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The Witness (2015 American film)

The Witness is a 2015 American documentary film directed and produced by James D. Solomon. It follows William "Bill" Genovese as, decades after her death, he investigates the March 13, 1964,[1] murder of his sister, Catherine Susan "Kitty" Genovese by Winston Moseley[2] in Kew Gardens, a neighborhood in the New York City borough of Queens. Bill Genovese executive produced and narrated the film.

The Witness
Theatrical release poster
Directed byJames D. Solomon
Written by
  • William Genovese
  • Russell Greene
  • Gabriel Rhodes
  • James D. Solomon
Produced byJames D. Solomon
Narrated byWilliam Genovese
CinematographyTrish Govoni
Edited byGabriel Rhodes
Russell Greene
Music byNathan Halpern
Distributed byFilmRise
Release dates
  • October 6, 2015 (2015-10-06) (New York Film Festival)
  • June 3, 2016 (2016-06-03) (limited, United States)
Running time
89 minutes
CountryUnited States
LanguageEnglish

Upon its release, film received positive reviews from critics. It was one of the fifteen documentaries (out of 145 entries) shortlisted for Best Documentary Feature at the 89th Academy Awards,[3] though it was not one of the five final nominees for the award.

Synopsis edit

The name Kitty Genovese became synonymous with bystander apathy, inspiring numerous sociology books and articles, after The New York Times reported that 38 witnesses saw her being murdered—and did nothing to help. The Witness follows her younger brother Bill's search for the truth, and ultimately debunks initial reports and long-held public opinion about the circumstances of her murder.

In addition to investigating Kitty's murder, the film reveals details about Kitty’s life: her popularity in high school; her brief marriage; her job as a bar manager; her relationship with her partner, Maryann Zielonko. It also examines the effect of the murder on Kitty’s family. During the Vietnam War, averse to being an "apathetic bystander", Bill determined he "wasn’t going to be like the 38 witnesses, so [he] enlisted in the Marines", losing both his legs to battle wounds. Her parents and siblings, to avoid bringing up painful memories, never discussed her, causing the details of her life to be a mystery, even to her eventual nieces and nephews.

Plot edit

The Case

Kitty Genovese was murdered at about 3:20 am on March 13, 1964, in the Kew Gardens neighborhood of Queens, New York. The lede of the initial article in The New York Times about her death, written by Martin Gansberg, read:

"For more than half an hour 38 respectable, law-abiding citizens in Queens watched a killer stalk and stab a woman in three separate attacks in Kew Gardens."

Although "absolutely riveting", the film argues that most of that statement was inaccurate:

  • The number of "witnesses" is disputable, as, with one or two exceptions, the witnesses awakened by the attack only heard screams and were not eyewitnesses. The people in the apartment building could not have seen Kitty for more than a couple of minutes, could not clearly see the attack in the dark, and saw her stand up and stagger away, thinking they had seen a drunken brawl originating at a nearby bar. For most, that was the end of the attack. They had no sense Kitty was being "stalked".
  • There were two attacks, not three. When a few witnesses saw the attacker, Winston Moseley, return, they assumed Kitty had gone someplace safe. They were unaware that Kitty had only staggered around the corner into an alley, then into a vestibule, behind a closed door, out of sight, and were unaware that the attacker later found Kitty in the vestibule, where he raped and killed her.

Journalist Jim Rasenberger tells Bill Genovese in the film: "If the story had been reported more accurately, it still would have been a two or three day—maybe a four-day story; but it would not have been a 50-year story. We would still not be talking about it today."

Bill Genovese's Investigation

William "Bill" Genovese was 16 when his older sister Kitty was murdered. For many years, Kitty’s family found it too painful to look into the facts of her death. Starting in March 2004, however, Bill began his own investigation into whether it was true that 38 witnesses failed to help his sister. With leads from prosecutor Charles Skoller, he obtained the police interviews and the transcript of Winston Moseley's trial, and set about finding the witnesses or informants who were still alive. His findings, which are documented in the film, include the following:

  • Joseph Fink, a night elevator operator seated in the lobby of the Mowbray building across the street, saw the attack and did nothing. He was the only one who was fully aware of the incident as it unfolded who failed to act.
  • Karl Ross looked down a staircase and saw the second attack taking place. He called friends for advice on what to do before calling police to report the attack. The police call log only listed one call related to the murder—from Karl Ross after Kitty was mortally wounded.
  • Hattie Grund saw a woman screaming, "Help", standing in front of the cleaners. She says she called the police, who said they had already gotten calls about the incident. Newspaper accounts did not report that Grund and others called the police.

