The Devil's Advocate
From Tv Tropes
- Kevin Lomax: What are you?
- John Milton: Oh, I have so many names...
The Devil's Advocate is a 1997 Template:Thriller / Template:Horror film starring Keanu Reeves, Al Pacino and Charlize Theron, and based on a novel by Andrew Neiderman.
It follows the career of a lawyer, Kevin Lomax, as he gets entangled with the demonic forces that are helping him on the road to success. He ultimately faces off against the origin of this positive influence and the horrors of his own origin.
Notable for Al Pacino CREATING AN ORGY INVOLVING ALL OF NEW YORK CITY! And that's an understatement!
- This movie contains examples of
- Adaptation Distillation: The novel by Andrew Neiderman is a rather uninspired cliche-ridden potboiler, which most haven't even heard of. The film has Al Pacino.
- Affably Evil: Well, that's how the Devil tends to operate anyway.
- Evilly Affably: However, some of the demons working for him are not likable at all.
- All Just A Dream: In the final scene, it is revealed that spoiler:Kevin saw the entire movie in the moment before his career-defining case about a child molester. Even though he does the right thing and refuses to win the case, Milton is still lurking around and manages to tempt him yet again.
- Another interpretation is that spoiler: Milton reverted time back to the point before Kevin's career-defining case in order to keep trying alternate pathways until he can get to the point where Kevin submits. There's also the implication that Milton will do this as many times as necessary until he wins.
- Ambition Is Evil: Played straight. Kevin's ferocious commitment to winning his court cases results in him defending some rather unsavory characters.
- Anti Anti Christ: Kevin's the Anti-AntiChrist, but his son with Christabella would be the actual The Antichrist.
- Anvilicious: Lawyers should not be Amoral Attorneys.
- Astral Checkerboard Decor.
- Awesome Ego.
- Big Applesauce: "Fallen, fallen is Babylon the Great..."
- Big No: Possibly the Biggest No ever. It takes several cuts, several breaths, and causes the guy to burst into flames and then burn or desiccate anyone watching
- Brother Sister Incest: Offered, but declined.
- Break The Cutie: Poor, poor Mary Ann.
- Break the Haughty: Aaand Kevin.
- Breaking The Fourth Wall: At the end of the movie, after the reporter turns into Milton, he turns to the camera and says, "Vanity, definitely my favorite sin."
- The Cameo: Sen. Alphonse D'Amato, Ambassador Charles Gagano, and Don King all appear as themselves, and seem to be on very good terms with John Milton. Makes you wonder if anyone told them...
- Caught Up In The Rapture.
- The Corrupter: "Free will. It's like butterfly wings: once touched, they never get off the ground. No, I only set the stage. You pull your own strings."
- Template:Cross-Melting Aura
- Deep South: The movie opens in Gainesville, Florida. Or rather, a small rural town that looks nothing like the actual, modern, skyscraper-encrusted college-town that is the real Gainesville, Florida, but does look like a one-horse hick town in the middle of nowhere, which was probably the point.
- Apparently the producers wanted Reeves' character to be from a small rural town and picked Gainesville, Florida off of a map at random, not realizing that "small rural town" does not describe Gainesville, and hasn't for about a hundred years. The Civil War-era "courthouse" where the trial was taking place is actually in a one-stoplight town some thirty-two miles east of Gainesville, for example; the courthouses in Gainesville proper are all modern, multi-story buildings.
- Devil In Disguise: John Milton.
- Devil's Advocate: There in the title.
- Driven To Suicide: Both Kevin's wife and, later, Kevin himself. However, it's revealed to be just a dream, or possibly Satan turning back time to try another way. Or, it could be that God turned back time in order to give Kevin another chance to make the right decision.]]
- Evil Is Cool / Evil Is Sexy: Pacino's Devil is well dressed and suave (in his own creepy way), and seems to get any woman he wants.
- Fan Disservice: Charlize Theron's nude scene also reveals that she's covered in scratches because the Devil spent the afternoon raping her.
- Of course, it depends from which way you look at it...
- Also the scene in the changing room, where the Devil's girls strip down to their underwear while casually making Mary-Anne as uncomfortable as possible and... AUGH! BAD FACE! BAD FACE!
- Christabella's role in the ending is probably supposed to have this effect, all things considered, but [[spoiler:frankly, it's hard to turn a naked, willing Connie Nielsen into a source of Squick.
- Foot Focus: Kevin sucks Mary Ann's toes during a weird sequence.
- Funny Background Event: As Kevin and Milton walk through the streets of New York talking, a delivery man keeps pace behind them for several seconds carrying a box labeled "Halo Illumination."
- Fur And Loathing: Some ladies wear fur, but as they are part of the law firm (or married to those in it), they are likely evil, or under the influence of evil.
