Search results
Roman J. Israel, Esq. is a 2017 American legal drama film written and directed by Dan Gilroy. The film stars Denzel Washington and Colin Farrell and follows the life of a civil rights advocate and defense lawyer (Washington) who finds himself in a tumultuous series of events that lead to a personal crisis and the necessity for extreme action.
- $13 million
- James Newton Howard
- $22 million
- Denzel Washington, Colin Farrell
Nov 22, 2017 · Roman J. Israel, Esq.: Directed by Dan Gilroy. With Denzel Washington, Colin Farrell, Carmen Ejogo, Lynda Gravatt. Roman J. Israel, Esq., a driven, idealistic defense attorney, finds himself in a tumultuous series of events that lead to a crisis and the necessity for extreme action.
- Dan Gilroy
- 3 min
People also ask
Who are the actors in Roman J Israel?
Who is Roman J Israel?
Who plays Roman Israel?
Is Roman J Israel a drama?
Roman J. Israel is an idealistic defense attorney whose life gets upended when his boss and mentor -- the legendary civil rights icon William Henry Jackson -- dies unexpectedly.
- (177)
- Dan Gilroy
- PG-13
- Denzel Washington
Nov 26, 2017 · KAREN GRIGSBY BATES, BYLINE: Roman J. Israel has been a civil rights attorney for almost three decades. He's poured his life into a two-man firm that is famous for its civil rights...
ROMAN J. ISRAEL, ESQ. is a dramatic thriller set in the underbelly of the overburdened Los Angeles criminal court system. Denzel Washington stars as Roman Israel, a driven, idealistic defense attorney who, through a tumultuous series of events, finds himself in a crisis that leads to extreme action.
Jan 30, 2018 · Roman J. Israel is a lawyer who has spent his entire thirty-six-year career as the employee of a boldly principled, civil-rights-oriented defense attorney named William Henry Jackson. Roman...
Nov 17, 2017 · Powered by JustWatch. “Roman J. Israel, Esq.” looks like prime Oscar bait. It has the glow of nobility and importance emanating from every frame courtesy of Robert Elswit ’s cinematography. The screenplay by writer-director Dan Gilroy is filled with dialogue about civil rights, the prison industrial complex and the common man.