The Hurricane

The Hurricane

1999 • DramaR
The story of Rubin "Hurricane" Carter, a boxer wrongly imprisoned for murder, and the people who aided in his fight to prove his innocence.
Runtime: 2h 26m

Why you shoud read the novels

If you want the most authentic, unfiltered insight into Rubin Carter's journey, pick up the source books. Rubin's own memoir, The Sixteenth Round, brings you into the world of his boxing career, wrongful conviction, and the enduring fight for his dignity—straight from his own voice. Books like 'Lazarus and the Hurricane' give you the broader picture: you’ll learn about the diverse group of people who fought by Carter’s side, and the way their relationships grew and changed throughout his ordeal. The nuances and real-life perspectives shine far beyond what even the best Hollywood film can deliver. By reading these books, you don’t just witness a heroic story; you come away understanding the flawed justice system, the power of hope, and the depth of human resilience in a way no movie can fully capture.

Adaptation differences

One of the major differences between the film and the source books lies in the scope and focus of the narrative. While 'The Hurricane' movie centers predominantly on Carter's wrongful conviction, imprisonment, and subsequent exoneration, the original books—especially 'The Sixteenth Round'—dive much deeper into Carter's full life. These include his formative years, boxing career, and the complexities of the American legal system and racism he endured firsthand. Another significant difference is the character portrayal and compression in the film. The movie simplifies and, at times, fictionalizes or combines real-life figures for dramatic effect. For example, Lesra Martin’s role and the actions of the Canadian group who helped free Carter are depicted with some artistic license, streamlining many people's contributions into composite characters or single-handed actions. The books, in contrast, provide a richer, more distributed account of the group’s collective effort to help Carter. 'The Hurricane' film also takes liberties with timelines and certain factual events. For cinematic clarity and pacing, the film sometimes alters when or how specific occurrences take place, and in some cases adds scenes or dialogues that did not happen or were never documented. The books offer a more accurate chronological and factual record, preserving the true nature and complexity of events without the constraints of a movie runtime. Finally, the internal thoughts, emotional struggles, and philosophies that Carter and other real-life participants share in the books are hard to translate fully to film. Reading the memoir and non-fiction account gives deeper access to Carter’s psyche and to the social context, whereas the movie, by necessity, externalizes much of this through dialogue and visual storytelling—sometimes at the expense of nuance and introspection.

The Hurricane inspired from

The Sixteenth Round: From Number 1 Contender to #45472
by Rubin 'Hurricane' Carter
Lazarus and the Hurricane: The Freeing of Rubin 'Hurricane' Carter
by Sam Chaiton, Terry Swinton