Mississippi Burning official wallpaper
Mississippi Burning poster

Mississippi Burning

  • 7.8 /10

  • 1883

  • 79%

Plot

Two FBI agents investigating the murder of civil rights workers during the 60s seek to breach the conspiracy of silence in a small Southern town where segregation divides black and white. The younger agent trained in FBI school runs up against the small town ways of his partner, a former sheriff.

Cast

Gene Hackman as Agent Rupert Anderson
Gene Hackman

as Agent Rupert Anderson

Willem Dafoe as Agent Alan Ward
Willem Dafoe

as Agent Alan Ward

Frances McDormand as Mrs. Pell
Frances McDormand

as Mrs. Pell

Brad Dourif as Deputy Clinton Pell
Brad Dourif

as Deputy Clinton Pell

R. Lee Ermey as Mayor Tilman
R. Lee Ermey

as Mayor Tilman

Gailard Sartain as Sheriff Stuckey
Gailard Sartain

as Sheriff Stuckey

Stephen Tobolowsky as Townley
Stephen Tobolowsky

as Townley

Michael Rooker as Frank Bailey
Michael Rooker

as Frank Bailey

Pruitt Taylor Vince as Lester Cowens
Pruitt Taylor Vince

as Lester Cowens

Badja Djola as Agent Monk
Badja Djola

as Agent Monk

Movie Facts

Rated

  • R

Status

  • Released

Release Date

  • December 8, 1988

Production Companies

  • Orion Pictures

  • Frederick Zollo Productions

Production Countries

  • United States of America

Spoken Language

  • English

Budget

  • $15,000,000.00

Revenue

  • $34,604,000.00

Runtime

  • 2.13 hrs

Links

Gallery

Reviews

"Mississippi Burning" has both insight and intelligence and it is an incredibly uncompromising scrutinization of how racism blighted American society and it is frightening to think the residents of Jessop in Mississippi possess minds much smaller than their town. This film also prompts you to seriously examine your own conscience in relation to the matter of the race issue, but how many people wi…

When three men go missing from their small-town Mississippi home, the FBI sends a team to investigate. "Anderson" (Gene Hackman) is very much the more hands-on of the pair leading the team, with "Ward" (Willem Dafoe) more inclined to play by the book. Their arrival exposes them to an open culture of racial hatred that's not only tolerated by the local sheriff "Stuckey" (Gailard Sartain) but enthu…