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Subject: "Like many films about postmodernity..." This topic is locked.
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Nettrice
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Sun Dec-31-06 12:00 AM

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26. "Like many films about postmodernity..."
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Sun Dec-31-06 12:08 AM by Nettrice

  

          

Brazil begins with a fairy tale/fantasy. The protagonist, Sam Lowry, is an angel/warrior who saves the damsel-in-distress (Jill) and the world from destruction. The dream is an eternal desire, the last wish of a brain dead man. In reality Sam Lowry is a casualty, not a hero.

In his films Gilliam loves to comment on prisons, both of the mind and the body. His cinematic prisons are institutions and the urban environment. The bad guys are bureaucrats and administrators who are so devoid of emotion and humanity that they appear robotic in their movements and interactions. The good guys are living off the grid (labeled terrorists...hmmmm).

Starting with a dream we are able to see that Sam is more than a robot. His desire is the desire of any person stuck in a maze (or a cubicle).

This is why I like this film.

Brazil is an example of postmodernity much like Blade Runner and others but it does not give us a vision of a post-apocalyptic world. This is a world we already live in, a possible world we could all live in if we give into corporations, over-population, and technology (which has not progressed since 1975). Like Blade Runner Brazil shows us the world miles and miles above the surface of the planet. 12 Monkeys turns the world 180 degrees; the people live under the surface. In these films the sky, nature is non-existent. In Brazil class (and race) are nonexistent...where's the lower class?

This is why I don't like the film.

In Brazil the only escape is lobotomy that renders the person trapped forever in a dream (in his mind). This film compresses space and time, so that in the beginning we are not aware of where we are in the story. Are we in a mythic fantasy or the ugly retro-future world? As the film progresses we realize that Sam Lowry is reluctantly being forced off the grid, so to speak, by a administrative mistake not of his making. He just wants to do the right thing and get the girl.

I love Brazil because it reminds me of a choice I made as the child of a computer programmer. I never wanted to work in a cubicle and I never wanted to be a bureaucrat. I was sad when Harry Tuttle gets erased by the excess (paper) of the world. This is when I realized that Lowry's mind was someplace else. What I was watching was not real.

I give the film a B+

<--- Blame this lady for Nutty.

  

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Okayplayer Movie Club: Brazil by Terry Gilliam [View all] , Frank Longo, Mon Dec-25-06 11:51 AM
 
Subject Author Message Date ID
wens the deadline?
Dec 25th 2006
1
Brazil's in HD Thursday on UniversalHD
Dec 25th 2006
2
The HD version of this is like watching an ENTIRELY NEW FILM
Jan 01st 2007
28
Some HD screen captures here (link)
Jan 01st 2007
29
I will be discussing this one with ya'll.
Dec 25th 2006
3
This is in my Top 2 of favorite movies of all time
Dec 25th 2006
4
What's the 90 minute version like? I've only seen director's cut.
Dec 25th 2006
5
      A lot of the darker tones of the film are weakned quite a bit
Dec 26th 2006
9
okay... i'll gladly join in for this one
Dec 25th 2006
6
I can get down with this one. One of my all-time favorites...
Dec 26th 2006
7
Which cut? n/m
Dec 26th 2006
8
most overrated movie in the history of ever.
Dec 26th 2006
10
Care to explicate?
Dec 26th 2006
12
most overrated movie in the history of ever.
Dec 26th 2006
11
I really didn't care for this film
Dec 28th 2006
13
saw the director's cut...
Dec 28th 2006
14
DeNiro's most overlooked performance...
Dec 28th 2006
15
Overlooked? He was in one scene the whole movie
Dec 28th 2006
16
      you didn't even finish the movie!
Dec 28th 2006
17
           I didn't have to finish the movie to see that 4 minute scene.
Dec 29th 2006
21
                If you think Harry Tuttle's an insignificant role, you missed a LOT.
Dec 29th 2006
24
weird as fuck.. but good...
Dec 29th 2006
18
I like the direction more than I do the writing.
Dec 29th 2006
19
      I agree, there are a lot of memorable images in Brazil.
Dec 29th 2006
22
I want to like this film, but I don't get it
Dec 29th 2006
20
Okay, since no one else is talking, I'll retort the best that I can:
Dec 29th 2006
23
So okay, I read a lot of sci-fi in high school
Dec 30th 2006
25
Your points are incredibly valid, but I've still gotta say...
Jan 01st 2007
27
so, i FINALLY watched this for the first time. some thoughts
Jan 18th 2007
30
I'm still undecided on whether to watch this . . .
Jul 04th 2007
31
Watch it.
Jul 05th 2007
32

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