- But the furs are real, so the film doubles with Pretty In Mink (loathing its mink, and wearing it too).
- Get a Hold of Yourself, Man!: "For God's sake, man!" Said by a judge to a prosecutor, no less. Justified by the fact that he was under some bad mojo and coughing up a storm.
- Good People Have Good Sex: It used to be at least, before the Devil put his tail in it...
- Half Human Hybrids: Many of Milton's lawyers (being his bastard children by various women from around the world) are examples of this, and spoiler: Kevin himself learns that he is one, too.
- High Octane Nightmare Fuel: Good Lord, it's everywhere. Most notably when Kevin's wife goes out with the business partners' wives and finally sees that they are actually demons in disguise. And the baby playing with the ovaries. If that's not enough, there's always every single facial expression Al Pacino has in this movie.
- The scene where Mary Anne snaps and commits suicide by slicing her throat with a piece of broken glass is simultaneously this and a Tear Jerker.
- Hollywood Law: Kevin's courtroom antics wouldn't exactly exist in reality. Some of it might be justified given the revelations at the end.
- In the initial case with the child molester he presents some surprise evidence. This should have been presented during the pretrial discovery and would have resulted in sanctions against the defense and possibly a mistrial.
- Perhaps not. The evidence was exculpatory, and so even if it was improperly handled or concealed during discovery it would still be allowed in (as defendants have a constitutional right to present all available exculpatory evidence). Also, defense could simply have claimed that the evidence was revealed late into the case. In fact, following this, the prosecutor did object, the judge did overrule (presumably because of the exculpatory evidence exception), and also admonished the defense to not do it again; precisely what one might expect.
- Kevin is presented as having never lost a case. This phenomenon is seen commonly among new lawyers that haven't tried any cases, and never outside of that.
- Justified in-story by this parentage. Apparently being the son of the Devil gives you some skill in the courtroom (cue devil/lawyer jokes here).
- In Milton's rage-against-God speech near the end he lampshades how impossible it is for a lawyer to have never lost a case and points out how supernatural influences were a factor.
- Kevin would not be disbarred for his actions at the end of the movie; in fact, he would be required to withdraw in that case as his client was using his services to further a criminal act.
- It's not so much what he did as when he did it. At that point he has no demonstrable knowledge that his client is guilty (as he and only he, presumably, saw the future in which it was revealed), and the jury had already been empaneled and the prosecution had rested. He probably would get slapped around by a disciplinary committee for that, though getting disbarred is usually a little tougher than that.
- In the initial case with the child molester he presents some surprise evidence. This should have been presented during the pretrial discovery and would have resulted in sanctions against the defense and possibly a mistrial.
- Hollywood Voodoo: Kevin's first case with Milton's firm involves defending a man who was caught slaughtering a goat in the practice of Santeria. The actual case (and Kevin's defense of religious freedom) are completely plausible and justified. However, the client's use of a curse against the prosecutor and other hints at supernatural powers... stretches the imagination.
- Honey Trap: The Devil uses his daughter to seduce his son to make the Antichrist. A big Take That from the Devil to God, of course.
- Humanoid Abomination: It's Satan, what did you expect? Given the extent of his powers in the film, (not to mention the creepy, writhing statue in his penthouse), his depiction flirts with Eldritch Abomination as well.
- I Have Many Names: Pretty much word for word. Though Pacino plays with this a bit. No need for the fancy titles, he just wants Kevin to call him "Dad".
- Important Haircut: Important, but not at all good. Mary Ann gets a haircut after prompting from Milton, and this just destabilizes her even more.
- It Was His Sled: Al Pacino's character is really the Devil? You don't say!
- Jerkass: Kevin places his career above everything else and ends up losing spoiler: his wife and his personal integrity. It takes him quite some time to consult his conscience and do the right thing.
- Large Ham: "GOD!! IS AN ABSENTEE LANDLORD!!" Al Pacino would only take the part if he got to do a ten minute rant in the film's climax. [Which ended up pushing TWENTY.] Upon hearing that, the producers must have looked at each other, shrugged, and said; "Do whatever the hell you want, Al!"
- He even Milks The Giant Cow not once, but twice during it.
- Les Yay: In the elevator.
- Magnificent Bastard: John Milton.
- This scene provides an excellent example, as he baits a Spanish-speaking passenger on the subway, potentially leading him to commit murder.
- Kevin, I Am Your Father.
- Married To The Job: Before he signs on with Milton, Kevin is heavily invested in his career and his wife is just as enthusiastic about it. Afterwards, well...not so much.
- Meaningful Name / Lou Cypher: John Milton refers to the author of Paradise Lost, the original Sympathy For The Devil poem.
- Mistaken For Cheating.