Only 5 of the "38 witnesses" were called to the testify at Moseley's trial, among them:

  • Irene Frost heard screaming and saw a man and a woman across the street and heard Kitty scream, "Please help me, God. Please help me. I’ve been stabbed." At the window, she saw Kitty kneeling down on the sidewalk and Moseley running away down the street.
  • Robert Mozer saw Kitty kneeling at the bookstore, and a man bending over her. Mozer hollered, "Hey, get out of there!", and Moseley jumped up and ran away.
  • Andree Picq heard Mozer's yell to Moseley and saw Moseley run away fast. She then saw Kitty get up slowly and scream, "Help", walking slowly toward the backstreet. Picq was still at the window a few minutes after Moseley came back, walking normally as if nothing happened. "Then he went down to the train station and then he came out again and left in the back and I could not see anything, but I heard the last two screams, 'Help, help.'"
  • Sophie Farrar lived in the apartment next to Kitty's and was a friend. She was awakened by a loud scream. About 20 minutes later she received a phone call—possibly from Karl Ross—informing her that Kitty was in the hall bleeding. Farrar rushed to find Kitty in the hallway and held her as she was dying waiting for an ambulance. The newspaper account failed to report this.

According to defense attorney Sydney Sparrow (as reported by his son), Moseley was bright and manipulative, with a 135 IQ. Moseley told the story of killing Kitty in a cold "conversational tone", and also confessed to murdering Annie Mae Johnson two weeks before Kitty. He shot Annie Mae four times as she was getting out of her car at night, then raped her in her house while her unknowing family members were upstairs, then set the house on fire.

Moseley was sentenced to death for the murder of Genovese, but his sentence was reduced to life imprisonment on appeal. In 1968, he escaped from prison and terrorized Buffalo, New York, for 4 days, breaking into houses, raping a woman at gunpoint, and taking hostages before being captured by the FBI. He went on to complete a sociology degree from prison in 1977, and later claimed to be reformed.

Bill attempts to interview Winston Moseley, who refuses, saying he was "tired of being exploited." Moseley's son Steven, a minister, does agree to meet with Bill, however. He says his father told him that Kitty had hurled racial slurs at Moseley, who "snapped" and killed her, but a dubious Bill points out that Moseley had previously killed Annie Mae Johnson, who was African American. Steven then states that he was scared to meet with Bill because the story in his family is that Kitty was related to the Genovese crime family, which Bill denies. Later, Bill receives a letter from Winston Moseley, which makes the "bizarre claim" that Moseley had just been an unwitting getaway driver the night Kitty was killed, and "an Italian mobster named Dominick" killed Kitty over an unpaid debt, threatening Moseley and his family if he revealed the truth.

Bill concludes: "I've come to realize that the whole truth about Kitty's death will never be known, but maybe that's why the story continues to fascinate people…but I know she'd want me to move on."

Cast edit

  • Kitty Genovese, a murder victim (archive footage)
  • Winston Moseley, a confessed and convicted murderer (archive footage)
  • William Genovese, one of Kitty's younger brothers
  • Sophia Farrar, Kitty's neighbor and friend
  • A. M. Rosenthal, an editor at The New York Times
  • Mike Wallace, a journalist who reported on the case
  • Gabe Pressman, a journalist critical of the initial coverage of the case
  • Shannon Beeby, an actress recruited for the reenactment done in the film

