Philadelphia (film)

Everything About Fiction You Never Wanted to Know.
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Philadelphia is a film from 1993 about a man named Andrew Beckett (Tom Hanks), who is an up and coming lawyer until his employers figure out that he has AIDS. Then an important complaint is suddenly misplaced and he is sacked on that account. Suspecting that his disease was the true cause of his firing, Andrew approaches an old rival lawyer named Joe Miller (Denzel Washington) to plead his case in a lawsuit for discrimination. The two eventually team up to fight Andrew's firm while Joe is struggling with his own homophobia and Andrew himself is fighting a losing battle against his disease.

Philadelphia is notable as one of the first big Hollywood movies to bring up the subject of AIDS, and Tom Hanks got his first Oscar for playing the leading role in it.

Tropes:

  • A Worldwide Punomenon: The intro shows a store named "Condom Nation"
  • Amoral Attorney: Andrew's former employers.
  • Birth-Death Juxtaposition: Just count the babies at that funeral...
  • Bittersweet Ending: Andrew wins his case, but is unable to be present when it happens and dies soon after.
  • Bury Your Gays: Andrew.
  • But Not Too Gay: It received (and continues to receive) a lot of criticism for this, to the point where Tom Hanks addressed the issue in The Celluloid Closet.
  • Camp Gay: Several of the guests during the party that Andrew and Miguel hold. Quentin Crisp, who as a real-life example of a Camp Gay also makes an appearance, though doesn't have any dialogue. However, Andrew also shows shades of this in a scene where he puts on opera music and explains it for Joe.
  • Catch Phrase: "Explain it to me like I'm a [random single-digit age] year old"
  • Courtroom Antics
  • Cut Himself Shaving: Andrew explains the first mark on his face as a bruise.
  • Evil Lawyer Joke: "What do you call a thousand lawyers chained together at the bottom of the ocean?" "A good start."
  • Executive Meddling: Several scenes depicting a more intimate relationship between Andrew and Miguel were chopped out by the studio. They also attempted to block the casting of the HIV-positive Ron Vawter, until director Jonathan Demme pointed out how hypocritical this would be in the face of the film's message.
  • Fan Disservice: Andrew opening his shirt to show the jury his sores.
  • Five-Token Band: Well, it was The Nineties, after all
  • Gay Aesop
  • Good Victims, Bad Victims: Invoked. When Andrew is suing his former firm for AIDS discrimination and bring up a woman working at the firm who also had AIDS, Andrew's former co-workers express their sympathy for her, pointing out the fact that she had contracted HIV from a blood transfusion. However, they not-so-subtly blame Andrew for his illness, given that he is gay and contracted HIV from an unsafe sexual encounter with a stranger he met at an adult theater.
  • Happier Home Movie
  • Ill Man
  • Inspirationally Disadvantaged: Andrew can be seen as this.
  • Ivy League for Everyone: Andy is a graduate of Penn, and so is the only student that we run into.
  • Magical Queer
  • Punch Clock Villain: The Lawyers representing Andrew's former employers.
  • Satellite Character: Arguably his entire family.
  • Straight Gay: Andy and Miguel act more like best friends than lovers. The student who tries to proposition Joe in the drug store is also an example.
  • Troubled Sympathetic Bigot: Joe is himself quite homophobic at the outset. Getting to know Andrew over the course of the trial changes this.
  • WHAM Scene: Andrew's sudden collapse in the middle of the trial.