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The nightmarish futuristic satire Brazil effectively blurs all lines between illusion and reality. Jonathan pryce plays a government statistician who chooses to blind himself to the decaying world around him. (official distributor synopsis)

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lamps 

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English A hallucinogenic satire of 1984 meets the biggest middle finger to the Christmas spirit in the history of cinema. And it’s fun, but also has interpretive challenges, especially in the depressive ending. So many ideas in one film – whether purely visual, the staging (sci-fi like Metropolis + grotesque irony in the style of Monty Python) or themes - is not something we see very often. I should give it 5*, but at times that frantic movement didn’t feel fully organised and meaningful. 85% ()

Marigold 

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English What to make of this film? In the first plan, it will impress you with absolutely amazing design and a novel visualization of Gilliam's world. Only then does a very strange story follow, and a very strange conclusion which, willingly or unwillingly, gives the impression that one would have to take support resources in order to inspect it. However, Brazil is a classic film with a tail, so it was only after a long time that I found that it fascinated me externally and left a strong resonance in me. I didn't understand why, but I still liked this visually riveting representation of human civilization (is it me, or is there really a bit of Kafka and Orwell in it?) very much. And in a way, Brazil can be seen as a successor to Monty Python's bizarre black humor... ()

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novoten 

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English Accepting Terry Gilliam as a non-python creator occasionally causes me problems, but with Brazil, he hit my taste precisely. Although at times it is too far from any existing film schemes, in this case, it is exactly his strongest weapon. Jonathan Pryce plays a perfectly identifiable character, a positive and, in a sense, tragic hero, isolated in a mad world. The world of this future is a nest of evil, calculating, or conversely, too naive characters, and its rules are merciless. The pressure of the system is most noticeable on Jack, played by Michael Palin. Who would have thought that this perpetually smiling Monty Python could be such a slimy snake? Thanks to his character, the pervasive social criticism is almost brutal. ()

Lima 

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English Producers must be getting stomach ulcers from Terry "here-you-have-it-and-take-it-as-you-want" Gilliam. For most viewers, Brazil will probably be a difficult film to digest. A visually immensely striking metaphor that was a flop with the general public but went down in film history as an original piece of work. It would have made Franz Kafka happy. And maybe George Orwell, too :) ()

kaylin 

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English A very strange film that either fits you very well with its concept or not at all. Terry Gilliam succeeded mainly with the visual side, but it is necessary to realize that there is also a great story, great criticism of human society and how we function, or rather how we could function but shouldn't. I haven't seen Jonathan Pryce act better yet, his acting approach fit perfectly here. ()

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