The O. J. Simpson Story
The O. J. Simpson Story is a 1995 American drama film directed by Jerrold Freedman and written by Stephen Harrigan. It stars Bobby Hosea, Jessica Tuck, David Roberson, James Handy, Kimberly Russell and Harvey Jason. It premiered on Fox on January 31, 1995.[2][3][4] PlotO. J. Simpson's ex-wife Nicole Brown is found murdered along with her friend Ron Goldman, outside Brown's Brentwood townhouse. Simpson is brought to the police station as a suspect. As he struggles with police interrogation and the focus of the media, Simpson's life unfolds via flashbacks, from his first meeting with Brown in 1977, to growing up in San Francisco in the 1960s, to Simpson's and Brown's romance and marriage in 1985. The pair gradually descend into domestic squabbles over Simpson's selfish and controlling behavior, with Brown suffering depression and drug use. Aspects of Simpson’s life are shown, 1964, 1970, 1975, 1979, 1985 and 1989. Charged with the murders, Simpson panics and flees with his friend A. C. Cowlings, finding himself flashing back to a childhood meeting with baseball great Willie Mays. The bronco chase is filmed by media. Simpson ultimately turns himself in, as his life of his prime flashes before his eyes; his friends, children, fame, and Brown.[5] Cast
ProductionThe film was reported conceived while the infamous bronco chase was taking place.https://www.latimes.com/archives/la-xpm-1994-08-10-ca-25382-story.html Simpson is portrayed by Bobby Hosea.[6][7][8] Hosea was advised by fellow black actors not to take the part but ignored them, keen to portray Simpson, who was an influence on his life, in a non-judgmental fashion.[9] Conceived by Rupert Murdoch who saw the biopic as a promotional platform for NFL telecasts, the movie was originally scheduled to air the week before Simpson’s trial began. However, after Shapiro raised concerns about the jury pool being tainted, the FOX network agreed to delay the telecast until after the trial had started. It eventually aired on January 31st 1995, one week after the trial began.[10][11] ReceptionThe film was successful upon release, though there was criticism that the film was capitalising on the forthcoming murder trial.[12] The site The Biopic Story gave a one-star review of the biopic:[13][14]
Bobby Hosea said in an interview that he felt his portrayal of Simpson ruined his career, stating that nobody wanted to hire him after.[15] The 2022 book Women in True Crime Media praised Tuck's performance as Brown as well as the portrayal of Brown as a human being. [16] Hosea reacted to Simpson's death in 2024 with "a mix of emotions and balances".[17] See alsoReferences
External links |
Portal di Ensiklopedia Dunia