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08 August 2019 / Mark Pawlowski
Issue: 7852 / Categories: Features , Profession , Training & education
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‘You can’t handle the truth!’

Crusader-heroes, or ugly, serious & boring? Mark Pawlowski takes a critical look at lawyers & law schools as portrayed on screen

In The Paper Chase (1973), first year law student, James Hart, struggles to gain approval and recognition from his daunting contract teacher, Professor Kingsfield, at Harvard Law School. The school is depicted as a forbidding place (suitable only for highly competitive students), and Kingsfield himself is shown as a cold, sadistic figure who humiliates his students by posing deliberately difficult and confounding questions. In his first contract law class, he tells his audience: ‘In my classroom there is always another question, and another question to follow your answer. Yes, you are on a treadmill; my little questions are the fingers probing your brain. We do brain surgery here. You teach yourselves the law, but I train your mind. You come in here with a skull full of mush, and you leave thinking like a lawyer.’

The film Legally Blonde (2001) also concerns student life at Harvard and here too the professors

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MOVERS & SHAKERS

Anthony Collins—William Hallett & Lorna Scully

Anthony Collins—William Hallett & Lorna Scully

Anthony Collins hires two talented legal directors

Switalskis—five appointments

Switalskis—five appointments

Firm expands national abuse compensation team

Mathys & Squire—nine promotions

Mathys & Squire—nine promotions

IP firm announces new partners and senior promotions across UK offices

NEWS
A High Court ruling has sent a jolt through the legal profession after a newly qualified solicitor used an internal AI tool to produce court correspondence containing a fabricated legal citation
A significant data privacy ruling has clarified what counts as valid consent under UK data protection law
Executors may be overlooking billions of pounds in estate assets hidden in forgotten investments and misplaced share certificates
Britain’s booming non-surgical cosmetics market is operating in what some critics describe as a regulatory ‘Wild West’
Family contact disputes are becoming an increasingly prominent feature of Court of Protection litigation
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