Reception edit

On review aggregator website Rotten Tomatoes, 90% of 61 critics' reviews of the film are positive, with an average rating of 7.7/10; the site's "critics consensus" reads: "The Witness can't hope to truly untangle the true crime case at its center, but offers a series of fascinating — and troubling — insights in the attempt."[4] On Metacritic, the film holds a weighted average score of 79 out of 100 based on reviews by 18 critics, indicating "generally favorable reviews".[5]

In a positive review, Pat Padua of The Washington Post wrote: "The Witness makes an encouraging case for the argument that society is not as apathetic as we fear. But it also reveals a troubling phenomenon: our willingness to accept all that we are told as truth."[6] Writing for Variety, Nick Schager said: "The Witness functions as a project of not only confrontation but resurrection, as Bill's sleuthing sheds new light on Kitty’s personality, romances and career, and thus finally re-emphasizes her as a flesh-and-blood person rather than just a famous victim."[7] Reviewing for The A.V. Club, A.A. Dowd wrote: "Perhaps because any real closure is impossible at this point, The Witness eventually embraces its own inconclusiveness, like some documentary cousin to Zodiac."[8]

Justin Chang of the Los Angeles Times lauded the film and said: "The strength of The Witness lies in its recognition that the truth is often not just elusive but unattainable."[9] Reviewing for RogerEbert.com, film critic Matt Zoller Seitz wrote: "This is a powerful movie, but perhaps its greatest triumph is that for a brief time it resurrects Kitty Genovese, and lets us see her as a person"[10] Farran Smith Nehme of the New York Post explained: "Solomon and Genovese remind us that all witnesses can be unreliable, in one way or another. The emotional impact comes from the gentle way the film reveals Kitty Genovese as a loving, vibrant person, and not as a symbol."[11] Joe McGovern of Entertainment Weekly said that "The powerful thrust of the film comes from its critique of the media."[12]

Joe Morgenstern of The Wall Street Journal reviewed the film positively, saying: "The Witness is remarkable for its emotional impact, and its clarity. The picture that emerges isn’t perfectly clear; the whole truth will never be known, Bill Genovese says. What he has made known, though, is valuable."[13] Kate Erbland of Indiewire said: ""Although The Witness functions just fine as a true crime documentary in the vein of such en vogue offerings as Serial and Making a Murderer, the film makes its mark when it leans in on the deeply personal connection between its subject and its storyteller."[14] Andy Webster of The New York Times praised the film and said: "A re-creation of the night, with an actress playing the screaming victim while Mr. Genovese observes, is harrowing."[15] Frank Scheck of The Hollywood Reporter expressed: "Few films feel as cathartic as James Solomon's documentary The Witness."[16]

The Witness was named as one of the best films of 2016 by both Richard Brody of The New Yorker and David Edelstein New York.[citation needed]

Accolades edit

Award Category Recipients and nominees Results Ref.
Atlanta Film Festival Best Documentary Feature James D. Solomon Nominated
Boulder International Film Festival Best Feature Documentary (Theatrical Feature) James D. Solomon Won
Critics' Choice Documentary Awards Best First Documentary James D. Solomon Nominated
Best Documentary Feature The Witness Nominated
Hong Kong International Film Festival Golden Firebird Award (Documentary) James D. Solomon Nominated
Sarasota Film Festival Best Documentary Feature – Jury James D. Solomon Nominated

