Brazil with Jonathan Pryce: DVD Cover

    Brazil
    a.k.a. Brazil Director: Terry Gilliam Cast: Jonathan Pryce, Michael Palin, Kim Greist, Robert De Niro

    DVD - Wide Screen Learn more

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    • DVD Release Date: 03/31/1998
    • Original Release: 1985
    • Rating: Rated R
    • Sales Rank: 10,005

    Viewer Rating: (13 ratings)

    Detailed Rating: "Unforgettable" See All

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    DVD - Wide Screen$14.99
    DVD - Wide Screen$29.99

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    • Overview
    • Editorial Reviews
    • Scenes
    • Customer Reviews
    • Cast & Crew
    • Full Product Details

    Scenes

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    Full Product Details

    Scene Index

    Chapter List
    0. Chapter List
    1. Somewhere In The 20th Century (Main Titles) [3:37]
    2. Buttle, Not Tuttle [3:43]
    3. Where's Sam Lowry? [5:02]
    4. The Ministry Of Information [4:20]
    5. Mother [9:26]
    6. The Subversive Heating Engineer [13:37]
    7. A Visit To Mrs. Buttle [11:53]
    8. The Return Of Central Services [5:36]
    9. Mother's Party [8:25]
    10. Welcome To Information Retrieval! [9:36]
    11. Officer 412-L [6:22]
    12. The Girl Of His Dreams [9:53]
    13. Actual Terrorists [9:48]
    14. Where's Jill? [18:31]
    15. The Enemy Of The People [16:58]
    16. The Happy Ending (End Titles) [6:14]

    Scene Index

    Editorial Reviews

    A satirical masterpiece directed by former Monty Python member Terry Gilliam, this dark, dystopian fantasy dazzled viewers with its delirious camera moves and audacious production design. In an Orwellian future, chaos ensues when a housefly causes a glitch in the bureaucratic machinery, leading to false arrests, terrorism, and Ministry of Information clerk Sam Lowry's (Jonathan Pryce) rendezvous with his dream girl (Kim Greist). Lanky Pryce makes an unlikely epic hero, which is exactly the point: By day he is a functionary; at night he imagines himself to be a winged warrior battling the forces of evil and rescuing his blonde damsel in distress, who may or may not be in league with an insurgent heating duct engineer (Robert De Niro). Brazil became famous not just for its visionary filmmaking but for the much-publicized "Battle of Brazil" that pitted Gilliam against the real-life bureaucratic forces at Universal, who thought the film was too long and downbeat. Gilliam eventually cut the film down to 131 minutes and slightly altered the ending; after it won multiple awards from the Los Angeles Film Critics Association, Universal was forced to release this landmark celebration of the imagination. Ben Wolf, Barnes & Noble

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    Customer Reviews

    12 Monkeys meets 1984by The_Dad

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    September 14, 2009: The bigger, badder brothers of the Rube Goldberg machines from 12 Monkeys dominate the "real life" visuals of Brazil. But, the fantasy sequences are stunning with heroic images in the style of the early Soviet and Nazi propaganda movies with fantastic Art Deco sets. The characters and the story line give an unsettling mix of slapstick comedy, dark cynicism, and (maybe) flamboyant individualism defying the impersonal grinding of the state. How dark? In one scene waiters set up screens to separate a table of diners (who continue to eat and talk) from the bloody victims of a terrorist bomb that goes off in the other half of the restaurant. This movie is a beautiful, offbeat retelling of 1984. But make no mistake, the story at the heart of this movie is the same story at the heart of Orwell's 1984. It does NOT have a happy ending. It does raise questions that are worth your time and thought. Finally, if you are a fan of Terry Gilliam, then this movie must be in your collection.

    This review was written about the DVD Wide Screen edition.

    I Also Recommend: Twelve Monkeys.

    Among the best movies ever made.by Anonymous

    Reader Rating:
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    September 29, 2006: This wild and dark look at the inhumanity of the modern condition makes laughter and tears flow together in a psychotic yet prescient look at the world of 1984 and the future present. This movie represents the best type of entertainment, because it amuses while causing one to look inward. It is among the greatest motion pictures made.

    This review was written about the DVD Wide Screen edition.


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