Updated On: 20 October, 2023 05:52 PM IST | Los Angeles | Johnson Thomas
A charming, light-weight court-room drama with civil rights flags pinned into its theme, this ‘Inspired by true events’ story of a super-successful Black lawyer helping a white funeral home owner save his family business

The Burial
A charming, light-weight court-room drama with civil rights flags pinned into its theme, this ‘Inspired by true events’ story of a super-successful Black lawyer helping a white funeral home owner save his family business from a Canada based corporate behemoth, works its way into exposing a complex web of race, power, and injustice. The claim here is that it’s based on a news article by Jonathan Harr that appeared in the November 1, 1999, edition of The New Yorker.
Jerry, aka the mild-mannered Jeremiah O’Keefe’s (Tommy Lee Jones) family business involves running a number of funeral homes in South Mississippi. In his efforts to become big, he ends up going into debt and feels guilty for having failed his long-standing wife, 13 children and many grandchildren. He finally agrees to sell 3 funeral homes for some much-needed capital inflow, to the giant Loewen funeral company, headed by flamboyant, filthy rich, show-off, CEO Ray Loewen(Bill Camp). Loewen tries to go underhand and appears to deliberately fail to fulfill his end of the bargain. So that leaves Jerry with little else to do but sue and to this end he hires an aggressive, flashy personal injury lawyer Willie E. Gary (Jamie Foxx) known for winning all his cases. Jerry’s business associate and loyal longtime Lawyer friend Mike Allred (Alan Ruck) finds himself sidelined because of his milder demeanor and lack of killer instinct.
The film is not exactly about race even though most of the principal characters are from different racial backgrounds. The case was fought in a predominantly Black neighbourhood county courthouse as part of the strategy to fall back on the Black man’s fervor to right historical injustices. This is not a trite feel-good story. “The Burial” doesn’t believe in resolving discriminatory inequities in life. Jeremiah is solely intent on teaching the Big Bad bully Loewen that even a small town David can fix the behemoth Goliath by using native smarts. Eventually, the drama magnifies into something bigger when the courtroom histrionics becomes more about taking down an entire corrupt industry.