Witness (1985)
7/10
Witness
5 November 2023
Warning: Spoilers
Directed by Peter Weir and written by Earl W. Wallace and William Kelley, Witness tells the tale of an Amish community outside Lancaster, Pennsylvania and one of their youngest members, Samuel (Lukas Haas), who has witnessed a murder in a Philadelphia train station. Detective Sergeant John Book (Harrison Ford) and his partner Sergeant Elton Carter (Brent Jennings) are on the case and soon discover that the murderers were corrupt police officers, Book is nearly killed by them and has to hide out with the Amish while protecting Sam and his mother Rachel (Kelly McGillis) from the criminals.

Ford spent time with the Philadelphia Police Department and McGillis lived with an Amish widow and her seven children, learning how to milk cows and practicing their Pennsylvania German dialect. Filmed in Intercourse, Lancaster, Strasburg and Parkesburg, this had local Amish work as carpenters and electricians while refusing to be in the movie. The Amish extras that appear are really Mennonites.

Leading up to and following its release, Witness was met with controversy from the Amish. They felt that it exploited them and the graphic violence in the movie went against their religion. The National Committee For Amish Religious Freedom asked for a boycott and the state of Pennsylvania agreed to not promote Amish communities for movie sets. Yet the film has a scene that calls this out, as Rachel talks about people just walking onto their farms and staring at them, treating them as someone to gawk at.

The winner of Oscars for Best Original Screenplay and Best Film Editing, Witness was a big movie when it came out. In his top one hundred movies, Akira Kurosawa had this at 89.

I've always thought that it was an interesting film for Ford to be in and also one that shows the alien nature of the Amish and never judges them. Instead, it shows that these parallel worlds can exist -- and should -- outside of the modern way of life.
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