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Brazil (1985)
 
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Brazil (1985)
VHS ~ Jonathan Pryce
4.5 out of 5 stars  (12 customer reviews)

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23 used & new available from £0.01

Product details
  • Actors: Jonathan Pryce, Robert De Niro, Katherine Helmond, Ian Holm, Bob Hoskins
  • Directors: Terry Gilliam
  • Format: Dolby, PAL, Surround Sound, Widescreen
  • Language French
  • Classification: 15
  • Studio: Warner Home Video
  • VHS Release Date: 14 April 1997
  • Run Time: 137 minutes
  • Average Customer Review: 4.5 out of 5 stars  (12 customer reviews)
  • ASIN: B00004CTXO
  • Amazon.co.uk Sales Rank: 1,085 in Video (See Bestsellers in Video)

Product Description
Amazon.co.uk Review
If Franz Kafka had been an animator and film director--oh, and a member of Monty Python's Flying Circus--this is the sort of outrageously dystopian satire one could easily imagine him making. However, Brazil was made by Terry Gilliam, who is all of the above except, of course, Franz Kafka. Be that as it may, Gilliam sure captures the paranoid-subversive spirit of Kafka's The Trial (along with his own Python animation) in this bureaucratic nightmare-comedy about a meek governmental clerk named Sam Lowry (Jonathan Pryce) whose life is destroyed by a simple bug. Not a software bug, a real bug (no doubt related to Kafka's famous Metamorphosis insect) that gets smooshed 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 glitch, 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

Synopsis
The tale of a world where bureaucracy has gone mad and all Ministry lackey Sam Lowry can do is fantasise about his ideal world. Until, that is he meets renegade freedom fighter and heating engineer Harry Tuttle.


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Customer Reviews

12 Reviews
5 star: 75%  (9)
4 star: 8%  (1)
3 star: 8%  (1)
2 star: 8%  (1)
1 star:    (0)
 
 
 
 
 
Average Customer Review
 
 
 
 
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Most Helpful Customer Reviews

 
14 of 15 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars a dark satire on bureaucracy gone mad, 2 Dec 2001
Imagine something darker and more miserable than Bladerunner but with laughs - and you'll find yourself in Brazil. It is this very paradox which makes this film so fascinating yet disturbing at the same time. I have seen it many times and yet it still holds its magic. What makes it so engrossing for me is the extremes to which the viewer is taken - from Michael Palin's evil torturer having spasms as he "cleans up" after another victim (while wearing a mask that makes him look like child) to the laugh-out-loud scene when one of his daughters tells Pryce's cringingly embarrassed Sam Lowry "I can see your willy!" Then there are the comic - yet still disturbing - turns from Bob Hoskins as a violent and threatening "official" maintenance engineer and Katherine Helmond as Sam's plastic surgery obsessed mother. (Seeing her doctor literally "pull" her face in different directions is still hilarious) One moment you're laughing out loud, the next you're stunned into shocked silence. Brilliant. One final similie - imagine being on a rollercaster ride. Some bits are scary, some bits are thrilling, some bits are terrifying. But as soon as you come to the end you want to do it all over again. This particular rollercoaster ride is called "Brazil".
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5 of 5 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars An intense cinematic experience, 7 Sep 2001
By A Customer
For years I didn't want this to be my favourite film. Whilst Gilliam fills the screen to perfection for the whole 2 hours, with creativity, nonsense and astonishment, it's the film's darkness that makes me just a little wary of it - and its closeness to the truth. If you appreciate the kind of film that needs to be watched at least twice to get it, then this video will repay its price handsomely. Don't bung it on in the corner while you're getting ready to go out, give yourself to this film.

It's the tiny flaws that make Brazil a true masterpiece.