Written in 1992 and made into a movie a year later, Julia Roberts and Denzel Washington cast in the main roles, The Pelican Brief is billed as a legal thriller. The Supreme Court of the US is/was presided over by nine aging Chief Justices, appointed for life – at the time all male, white, with a closet gay thrown into the mix, which suits the Republican Administration. A presidential benefactor with deep pockets, fearing for the outcome of a Supreme Court ruling if the democrats win the next election, pays an assassin to take out a couple of the justices, to have in place a court likely to find in his favour.
Washington Post journalist Gray Grantham is approached by a lawyer named “Garcia”, claiming to have some startling evidence on the assassinations, while in New Orleans, legal student Darby Shaw, in a relationship with law professor, Thomas Callahan, investigates which cases are likely to tipped upwards to the Supreme Court in the next few years, and hits upon one with links to the president. She writes the Pelican Brief – an environmental tussle in Louisiana, where wetlands are drained for oil and gas exploration, the waters polluted by DDT which is destroying the local population of brown pelicans. Callahan hands it to a friend from back in law school, Gavin Verheek, now a lawyer with the FBI in Washington.
When her boyfriend is killed in a car bomb, also meant for her, Darby goes to ground, contacting Verheek, who flies to New Orleans to search for her. Verheek is taken out and Darby narrowly escapes a second time, fleeing to New York, for a reason I never really understood. Eventually, student lawyer and journo team up, on what is billed as the biggest story to break since Watergate.
The movie was a box office success, though critics claimed it was overlong, as was the book. With the assassin despatched early in the piece, there seemed to be enough lawyers on board to sink a battleship. For me, this is where it lost traction and got bogged down in an animal rights/ environmental message. (It may have been true back then and legislation tightened since. I hope so, though I have never been mistaken for a tree-hugger.)
The story winds on, with our pair disappearing down rabbit holes and emerging with proof of who is behind the killings - despite denials from the President’s Chief-of-Staff, Fletcher Cole (an admiral villain). Various characters put in cameo appearances for no apparent reason – Eric East of the FBI and Edwin Sneller (presumably) CIA, but the shady ex-CIA/former marine in Cole’s pay, did not make it in the movie, nor the oil industrialist behind it all.
Overall, disappointing.