References edit

  1. ^ "Queens Woman Is Stabbed to Death in Front of Home". The New York Times. March 14, 1964. p. 26. Retrieved July 5, 2007.
  2. ^ Gansberg, Martin (March 27, 1964). (PDF). The New York Times. Archived from the original (PDF) on August 7, 2015.
  3. ^ "15 Documentary Feature advance in 2016 Oscar Race". Oscars.org. Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences. December 6, 2016. Retrieved January 15, 2017.
  4. ^ "The Witness (2016)". Rotten Tomatoes. Fandango Media. Retrieved February 4, 2024.
  5. ^ "The Witness Reviews". Metacritic. CBS Interactive. Retrieved January 17, 2017.
  6. ^ Padua, Pat (June 30, 2016). "One lesson from 'The Witness': Don't believe everything that you read". The Washington Post. Retrieved January 17, 2017.
  7. ^ Schager, Nick (January 21, 2016). "Film Review: 'The Witness'". Variety. Penske Business Media. Retrieved January 17, 2017.
  8. ^ Dowd, A.A. (June 1, 2016). "The Witness puts a personal spin on a true crime and the apathy it inspired". The A.V. Club. The Onion. Retrieved January 17, 2017.
  9. ^ Chang, Justin (June 16, 2016). "'The Witness' powerfully revisits the murder of Kitty Genovese". Los Angeles Times. Retrieved January 17, 2017.
  10. ^ Seitz, Matt Zoller (Jun 3, 2016). "The Witness, Review". RogerEbert.com. Ebert Digital LLC. Retrieved January 17, 2017.
  11. ^ Smith Nehme, Farran (Jun 2, 2016). "Kitty Genovese murder doc recalls the infamous crime". New York Post. NYP Holdings. Retrieved January 18, 2017.
  12. ^ McGovern, Joe (June 1, 2015). "The Witness: EW review". Entertainment Weekly. Time. Retrieved January 17, 2017.
  13. ^ Morgenstern, Joe (Jun 2, 2016). "Review: 'The Witness' Throws Shocking New Light On New York's Most Infamous Murder". The Wall Street Journal. Dow Jones & Company. Retrieved January 19, 2017.
  14. ^ Erbland, Kate (Jun 2, 2016). "Review: 'The Witness' Throws Shocking New Light On New York's Most Infamous Murder". IndieWire. Penske Business Media. Retrieved January 19, 2017.
  15. ^ Webster, Andy (June 2, 2016). "Review: 'The Witness,' a Brother's Quest to Put Kitty Genovese Case to Rest". The New York Times. Retrieved January 17, 2017.
  16. ^ Scheck, Frank (January 21, 2016). "The Witness: NYFF Review". The Hollywood Reporter. Prometheus Global Media. Retrieved January 19, 2017.
  17. ^ . Atlanta Film Festival. Archived from the original on February 2, 2017. Retrieved January 19, 2017.
  18. ^ "The Witness". Boulder International Film Festival. Retrieved January 19, 2017.
  19. ^ Erbland, Kate (October 10, 2016). "Inaugural Critics' Choice Documentary Awards Heap Nominations on '13th,' 'O.J.: Made In America' and 'Gleason'". IndieWire. Penske Business Media. Retrieved January 17, 2017.
  20. ^ . The 40th Hong Kong International Film Festival. Hong Kong International Film Festival. Archived from the original on February 1, 2017. Retrieved January 19, 2017.
  21. ^ Ogles, Jacob (March 16, 2016). "Sarasota Film Festival releases complete program of films for 2016". SRQ Backlot. Retrieved January 19, 2017.

