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- We just have different ways to deal with our son's death. Until death do us part. Sister Helen Prejean: It's not faith, it's work.
www.moviemistakes.com/film2670/quotes
Death is looking down your neck, and you're playing your little male come-on games. Sister Colleen : If Matt dies, guess who he'll be buried next to? Sister Helen Prejean : Who's the last person to die?
Mar 13, 2019 · Dead Man Walking is a 1995 film about a nun who, while comforting a convicted killer on death row, empathizes with both the killer and his victim's families. Directed and written by Tim Robbins, based on the book by Sister Helen Prejean.
Great memorable quotes and script exchanges from the Dead Man Walking movie on Quotes.net.
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- Helen Prejean
- 1993
- “In sorting out my feelings and beliefs, there is, however, one piece of moral ground of which I am absolutely certain: if I were to be murdered I would not want my murderer executed.
- “There are spaces of sorrow only God can touch.” ― Helen Prejean, Dead Man Walking: The Eyewitness Account Of The Death Penalty That Sparked a National Debate.
- “I realize that I cannot stand by silently as my government executes its citizens. If I do not speak out and resist, I am an accomplice.” ― Sister Helen Prejean, Dead Man Walking: The Eyewitness Account Of The Death Penalty That Sparked a National Debate.
- “no government is ever innocent enough or wise enough or just enough to lay claim to so absolute a power as death. (p. 21)” ― Helen Prejean, Dead Man Walking: The Eyewitness Account Of The Death Penalty That Sparked a National Debate.
“Dead Man” Quotes 16 quotes. more on this quote ››. “I'll tell you one thing: if that there Blake fella keeps on shootin' marshals, I might end up liking the bastard!” Michael Wincott - Conway Twill. [Tag: crime, like, murder] more on this quote ››. “- Nobody: I prepared your canoe with cedarboughs. It's time for you to leave now, William Blake.
By showcasing their humanity and the circumstances that led them to commit their crimes, Dead Man Walking challenges readers' preconceived notions about death row inmates and encourages empathy and understanding.
Dead Man Walking (1995) In Tim Robbins' anti-death penalty drama: the flashback scene of the murders of a teen couple by death row inmate and convicted criminal Matthew Poncelet (Sean Penn)