Reginald Rose’s late modernist work demonstrates many characteristics of this time period in literature. Modernism was shaped by the cultural shift of industrialization and the horrors of large-scale world wars. Artists in many different genres felt that the old rules and forms were no longer appropriate to express the rapidly changing modern world. Modernist works show innovations of form and content, and self-consciousness for the processes of art itself. Late modernist works show a shift to the post-modernist ideas of political and social critique that can be achieved in art.
Twelve Angry Men demonstrates innovative and contemporary language in its dialogue paired with a concern for the internal lives of human beings and the impacts these internal lives have on society and culture. Contemporary late modernist works that share characteristics with
Twelve Angry Men include:
Waiting for Godot (1949) by playwright Samuel Beckett; a series of successful plays by poet T. S. Eliot including
The Family Reunion(1939),
The Cocktail Party(1949),
The Confidential Clerk, (1953) and
The Elder Statesman(1958); and
Briggflatts (1966) by poet Basil Bunting. The screenplay and stage play of
Twelve Angry Men show an interesting reaction to the influence of popular television and film on literature. In many ways, the play is best placed in conversation with other crime dramas. The movie version exhibits qualities of the Film Noir style popular in the 1940s and 1950s. Other Film Noir crime dramas that may have influenced
Twelve Angry Men include:
The Big Sleep (1946),
The Big Heat (1953),
The Set-Up (1949),
Night and the City (1950), and
Gun Crazy (1950).