External links edit

witness, 2015, american, film, witness, 2015, american, documentary, film, directed, produced, james, solomon, follows, william, bill, genovese, decades, after, death, investigates, march, 1964, murder, sister, catherine, susan, kitty, genovese, winston, mosel. The Witness is a 2015 American documentary film directed and produced by James D Solomon It follows William Bill Genovese as decades after her death he investigates the March 13 1964 1 murder of his sister Catherine Susan Kitty Genovese by Winston Moseley 2 in Kew Gardens a neighborhood in the New York City borough of Queens Bill Genovese executive produced and narrated the film The WitnessTheatrical release posterDirected byJames D SolomonWritten byWilliam Genovese Russell Greene Gabriel Rhodes James D SolomonProduced byJames D SolomonNarrated byWilliam GenoveseCinematographyTrish GovoniEdited byGabriel RhodesRussell GreeneMusic byNathan HalpernDistributed byFilmRiseRelease datesOctober 6 2015 2015 10 06 New York Film Festival June 3 2016 2016 06 03 limited United States Running time89 minutesCountryUnited StatesLanguageEnglish Upon its release film received positive reviews from critics It was one of the fifteen documentaries out of 145 entries shortlisted for Best Documentary Feature at the 89th Academy Awards 3 though it was not one of the five final nominees for the award Contents 1 Synopsis 2 Plot 3 Cast 4 Reception 4 1 Accolades 5 References 6 External linksSynopsis editThe name Kitty Genovese became synonymous with bystander apathy inspiring numerous sociology books and articles after The New York Times reported that 38 witnesses saw her being murdered and did nothing to help The Witness follows her younger brother Bill s search for the truth and ultimately debunks initial reports and long held public opinion about the circumstances of her murder In addition to investigating Kitty s murder the film reveals details about Kitty s life her popularity in high school her brief marriage her job as a bar manager her relationship with her partner Maryann Zielonko It also examines the effect of the murder on Kitty s family During the Vietnam War averse to being an apathetic bystander Bill determined he wasn t going to be like the 38 witnesses so he enlisted in the Marines losing both his legs to battle wounds Her parents and siblings to avoid bringing up painful memories never discussed her causing the details of her life to be a mystery even to her eventual nieces and nephews Plot editThe CaseKitty Genovese was murdered at about 3 20 am on March 13 1964 in the Kew Gardens neighborhood of Queens New York The lede of the initial article in The New York Times about her death written by Martin Gansberg read For more than half an hour 38 respectable law abiding citizens in Queens watched a killer stalk and stab a woman in three separate attacks in Kew Gardens Although absolutely riveting the film argues that most of that statement was inaccurate The number of witnesses is disputable as with one or two exceptions the witnesses awakened by the attack only heard screams and were not eyewitnesses The people in the apartment building could not have seen Kitty for more than a couple of minutes could not clearly see the attack in the dark and saw her stand up and stagger away thinking they had seen a drunken brawl originating at a nearby bar For most that was the end of the attack They had no sense Kitty was being stalked There were two attacks not three When a few witnesses saw the attacker Winston Moseley return they assumed Kitty had gone someplace safe They were unaware that Kitty had only staggered around the corner into an alley then into a vestibule behind a closed door out of sight and were unaware that the attacker later found Kitty in the vestibule where he raped and killed her Journalist Jim Rasenberger tells Bill Genovese in the film If the story had been reported more accurately it still would have been a two or three day maybe a four day story but it would not have been a 50 year story We would still not be talking about it today Bill Genovese s InvestigationWilliam Bill Genovese was 16 when his older sister Kitty was murdered For many years Kitty s family found it too painful to look into the facts of her death Starting in March 2004 however Bill began his own investigation into whether it was true that 38 witnesses failed to help his sister With leads from prosecutor Charles Skoller he obtained the police interviews and the transcript of Winston Moseley s trial and set about finding the witnesses or informants who were still alive His findings which are documented in the film include the following Joseph Fink a night elevator operator seated in the lobby of the Mowbray building across the street saw the attack and did nothing He was the only one who was fully aware of the incident as it unfolded who failed to act Karl Ross looked down a staircase and saw the second attack taking place He called friends for advice on what to do before calling police to report the attack The police call log only listed one call related to the murder from Karl Ross after Kitty was mortally wounded Hattie Grund saw a woman screaming Help