RaMell Ross, Joslyn Barnes
A grieving grandmother, Hattie, descends into a traumatic memory of racial injustice while preparing a cake for her grandson, Elwood. She grapples with the cycle of systemic violence that has claimed the men in her family and pleads with God to spare Elwood from the same fate.
During a segregated boxing match at the Nickel Academy, Elwood and Turner observe the high-stakes gambling and racial tensions simmering in the crowd. As they watch their peer Griff fight a white opponent, they realize the match is a rigged spectacle where the boys' lives are merely currency for the staff's amusement. The scene highlights the contrast between the boys' desperate hope and the systemic corruption of the reform school.
EXECUTIVE DECISION
by Jim Thomas, John Thomas
Colonel Travis confronts Captain Grant about the ethics and consequences of a high-stakes intelligence operation. Travis challenges Grant's academic perspective on justice, highlighting the disconnect between those who plan missions and the soldiers who execute them.
Midnight Express
by Oliver Stone
A father visits his son in a Turkish prison, desperately trying to offer hope through talk of appeals and legal deals. The scene reaches an emotional breaking point as the father's composure shatters, shifting from forced optimism to a grief-stricken outburst against the injustice of the situation.
Person of Interest (Pilot)
by Jonathan Nolan
Detective Carter confronts the mysterious Reese in a dark alleyway after a violent encounter. She warns him that despite his potential justifications, she intends to bring him to justice, while Reese cryptically acknowledges that someone is finally 'keeping score' of his actions.
Batman Begins
by DAVID GOYER
Bruce Wayne confesses his intent to murder his parents' killer, leading to a heated confrontation with Rachel Dawes. Rachel challenges Bruce's moral compass, arguing the difference between justice and personal vendetta while exposing him to the systemic corruption destroying Gotham.
3:10 to Yuma
by Halsted Welles, Michael Brandt, Derek Haas
Dan Evans prepares to escort a notorious outlaw to justice while his wife, Alice, pleads with him to reconsider the dangerous mission. Dan reveals the deep-seated desperation and loss of pride driving his decision, explaining that he can no longer endure his family's poverty or the way they look at him.
The Spanish Tragedy
by Thomas Kyd
Driven to madness by the murder of her son Horatio and the King's failure to provide justice, Isabella destroys her garden before taking her own life. It is a high-stakes tragic monologue centered on grief, revenge, and despair.
Loving
by Jeff Nichols
Bernie Cohen, a lawyer, explains the state's racist defense to Richard Loving ahead of their Supreme Court hearing. Richard, a man of few words, declines to attend the hearing but offers a simple, powerful message for the justices.
Electra
by Sophocles
Electra engages in a fierce verbal battle with her mother, Clytemnestra, regarding the murder of her father, Agamemnon. The scene explores themes of justice, familial betrayal, and the cycle of vengeance.
Othello
Othello stands over the sleeping Desdemona, grappling with his internal conflict before he murders her. He contemplates her beauty and the finality of death, convincing himself that her execution is a necessary act of justice.
The Father We Loved on a Beach by the Sea
by Stephen Sewell
Dan confronts his father's silence and hypocrisy, railing against the social injustices and political corruption he was raised to ignore. He expresses a deep sense of betrayal and a desperate need for a paternal connection that was never fulfilled.
Jerusalem
by Michael Gurr
Nina delivers a sharp, cynical critique of the concept of karma and divine justice to Malcolm. She argues that believing people get what they deserve is a form of intellectual laziness and a way for the fortunate to feel smug while the suffering are silenced.
Nina, a medical professional, delivers a scathing intellectual critique of karma and divine justice. She argues that such spiritual beliefs are merely a form of smug complacency that ignores the reality of human suffering and personal responsibility.