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Philadelphia (1993)

Drama | 125 minutes
3,61 1.934 votes

Genre: Drama

Duration: 125 minuten

Country: United States

Directed by: Jonathan Demme

Stars: Tom Hanks, Denzel Washington and Roberta Maxwell

IMDb score: 7,7 (271.746)

Releasedate: 22 December 1993

Philadelphia plot

"No one would take on his case... until one man was willing to take on the system."

Lawyer Andrew Beckett is told shortly after his promotion that he has been fired. His employer gives the reason that he has messed up an assignment. Andy thinks otherwise: he thinks they found out he's gay and has AIDS, which was the reason for his firing. In a world full of misunderstanding and intolerance, he fights for justice.

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Andrew Beckett

Charles Wheeler

Belinda Conine

Miguel Alvarez

Bob Seidman

Walter Kenton

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Jerome Green

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avatar van Onderhond

Onderhond

  • 87585 messages
  • 12833 votes

Phew.

Seen it once, but could hardly remember anything about it, except that the film caused some commotion at the time because of the subject. And of course the title song by Springsteen, one that I used to really like.

The first hour is pretty nice. Typical court movie of course, with a cheeky Hanks and Washington who plays the perfect Hollywood lawyer with his smiles and laconic attitude. I don't think anyone would ever confide in my own business, but within a film it's fun of course.

But Demme doesn't aim for fun court scenes, that much is clear after watching the second hour. There the drama card is drawn, unfortunately in a very sentimental and cheap way. The scenes become more and more cringe-inducing, with the sad highlight being the end credit with statues from the past.

Mno, Demme goes completely off track during the second part, so that the reasonable start is quickly forgotten and there is especially a very sour aftertaste when the credits finally start rolling across the screen.

1.0*

dutch flagTranslated from Dutch · View original

avatar van timburton

timburton

  • 1296 messages
  • 632 votes

Jonathan Demme's Philadelphia was apparently the first film on the subject of AIDS to reach the general US audience. The film is also seen as one of the titles that ushered in the American commercial gay era of cinema. Somehow I always expect with a film from the nineties that I hardly have to adapt to the mindset and zeitgeist of the year of production. Yet this time it took me much more effort to eat this film aimed at the emancipation of homosexual AIDS patients with my eyes in 2017. The soundtrack alone is far too sentimental to support an otherwise well-researched script. Even the necessary gluttony to keep a film about the AIDS epidemic surrounding homosexuals appetizing for the conservative twentieth-century film-goer now seems over-the-top, in fact a bit ridiculous (see: the family-amateur film cliché, so that we can all humanize with the sick character: the family is mentally very healthy and they also do the same things as my family). By the way, would a lawyer still publicly state that he thinks homosexuals are dirty? Would one still wash one's hand after shaking this with that of an HIV patient? Let's hope we're well past that stage, at least in Western Europe. Anyway, Philadelphia seems to be really outdated in a few years. Not only the film style is too sweet. The subject is also too clichéd. That makes it interesting to watch. Fortunately, Demme's special camera work (constantly looking from another's eyes fits well with the then-controversial theme) and the great acting of Hanks and Washington make up for a lot.

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avatar van IH88

IH88

  • 9725 messages
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“In this courtroom, Mr.Miller, justice is blind to matters of race, creed, color, religion, and sexual orientation.”

“With all due respect, your honor, we don't live in this courtroom, do we?”

Stays strong. Philadelphia sometimes overdoes it in terms of sentimentality, dominant music and drama, but when director Jonathan Demme steps back and lets the actors do the work, the film is a strong and heartfelt film about the consequences of AIDS, how homosexuality is looked at, and also a court drama. With excellent acting by Hanks and Washington, and great music by Bruce Springsteen, among others.

dutch flagTranslated from Dutch · View original