standing in front of the cleaners She says she called the police who said they had already gotten calls about the incident Newspaper accounts did not report that Grund and others called the police Only 5 of the 38 witnesses were called to the testify at Moseley s trial among them Irene Frost heard screaming and saw a man and a woman across the street and heard Kitty scream Please help me God Please help me I ve been stabbed At the window she saw Kitty kneeling down on the sidewalk and Moseley running away down the street Robert Mozer saw Kitty kneeling at the bookstore and a man bending over her Mozer hollered Hey get out of there and Moseley jumped up and ran away Andree Picq heard Mozer s yell to Moseley and saw Moseley run away fast She then saw Kitty get up slowly and scream Help walking slowly toward the backstreet Picq was still at the window a few minutes after Moseley came back walking normally as if nothing happened Then he went down to the train station and then he came out again and left in the back and I could not see anything but I heard the last two screams Help help Sophie Farrar lived in the apartment next to Kitty s and was a friend She was awakened by a loud scream About 20 minutes later she received a phone call possibly from Karl Ross informing her that Kitty was in the hall bleeding Farrar rushed to find Kitty in the hallway and held her as she was dying waiting for an ambulance The newspaper account failed to report this According to defense attorney Sydney Sparrow as reported by his son Moseley was bright and manipulative with a 135 IQ Moseley told the story of killing Kitty in a cold conversational tone and also confessed to murdering Annie Mae Johnson two weeks before Kitty He shot Annie Mae four times as she was getting out of her car at night then raped her in her house while her unknowing family members were upstairs then set the house on fire Moseley was sentenced to death for the murder of Genovese but his sentence was reduced to life imprisonment on appeal In 1968 he escaped from prison and terrorized Buffalo New York for 4 days breaking into houses raping a woman at gunpoint and taking hostages before being captured by the FBI He went on to complete a sociology degree from prison in 1977 and later claimed to be reformed Bill attempts to interview Winston Moseley who refuses saying he was tired of being exploited Moseley s son Steven a minister does agree to meet with Bill however He says his father told him that Kitty had hurled racial slurs at Moseley who snapped and killed her but a dubious Bill points out that Moseley had previously killed Annie Mae Johnson who was African American Steven then states that he was scared to meet with Bill because the story in his family is that Kitty was related to the Genovese crime family which Bill denies Later Bill receives a letter from Winston Moseley which makes the bizarre claim that Moseley had just been an unwitting getaway driver the night Kitty was killed and an Italian mobster named Dominick killed Kitty over an unpaid debt threatening Moseley and his family if he revealed the truth Bill concludes I ve come to realize that the whole truth about Kitty s death will never be known but maybe that s why the story continues to fascinate people but I know she d want me to move on Cast editKitty Genovese a murder victim archive footage Winston Moseley a confessed and convicted murderer archive footage William Genovese one of Kitty s younger brothers Sophia Farrar Kitty s neighbor and friend A M Rosenthal an editor at The New York Times Mike Wallace a journalist who reported on the case Gabe Pressman a journalist critical of the initial coverage of the case Shannon Beeby an actress recruited for the reenactment done in the filmReception editOn review aggregator website Rotten Tomatoes 90 of 61 critics reviews of the film are positive with an average rating of 7 7 10 the site s critics consensus reads The Witness can t hope to truly untangle the true crime case at its center but offers a series of fascinating and troubling insights in the attempt 4 On Metacritic the film holds a weighted average score of 79 out of 100 based on reviews by 18 critics indicating generally favorable reviews 5 In a positive review Pat Padua of The Washington Post wrote The Witness makes an encouraging case for the argument that society is not as apathetic as we fear But it also reveals a troubling phenomenon our willingness to accept all that we are told as truth 6 Writing for Variety Nick Schager said The Witness functions as a project of not only confrontation but resurrection as Bill s sleuthing sheds new light on Kitty s personality romances and career and thus finally re emphasizes her as a flesh and blood person rather than just a famous victim 7 Reviewing for The A V Club A A Dowd wrote Perhaps because any real closure is impossible at this point The Witness eventually embraces its own inconclusiveness like some documentary cousin to Zodiac 8 Justin Chang of the Los Angeles Times lauded the film and said The strength of The Witness lies in its recognition that the truth is often not just elusive but unattainable 9 Reviewing for RogerEbert com film