Brazil Review
By Keith Breese
Unfortunately, there are no happy endings for dreamers in this alternate world. Sam always awakens to his mind-numbing existence, only plugging away in a system that rewards only blandness, appeasing his socialite mother (addicted to face lifts) whose only wish is to see her meek son move his way up a corporate ladder to nowhere.
When Sam's AC starts acting up he calls Central Services and instead of receiving the regular plodding service, is surprised to find a renegade handyman Harry Tuttle (Robert De Niro) at his door. Not only does Tuttle repair things without forms, he's a full-blooded anarchist and he leads Sam into a paranoid world quivering behind the state's façade of normality. A world where dreams can come true, if only you're willing to question reality....
Terry Gilliam's career has always been marked by a delightful sense of absurdity as well as an eye - most likely honed as an animator - for the weird. Sometimes he plays it up big -- Time Bandits, The Adventures of Baron Munchausen, The Fisher King -- and other times... well, actually Gilliam always plays it up big. And Brazil is his surrealist manifesto: Art deco swirls in concrete, fetishistic military gear and top hats, it's a pop culture cartoon explosion wrapped over an epic tale of the everyman. Thankfully, Gilliam and co-screenwriters Charles McKeown (Time Bandits) and Tom Stoppard (himself no stranger to weirdness) don't let this Theatre of the Absurd run rampant over the plot - it's surprisingly consistent and emotionally charged. Funny, scary, sublime.
And, as many critics have noted, it's frighteningly prophetic. In 1985 audiences scoffed at the idea of terrorists infiltrating the government and waging war on corporate interests. A police state literally "sacking" people and holding them indefinitely in a secret prison where they are tortured? Not possible. A world where technology has overwhelmed us? Where privacy is only a word? You must be kidding.
Sure, being a film geek, I can go on and on about Gilliam's battles with the studio for final cut. The infamous "Love Conquers All" happy-ending version of the film is as awful and unnecessary as it sounds, but honestly, nothing can truly dilute the power of Gilliam's revelation.
Visionary? Timeless? Indulgent? Call it what you will, Brazil had its fingers firmly on the pulse of world culture and the erratic beat telegraphed The End long before the War on Terror. Easy to say, Brazil isn't so much a movie as it is a movement. Harry Tuttles of the world rise up!
The three-disc DVD Criterion Edition of the film is one for the vaults. At its center is a documentary by film critic Jack Mathews which goes into all the painful and gory details Terry Gilliam undertook to get Brazil through a studio system that just didn't understand it. Gilliam wanted his 142 minute version, the studio wanted its 94 minute version. The two films are as different as two from Corman and Disney, with radically different themes, structures, and of course, quality. And you can watch them both, Gilliam's original cut with his own commentary, the so-called "Love Conquers All" version with "Gilliam expert' David Morgan lending an academic tone to the proceedings. Fascinating -- even though you're not likely to watch that third disc once and once only.
Criterion has also just released a new single-disc DVD which includes just the "final cut" version of the film and a commentary track, if the big boxed set is too rich for your blood.

Facts and Figures
Year: 1985
Run time: 132 mins
In Theaters: Wednesday 18th December 1985
Budget: $15M
Distributed by: Universal Pictures
Production compaines: Embassy International Pictures, Universal Pictures
Reviews
Contactmusic.com: 5 / 5
Rotten Tomatoes: 98%
Fresh: 44 Rotten: 1
IMDB: 8.0 / 10
Cast & Crew
Director: Terry Gilliam
Producer: Arnon Milchan
Screenwriter: Terry Gilliam, Charles McKeown, Tom Stoppard
Starring: Jonathan Pryce as Sam Lowry, Robert De Niro as Archibald 'Harry' Tuttle, Katherine Helmond as Mrs. Ida Lowry, Ian Holm as Mr. M. Kurtzmann, Bob Hoskins as Spoor, Michael Palin as Jack Lint, Ian Richardson as Mr. Warrenn, Peter Vaughan as Mr. Helpmann, Kim Greist as Jill Layton, Jim Broadbent as Dr. Jaffe, Terry Gilliam as Smoking Man (uncredited), Barbara Hicks as Mrs. Alma Terrain, Charles McKeown as Harvey Lime, Derrick O'Connor as Dowser, Kathryn Pogson as Shirley, Bryan Pringle as Spiro
Also starring: Arnon Milchan, Tom Stoppard