|
Michael Clarke Duncan | John Coffey | |
Tom Hanks | Paul Edgecomb | |
Patricia Clarkson | Melinda Moores | |
Jeffrey DeMunn | Harry Terwilliger | |
Dabbs Greer | Old Paul Edgecomb | |
Eve Brent | Elaine Connelly | |
Bonnie Hunt | Jan Edgecomb | |
David Morse | Brutus Howell | |
Barry Pepper | Dean Stanton | |
James Cromwell | Warden Hal Moores | |
Harry Dean Stanton | Toot-Toot | |
Graham Greene | Arlen Bitterbuck | |
Doug Hutchison | Percy Wetmore | |
Michael Jeter | Eduard Delacroix | |
Paula Malcomson | Marjorie Detterick | |
William Sadler | Klaus Detterick | |
Sam Rockwell | Bill Wharton |
Director |
|
||
Producer | Frank Darabont
David Valdes |
||
Writer | Frank Darabont
Stephen King |
||
Cinematography | David Tattersall
|
||
Musician | Thomas Newman
Jeff Coopwood Jimmy McHugh |
|
Tom Hanks stars as Paul Edgecombe, head guard of death row in a Depression-era Southern prison. Edgecombe and the guards he works with have the responsibility of guarding and executing the most depraved men in the prision. But their new charge, John Coffey (Michael Clarke Duncan), is different. Convicted of the rape and murder of two young girls, Coffey nonetheless possesses a childlike demeanor and miraculous healing powers. As the time of Coffey's execution nears, Edgecombe and the other guards begin to realize the scope of Coffey's powers. They also begin to doubt that Coffey is guilty of the crime he was convicted for. |
|
|
||||||||||||||||||||
Features
|
|||||||||||||||||||||