critic Matt Zoller Seitz wrote This is a powerful movie but perhaps its greatest triumph is that for a brief time it resurrects Kitty Genovese and lets us see her as a person 10 Farran Smith Nehme of the New York Post explained Solomon and Genovese remind us that all witnesses can be unreliable in one way or another The emotional impact comes from the gentle way the film reveals Kitty Genovese as a loving vibrant person and not as a symbol 11 Joe McGovern of Entertainment Weekly said that The powerful thrust of the film comes from its critique of the media 12 Joe Morgenstern of The Wall Street Journal reviewed the film positively saying The Witness is remarkable for its emotional impact and its clarity The picture that emerges isn t perfectly clear the whole truth will never be known Bill Genovese says What he has made known though is valuable 13 Kate Erbland of Indiewire said Although The Witness functions just fine as a true crime documentary in the vein of such en vogue offerings as Serial and Making a Murderer the film makes its mark when it leans in on the deeply personal connection between its subject and its storyteller 14 Andy Webster of The New York Times praised the film and said A re creation of the night with an actress playing the screaming victim while Mr Genovese observes is harrowing 15 Frank Scheck of The Hollywood Reporter expressed Few films feel as cathartic as James Solomon s documentary The Witness 16 The Witness was named as one of the best films of 2016 by both Richard Brody of The New Yorker and David Edelstein New York citation needed Accolades edit Award Category Recipients and nominees Results Ref Atlanta Film Festival Best Documentary Feature James D Solomon Nominated 17 Boulder International Film Festival Best Feature Documentary Theatrical Feature James D Solomon Won 18 Critics Choice Documentary Awards Best First Documentary James D Solomon Nominated 19 Best Documentary Feature The Witness Nominated Hong Kong International Film Festival Golden Firebird Award Documentary James D Solomon Nominated 20 Sarasota Film Festival Best Documentary Feature Jury James D Solomon Nominated 21 References edit Queens Woman Is Stabbed to Death in Front of Home The New York Times March 14 1964 p 26 Retrieved July 5 2007 Gansberg Martin March 27 1964 37 Who Saw Murder Didn t Call the Police PDF The New York Times Archived from the original PDF on August 7 2015 15 Documentary Feature advance in 2016 Oscar Race Oscars org Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences December 6 2016 Retrieved January 15 2017 The Witness 2016 Rotten Tomatoes Fandango Media Retrieved February 4 2024 The Witness Reviews Metacritic CBS Interactive Retrieved January 17 2017 Padua Pat June 30 2016 One lesson from The Witness Don t believe everything that you read The Washington Post Retrieved January 17 2017 Schager Nick January 21 2016 Film Review The Witness Variety Penske Business Media Retrieved January 17 2017 Dowd A A June 1 2016 The Witness puts a personal spin on a true crime and the apathy it inspired The A V Club The Onion Retrieved January 17 2017 Chang Justin June 16 2016 The Witness powerfully revisits the murder of Kitty Genovese Los Angeles Times Retrieved January 17 2017 Seitz Matt Zoller Jun 3 2016 The Witness Review RogerEbert com Ebert Digital LLC Retrieved January 17 2017 Smith Nehme Farran Jun 2 2016 Kitty Genovese murder doc recalls the infamous crime New York Post NYP Holdings Retrieved January 18 2017 McGovern Joe June 1 2015 The Witness EW review Entertainment Weekly Time Retrieved January 17 2017 Morgenstern Joe Jun 2 2016 Review The Witness Throws Shocking New Light On New York s Most Infamous Murder The Wall Street Journal Dow Jones amp Company Retrieved January 19 2017 Erbland Kate Jun 2 2016 Review The Witness Throws Shocking New Light On New York s Most Infamous Murder IndieWire Penske Business Media Retrieved January 19 2017 Webster Andy June 2 2016 Review The Witness a Brother s Quest to Put Kitty Genovese Case to Rest The New York Times Retrieved January 17 2017 Scheck Frank January 21 2016 The Witness NYFF Review The Hollywood Reporter Prometheus Global Media Retrieved January 19 2017 The Witness Atlanta Film Festival Archived from the original on February 2 2017 Retrieved January 19 2017 The Witness Boulder International Film Festival Retrieved January 19 2017 Erbland Kate October 10 2016 Inaugural Critics Choice Documentary Awards Heap Nominations on 13th O J Made In America and Gleason IndieWire Penske Business Media Retrieved January 17 2017 Films The 40th Hong Kong International Film Festival Hong Kong International Film Festival Archived from the original on February 1 2017 Retrieved January 19 2017 Ogles Jacob March 16 2016 Sarasota Film Festival releases complete program of films for 2016 SRQ Backlot Retrieved January 19 2017 External links editOfficial website The Witness at IMDb nbsp The Witness at Rotten Tomatoes The Witness at Metacritic nbsp Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title The Witness 2015 American film amp oldid 1206081867, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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