#10 — A Time to Kill
Box Office: $108.8M- Matthew McConaughey as Jake Brigance
- Samuel L. Jackson as Carl Lee Hailey
- Sandra Bullock as Ellen Roark
- Kevin Spacey as Rufus Buckley
A Time to Kill landing at number ten is a reminder that 1996 still had room for serious, star-heavy legal melodrama aimed squarely at adults. This is not a movie trying to masquerade as a comic-book spectacle or a tech showcase. It is an emotional courtroom machine, built to stir anger, sympathy, dread, and applause in carefully timed waves.
The film’s commercial success makes sense when you look at how many recognizable things it combines. It has a ripped-from-headlines moral urgency, a John Grisham source novel, a courtroom frame audiences already understood, and a cast stacked with performers who know how to make speeches feel like events. It is prestige-flavored mainstream entertainment in one of its most durable 90s forms.
Matthew McConaughey’s rise matters here because the movie depends on him feeling like both a young idealist and a credible center of gravity. Samuel L. Jackson brings the pain and righteous fury that gives the film its emotional charge, while the courtroom theatrics keep the whole thing operating at a level just heightened enough to feel like a big studio crowd-pleaser rather than a dry message movie.
In the context of 1996, A Time to Kill matters because it shows that grown-up drama could still punch its way into the top 10 if it had enough heat, enough stars, and enough emotional confrontation.
For Gen X, it remains part of that era when “adult movie night” at the multiplex could still mean something commercially powerful, not just culturally respectable.