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 Brazil (DVD) Movie DVD
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Brazil (DVD)

 

Description: Genre: Comedy / Theatrical Release: 1985 / Director: Terry Gilliam / Actors: Jonathan Pryce, Jim Broadbent ... / DVD ... more
Brazil (DVD) ... released 19 May, 2003 at 20th Century Fox Home Entertainment / Features of the DVD: Anamorphic, PAL, Widescreen / If Franz Kafka had been an animator and film director--oh, and a member of Monty Python's Flying Circus--Brazil is the sort of outrageously dystopian satire one could easily imagine him making. In fact it was made by Terry Gilliam, who is all of the above except, of course, Franz Kafka. Be that as it may, Gilliam captures the paranoid-subversive spirit of Kafka's The Trial (along with his own Python animation) in this bureaucratic nightmare-comedy about a meek government clerk named Sam Lowry (Jonathan Pryce) whose life is destroyed by a simple bug. It's not a software bug but a real bug (no doubt related to Kafka's famous Metamorphosis insect) that gets squashed in a printer and causes a typographical error unjustly identifying an innocent citizen, one Mr Buttle, as suspected terrorist Harry Tuttle (Robert De Niro). When Sam becomes enmeshed in unravelling this bureaucratic tangle, he himself winds up labelled as a miscreant. The movie presents such an unrelentingly imaginative and savage vision of 20th-century bureaucracy that it almost became a victim of small-minded studio management itself--until Gilliam surreptitiously screened his cut for the Los Angeles Film Critics Association, who named it the best movie of 1985 and virtually embarrassed Universal into releasing it. --Jim Emerson On the DVD: Brazil comes to DVD in a welcome anamorphic print of the full director's cut--here running some 136 minutes. Disappointingly the only extra feature is the 30-minute making-of documentary "What Is Brazil?", which consists of on-set and behind-the-scenes interviews. There's nothing about the film's controversial release history (covered so comprehensively on the North American Criterion Collection release), nor is Gilliam's illuminating, irreverent directorial commentary anywhere to be found. The only other extra here is the ubiquitous theatrical trailer. A welcome release of a real classic, then, but something of a missed opportunity. --Mark Walker

Newest Review: ... is to dream of flying and saving his perfect woman. In this bizarre world, a bug falls into a typewriter changing ‘Tuttle’ ... more

 ... into ‘Buttle’, causing the wrong man to be arrested and executed. The real wanted man, Harry Tuttle (Robert De Niro) is an air-conditioning repairman who turned his back on the government due to the sheer amount of paperwork. To illustrate the bureaucracy inherit in this society, the arresting official tells the Buttle family to sign ‘your receipt, and this is my receipt for your receipt’. Sam involves himself in this case after noticing the error on some paperwork, meeting the woman of his dream along the way, truck ...more

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ruth_cole
Crowned Review Brazil (DVD): Welcome To Information Retrieval (1138 words)
by ruth_cole - written on 23.09.04 (Very useful, 119 readings)
Rating:

I’d always meant to watch Terry Gilliam’s much lauded movie Brazil. Often the byword for futuristic dystopia on film, I was only encouraged by the recommendations of two trusted friends (“cat” and “hat”, amusingly enough) and toddled over to play.com, where £10.99 and two days later it was mine. <drooooool> The plot of Brazil is frankly a side-issue to its metaphorical, blisteringly satirical tale of breaking from cerebral constraints and inhabiting a dreamworld, but hey, I’ll try my best. Sam Lowry (Jonathan Pryce) is everyman, content to remain cloistered in the job he is good at, living his life of routine and denying he even has dreams… ...

Rumblefish
Crowned Review We're all in it together... (1187 words)
by Rumblefish - written on 09.02.01 (Very useful, 132 readings)
Rating:

“Brazil... Where hearts were entertaining June We stood beneath an amber moon And softly murmured someday soon...” So begins the song, ‘Brazil’, featured so unforgettably in the film of the same name. BRAZIL is one of those all too rare films that can truly be called essential viewing. They really should show it in schools. It is a work of such depth, scale, and utter brilliance that it loses nothing after seemingly unlimited viewings. In a strange quirk of fate, events surrounding the production and release of BRAZIL are almost as famous and startling as the film itself, and provide one of the most disturbing ...

moronboy
Crowned Review Brazil (DVD): Go to Brazil now! (258 words)
by moronboy - written on 11.08.00 (Very useful, 21 readings)
Rating:

Just a fabulous film, despite it's rather depressing message that sees a monolithic, bureaucratic fascistic society triumphs over the free spirited individual, just like '1984'. Jonathan Pryce is a dreamer, a pen pusher in an amazingly complex and sinister government department who dreams (literally) of flying away from his tedious life. This is a society governed by bureaucracy, where the rebel terrorists are not freedom fighters, but plumbers who will fix your drains straightaway instead on at the end of an interminable wait, where psychotic torturers are boring family men (Michael Palin in a rare role as a villain), and where one dead fly ...

 
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Brazil (DVD)