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Mississippi Burning Poster

Mississippi Burning

1964. When America was at war with itself.
1988 | 128m | English

(124951 votes)

TMDb IMDb

Popularity: 6 (history)

Director: Alan Parker
Writer: Chris Gerolmo
Staring:
Details

Two FBI agents investigating the murder of civil rights workers during the 60s seek to breach the conspiracy of silence in a small Southern town where segregation divides black and white. The younger agent trained in FBI school runs up against the small town ways of his partner, a former sheriff.
Release Date: Dec 08, 1988
Director: Alan Parker
Writer: Chris Gerolmo
Genres: Drama, Crime
Keywords suicide, ku klux klan, mississippi river, sheriff, shotgun, deputy sheriff, fbi, motel, funeral, u.s. navy, burning cross, police, rope, based on true story, murder, racism, dramatic, callous, compassionate, disheartening, empathetic, harsh, tragic
Production Companies Orion Pictures
Box Office Revenue: $34,604,000
Budget: $15,000,000
Updates Updated: Feb 01, 2025
Entered: Apr 13, 2024
Trailers and Extras

Full Credits

Name Character
Gene Hackman Agent Rupert Anderson
Willem Dafoe Agent Alan Ward
Frances McDormand Mrs. Pell
Brad Dourif Deputy Clinton Pell
R. Lee Ermey Mayor Tilman
Gailard Sartain Sheriff Stuckey
Stephen Tobolowsky Townley
Michael Rooker Frank Bailey
Pruitt Taylor Vince Lester Cowens
Badja Djola Agent Monk
Kevin Dunn Agent Bird
Frankie Faison Eulogist
Thomas B. Mason Judge (as Tom Mason)
Geoffrey Nauffts Goatee
Rick Zieff Passenger
Christopher White Black Passenger
Gladys Greer Hattie
Jake Gipson Mose
Dianne Lancaster Waitress
Stanley W. Collins Hollis
Daniel Winford Fennis
Marc Clement Floyd Swilley
Larry Shuler Earl Cooke
Stephen Bridgewater Wesley Cooke
Bob Penny Curtis Foy
James F. Moore Barber
Park Overall Connie
Georgia F. Wise Beauty Parlor Woman 1
Lois Allen Beauty Parlor Woman 2
Barry Davis Jim, Sr. Choctaw Man
Dan Desmond Television Commentator (voice)
Darius McCrary Aaron Williams
Lou Walker Vertis Williams
Billie Jean Young Mrs. Williams
Alisa R. Patrick Church Soloist
Barbara Gibson Church Soloist
Pat Funderburk Pell Maid
Tobin Bell Agent Stokes
Mark Jeffrey Miller Fire Bomber
John P. Fertitta T.V. Commentator
Charles Franzen Interviewer & Reporter
Tonea Stewart Mrs. Walker
Robert F. Colesberry Cameraman
Frederick Zollo Reporter
Ron De Roxtra Reporter
Doug Jackson Reporter
Gary Moody Reporter
Robert Erickson Reporter
Ed Geldart Fire Bomber
Mert Hatfield Fire Bomber
James Eric Fire Bomber
Daniel Chapman Agent MacMillan
Rick Washburn Agent Brodsky
Robert Glaudini Agent Nash
Ken Magee Agent Reilly
Paul Henderson Local #1 (uncredited)
Ralph Pruitt Vaughn Peckerwood (uncredited)
Jesse Merle Speaks Pecan Vendor
Simeon Teague Obie Walker
Brenda Dunlap Mrs. Cowens
E.A. Thrall Agent Tubbs
Kenneth Magee Agent Reilly
Name Job
Alan Parker Director
Trevor Jones Original Music Composer
Juliet Taylor Casting
John Robotham Stunt Coordinator
Steve Kelso Stunts
David Appleby Still Photographer
Aldric La'Auli Porter First Assistant Director
Barbara Harris ADR Voice Casting
Chris Gerolmo Screenplay
Peter Biziou Director of Photography
Ellen Lutter Costume Supervisor
Gerry Hambling Editor
Howard Feuer Casting
Paul LeBlanc Hair Designer
Philip Harrison Production Design
Geoffrey Kirkland Production Design
John Willett Art Direction
Jim Erickson Set Decoration
Aude Bronson-Howard Costume Design
David Forrest Makeup Designer
Tom Razzano Unit Production Manager
Stan Parks Special Effects Coordinator
Mayin Lo Assistant Editor
Paul Hulme Sound Engineer
Maida N. Morgan Thanks
Nicholas Paleologos Thanks
Robin Squibb Script Supervisor
David Linck Unit Publicist
Pieter Hubbard Sound Editor
Bob Leitelt Grip
Dennis J. Lootens Electrician
Willie Mann Best Boy Electric
Helen P. Butler Costume Supervisor
Brenda Kalosh Second Assistant Director
Mike Roberts Camera Operator
Danny Michael Sound Recordist
Judith Lyn Brown Production Coordinator
Eamonn O'Keeffe First Assistant Camera
Ron Stone Property Master
Gretchen Rau Assistant Set Decoration
David Brace Leadman
James C. Feng Assistant Art Director
Steve Arnold Assistant Art Director
John Bromell Set Dresser
Anthony Starbuck Boom Operator
Carol D. Bonnefil Second Second Assistant Director
Glenn Cunningham First Assistant Editor
Robert J. Litt Sound Re-Recording Mixer
Elliot Tyson Sound Re-Recording Mixer
Rick Kline Sound Re-Recording Mixer
Bill Phillips Supervising Sound Editor
Hal Sanders Sound Editor
Bruce Lacey Sound Editor
John Phillips Sound Editor
David Grannis Assistant Sound Editor
Les Percy Key Grip
Mike Moad Dolly Grip
Cynthia L. Hamilton Assistant Costume Designer
Roger Dietz Scenic Artist
E.W. Bradford Construction Coordinator
Jerry G. Henery Construction Foreman
Jerry Jackson Transportation Coordinator
Rick Davis Transportation Captain
Gary Burritt Negative Cutter
Richard E. Butler Stunts
Stewart 'Polar Bear' Shaw Set Dresser
Kym Washington Longino Stunts
Name Title
Robert F. Colesberry Producer
Frederick Zollo Producer
Organization Category Person
Golden Globes Best Director Alan Parker Nominated
Golden Globes Best Supporting Actor Brad Dourif Nominated
Academy Awards Best Director Alan Parker Nominated
Spirit Awards Best Actor Gene Hackman Nominated
Popularity Metrics

