The Devil-s | Advocate
Rating: ★★★☆☆ (3/4)
The Devil’s Advocate is a movie of immense, almost arrogant potential. It wants to be Wall Street meets The Exorcist , a legal thriller soaked in supernatural dread and moral philosophy. It succeeds as a guilty pleasure. It fails as the masterpiece it so clearly aches to be. The Devil-s Advocate
Then comes the ending. If you have not seen it, spoilers follow—but honestly, the film spoils itself. After a climax involving demonic rape, a rooftop confession (“I’m the lawyer who fucking invented guilty!”), and a CGI transformation that has aged like cheap milk, Kevin shoots himself in the head. He wakes up. It was all a vision. He is back in Florida, at the original trial. He refuses the bribe this time. He wins the moral victory. Rating: ★★★☆☆ (3/4) The Devil’s Advocate is a
There is a moment, about two-thirds of the way through Taylor Hackford’s The Devil’s Advocate , where Al Pacino—corporate Satan, Manhattan real-estate mogul, and part-time father figure—turns to the camera and delivers a monologue about God’s greatest mistake: giving humanity free will. It is a symphony of ham, spit, and terrifying sincerity. For five minutes, the film achieves a kind of operatic madness. Then it remembers it has a plot to resolve, and the spell shatters. It fails as the masterpiece it so clearly aches to be