- Narm: The natural result of Al Pacino's hamminess and Reeves' rather stoic acting being both put in the same movie.
- Narm Charm: A result of the above, the mixture of hilarious and horrifying is actually a draw for some people.
- That said, both of them tend to ham it up when Pacino gives his twenty minute scene ranting at God. It's pretty awesome.
- Kevin: GODDAMNIT, WHAT DID'YA DO TA MAH WIYFE!
- Milton: Well... On a scale of one to ten, ten being the most depraved act of sexual theater known to man, one being your average Friday night run-through at the Lomax's household, I'd say, not to be immodest, Mary Ann and I got it on at about....(cue the creepy yet funny face) seven.
- Narm Charm / Feed Me: Al Pacino's climactic meltdown is magnificent. The part where he seamlessly starts singing "It Happened In Monterey" in Sinatra's voice somehow ups both the Fanservice and Squick of the scene.
- Not Even Bothering With The Accent: Reeves starts off his performance affecting a passable Southern accent, appropriate for Lomax's Florida background. It vanishes rather quickly, though that may simply be the character deliberately hiding his accent to avoid getting mocked for it.
- It comes back the more angry he gets by the end.
- Obvious Second Choice: Evidently the filmmakers wanted to end the film with "Sympathy For The Devil" by The Rolling Stones. It would seen they had to settle for less appropriate "Paint It Black". It doesn't work.
- Occult Law Firm: Run by Satan himself.
- Omniglot: Well, he is the Devil...
- One Winged Angel: Almost completely literal, as Milton transforms into a Fallen Angel at the climax. (His minions, too, occasionally enjoy flashing fanged grins out of their otherwise perfectly human faces.)
- Preacher's Daughter: Kevin's mother.
- Properly Paranoid: Kevin's mother, again. Just because you're a religious fanatic, doesn't mean the Devil isn't after you and your son.
- Rage Against The Heavens: Milton's climactic rant, and by extension, his entire existence.
- Retroactive Recognition: Tony Montana is the Devil, Neo is his son, Mary Embrey is his wife, Lucilla wants to bear Neo's child, Principal Rooney gets stomped to death by a mob of vagrants, Dr. Warner from Special Victims Unit is the wife of one of the demons, Steve Freeling is accused of killing his family and Woody Carmichael was into Santeria.
- Rock Me Asmodeus: Averted here, as this version of Satan prefers the show tunes of Frank Sinatra.
- Sanity Slippage: Mary Ann starts out as much of a go-getter as her husband, but between being becalmed in their huge apartment, the shallowness of the other wives, and the evil surrounding them, she unravels completely.
- Satan: Al Pacino, and he isn't subtle about it.
- Slashed Throat: Kevin's wife does this to herself . Right in front of him. That scene is probably more disturbing than all of the previous face-morphing scenes combined.
- The Sleepless: Milton is implied to be this, in a joking reference. May not be a joke.
- Unfortunate Implications: Apparently, no lawyer with any integrity would defend a guilty client. The movie doesn't make it quite that clear-cut, but still, for all the flaws in our justice system, there are very good reasons for a presumption of innocence and it doesn't work too well if lawyers just quit in the middle of trials - the law more or less insists that all attorneys be amoral. Kevin admits that "they're gonna disbar me!"; the bar association (which is actually a branch of the Justice Department, and therefore on the same side as the friggin' judges) has no use for "a lawyer with a crisis of conscience". More on the discussion page - this is Truth In Television Fridge Horror.
- People angst about this too much - Fundamentally, the role of defense attorneys in the US system is to ensure that the (legally presumed innocent) defendant's rights are maintained. Imagine yourself sitting in the defendant's chair. Care to describe a better system?
- There's also the implication that Voodoo = Satanism.
- Ungrateful Bastard: Milton views spoiler: his son this way at the climax, when the entire plot is foiled by spoiler: Kevin's shooting himself. ("HAVEN'T I GIVEN ENOUUUUUGH?!")
- Voice Changeling: John Milton.
- What Could Have Been: Edward Norton was considered for the role of Kevin Lomax.
- You Fail Biology Forever: After shooting himself in the head, Kevin can still watch, smile and generally enjoy the Milton's Villainous Breakdown.
- You Fail Geography Forever: See Template:Deep South, below.
- You Have Failed Me: Milton does this at the end to his daughter. May be a permanent death. Implied to have done to his many failure sons that he mentions.
- You Imagined It: Mary Ann throughout the movie is told this. Reaches its climatic point where she claims to have been raped by Milton, at the same time Milton was in a courtroom full of witnesses. The twist is she sees demon faces because she sees them in demon spawns of Milton, Milton did rape her and was in two places at once. Unfortunately, by the time Kevin learns the truth, it's too late.