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!! The novel by Creator/JohnGrisham and its film adaptation:

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-->[[quoteblock]]I have heard all of Cayhall's clichés before, but they have pretty much disappeared from general use in America, and there will be some younger audience members hearing them for the first time. How will these words affect them? In both “A Time to Kill” and “The Chamber,” the Ku Klux Klan, with its secret meetings and ghostly costumes, is presented in a way that is technically negative but could seem thrilling. The films portray the Klan as criminal, racist and anonymous, but those have always been its selling points; it is not portrayed as boring and stupid.[[/quoteblock]]

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-->[[quoteblock]]I have heard all of Cayhall's clichés before, but they have pretty much disappeared from general use in America, and there will be some younger audience members hearing them for the first time. How will these words affect them? In both “A Time to Kill” and “The Chamber,” the Ku Klux Klan, with its secret meetings and ghostly costumes, is presented in a way that is technically negative but could seem thrilling. The films portray the Klan as criminal, racist and anonymous, but those have always been its selling points; it is not portrayed as boring and stupid.[[/quoteblock]][[/quoteblock]]

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* DoNotDoThisCoolThing: [[https://www.rogerebert.com/reviews/the-chamber-1996 Roger Ebert criticized the film on the grounds that it made the KKK look more glamorous and appealing than it should be]].

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* DoNotDoThisCoolThing: [[https://www.rogerebert.com/reviews/the-chamber-1996 Roger Ebert criticized the film on the grounds that it made for making the KKK look more glamorous and appealing than it should be]].
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[[quoteblock]] I have heard all of Cayhall's clichés before, but they have pretty much disappeared from general use in America, and there will be some younger audience members hearing them for the first time. How will these words affect them? In both “A Time to Kill” and “The Chamber,” the Ku Klux Klan, with its secret meetings and ghostly costumes, is presented in a way that is technically negative but could seem thrilling. The films portray the Klan as criminal, racist and anonymous, but those have always been its selling points; it is not portrayed as boring and stupid.[[/quoteblock]]

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[[quoteblock]] I -->[[quoteblock]]I have heard all of Cayhall's clichés before, but they have pretty much disappeared from general use in America, and there will be some younger audience members hearing them for the first time. How will these words affect them? In both “A Time to Kill” and “The Chamber,” the Ku Klux Klan, with its secret meetings and ghostly costumes, is presented in a way that is technically negative but could seem thrilling. The films portray the Klan as criminal, racist and anonymous, but those have always been its selling points; it is not portrayed as boring and stupid.[[/quoteblock]]
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* DoNotDoThisCoolThing: [[https://www.rogerebert.com/reviews/the-chamber-1996 Roger Ebert criticized the film on the grounds that it made the KKK look more glamorous and appealing than it should be]].

[[quoteblock]] I have heard all of Cayhall's clichés before, but they have pretty much disappeared from general use in America, and there will be some younger audience members hearing them for the first time. How will these words affect them? In both “A Time to Kill” and “The Chamber,” the Ku Klux Klan, with its secret meetings and ghostly costumes, is presented in a way that is technically negative but could seem thrilling. The films portray the Klan as criminal, racist and anonymous, but those have always been its selling points; it is not portrayed as boring and stupid.[[/quoteblock]]

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