Popularity History


Year Month Avg Max Min
2024 4 31 51 22
2024 5 31 43 19
2024 6 28 46 16
2024 7 34 62 22
2024 8 22 34 15
2024 9 35 64 19
2024 10 21 28 14
2024 11 19 35 13
2024 12 21 32 14
2025 1 23 43 14
2025 2 16 26 4
2025 3 14 44 2
2025 4 3 4 2
2025 5 3 4 2
2025 6 5 9 2
2025 7 4 6 3
2025 8 3 4 2
2025 9 4 6 3
2025 10 5 7 4

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2025 6 527 699
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2025 5 473 776
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2025 4 878 903
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2025 3 236 674
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2025 2 227 308
Year Month High Avg
2024 11 691 757
Year Month High Avg
2024 10 710 908
Year Month High Avg
2024 9 86 400

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Reviews

kevin2019
10.0

"Mississippi Burning" has both insight and intelligence and it is an incredibly uncompromising scrutinization of how racism blighted American society and it is frightening to think the residents of Jessop in Mississippi possess minds much smaller than their town. This film also prompts you to seriou ... sly examine your own conscience in relation to the matter of the race issue, but how many people will actually be enthusiastically prepared to carry out such a thing? And how many of us will be shocked to discover something of Mayor Tilman in ourselves: we know all about what is going on and yet we choose to do nothing about it? That is the real lasting power of this superb film and that is why it will continue to have great longevity and deservedly so.

Apr 19, 2024
Geronimo1967
7.0

When three men go missing from their small-town Mississippi home, the FBI sends a team to investigate. "Anderson" (Gene Hackman) is very much the more hands-on of the pair leading the team, with "Ward" (Willem Dafoe) more inclined to play by the book. Their arrival exposes them to an open culture of ... racial hatred that's not only tolerated by the local sheriff "Stuckey" (Gailard Sartain) but enthusiastically supported by his deputy "Pell" (Brad Dourif). Their arrival only seems to empower the bigots as more Negro property is trashed or razed to the ground and the people themselves subjected to increasingly dangerous violence. The audience watching this know the local dynamic and who is pulling the strings, so the thrust of this rather potent look at the ghastliness going on here comes as we follow the differing styles of policing these men use to get to the bottom of things - and in a way that will make the equally complicit judicial system sit up and take note. With a media carnival only fanning the flames and tempers flying on both sides, the agents put into place a complex sting operation to turn the weapons of these intimidators into the very things that will hopefully entrap them. Hackman and Dafoe make for a formidable coupling in this well written and presented thriller that shines an unashamed light on the toxic attitudes of the white population whose concern for the missing men amounted to little more than "they got whet they deserved". Dourif is also on good form as his truly odious character emerges - not just against his black neighbours, but against his own wife (Frances McDormand) too. Alan Parker and Chris Gerolmo have created a palpably criminal scenario here and the ensemble deliver well that sense of fear, loathing and superiority. The photography captures well this increasingly menacing, dark and swamp-infested environment and by the denouement I did feel that this was all a perfectly plausible train of events in the mid-1960s USA.

Apr 28, 2024