Brazil offers a chillingly hilarious vision of the near-future.
Brazil (1985)
Tomatometer
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Reviews Counted:40
Fresh:39
Rotten:1
Average Rating:8.6/10
Consensus: Brazil, Terry Gilliam's visionary Orwellian fantasy, is an audacious dark comedy, filled with strange, imaginative visuals.
Runtime: 2 hrs 23 mins
Genre: Comedies
Synopsis: BRAZIL is Terry Gilliam's masterpiece. Cowritten by Gilliam, playwright Tom Stoppard, and Charles McKeown, the cult-favorite film is set in a futuristic society laden with red tape and bureaucracy.... BRAZIL is Terry Gilliam's masterpiece. Cowritten by Gilliam, playwright Tom Stoppard, and Charles McKeown, the cult-favorite film is set in a futuristic society laden with red tape and bureaucracy. When a bug (literally) gets in the system, an innocent man is killed, leading mild-mannered Sam Lowry (an excellent Jonathan Pryce) to reexamine what he wants out of life. He decides to fight the totalitarian system in his search for freedom--and the woman he loves. The terrific, offbeat cast features Robert De Niro as a renegade heating engineer; Katherine Helmond as Sam's ever-younger mother; Michael Palin as a government-sanctioned torturer with a distaste for upsetting the status quo; Bob Hoskins as a vengeful Central Services employee; Jim Broadbent as a wacko plastic surgeon; the wonderful Ian Holm as Sam's nerve-ridden, pitiful boss, afraid of his own signature; and Kim Greist as the rebel Sam falls for. The look of BRAZIL is relentless, overwhelming, and outrageously spectacular. Giant monoliths rise from the street; government offices are a network of computers, pneumatic tubes, and narrow hallways built with Nazi-like precision; and apartment complexes are a maze of washed-out grays and numbers, all frighteningly uniform. The terrorist explosions actually bring color into this dull, monochramatic world. BRAZIL is a nightmare vision of the future, yet also hysterically funny and incisive, one of the most inventive, influential, and important films of the 1980s. [More]
Starring: Jonathan Pryce, Robert De Niro, Michael Palin, Kim Greist
Starring: Jonathan Pryce, Robert De Niro, Michael Palin, Kim Greist, Ian Holm, Katherine Helmond, Bob Hoskins, Peter Vaughan, Jim Broadbent, Ian Richardson, Barbara Hicks, Charles McKeown
Director: Terry Gilliam
Director: Terry Gilliam
Screenwriter: Terry Gilliam, Tom Stoppard, Charles McKeown
Producer: Arnon Milchan
Composer: Michael Kamen
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Reviews for Brazil
Fortunately the story of an alternative future is realised with such visual imagination and sparky humour that it's only half way through that the plot's weaknesses become apparent.
Brazil -- a black comedy that remains ahead of its time -- is one of the most audacious fantasies ever made.
Brazil serves up one of the most breathtakingly imaginative worlds ever to be put on screen.
Brazil succeeds in painting an entertaining and chaotic picture of a nasty world where none of us would want to live.
If anyone ever doubts the visionary significance of Terry Gilliam's once bright genius as a filmmaker of enormous depth and cynical humor, you need only to visit upon his career-topping 1985 masterpiece of surreal satire.
Terry Gilliam's ferociously creative black comedy is filled with wild tonal contrasts, swarming details, and unfettered visual invention -- every shot carries a charge of surprise and delight.
Influenced by Kafka, Orwell, and Kubrick, Gilliam's darkly humorous futuristic satire is narratively flawed and excessive in many ways, but it displays its creator's wildly vivid imagination and is intermittently witty.
Celebrates imagination as the only escape from a bleak, ridiculous, and troubled world.
Not in everybody's taste, but why risk missing one of the most brilliant science fiction movies ever made?
A superb example of the power of comedy to underscore serious ideas, even solemn ones.
Everything that Terry Gilliam does seems to come in a peak. His movies tend to be a series of exhilarating, madding high points, and his method of dazzle can be exhausting and exasperating. But you never want him to stop.
Latest News for Brazil
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July 17, 2006:
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August 25, 2005:
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June 15, 2005:
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