
Summary: Filmmaker Brett Weiner created a video series that captured the oddness of the legal world by using transcripts of real life cases as scripts.
In August of 2014, filmmaker Brett Weiner showed the world the absurdity of the legal world when his short video, “Verbatim,” was released through the New York Times. Weiner took a transcript from an Ohio case, and using the transcript word for word as a script, he showed audiences what it’s like for a BigLaw lawyer to interview a difficult dummy. The video, which was also shown at the Sundance Film Festival, went viral on the New York Times’ website, getting almost 1.5 million views.
“The dialogue was so sharp, inane and fully realized that I assumed it was fiction,” Weiner said. “I traced the deposition back to the Ohio Supreme Court and downloaded hundreds of pages of legal documents from the case. To my pleasant surprise, it was as strange as it was true.”
In 2015, Weiner continued his trend of making compelling art out of lawyer reality by releasing two other New York Times shorts in the Verbatim series: “The Ferguson Case” and “Follow the Chickens.” While these videos didn’t rack as many views as the original, they were just as interesting and well-researched.
Post-Verbatim, Weiner continues making comedic videos. He is currently a member of the filmmaking group, Screen Junkies, which produces the wildly popular “Honest Trailers” Youtube series.
VERBATIM (2014)
THE FERGUSON CASE, VERBATIM (2015)
“My intent is to add to viewers’ understanding of the story in as balanced a way as possible, remaining truthful to the facts, context and chronology of the testimony,” Weiner wrote in The New York Times. “I hope that when you watch this film, you can put yourself in the position of that grand jury, seeing and interpreting the testimony as they did.”
VERBATIM: FOLLOW THE CHICKENS (2015)
Weiner’s third “Verbatim” short film centered around a $300,000 case where a man sued a lumber company for damaging his chicken coupe. In this bizarre deposition, the plaintiff shares his crazy tale about the destruction of his land, and he answers simple questions with long-winded answers that even the court reporter had a hard time documenting.
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[tps_header]What do you think of these real life depositions? Let us know in the comments below![/tps_header]