Sunday, May 19, 2019
Film Review Brazil (1985) by Terry Gilliam Essay
Brazil is set in a dystopian future, where society is closely monitored and its freedoms infringed upon by the Ministry of Information. The bring is a humorous approach to the dystopia genre, which isnt surprising given that the charge is directed and co-written by Terry Gilliam (the creator of Monty Python). The film is the story of surface-to-air missile Lowry, who has a boring life working for the Ministry of Information until it changes through a strange events, which shows us ministry as a bureaucratic jail.The sets, costumes and props in Brazil create a dazzling and interesting adult male to see. The film features colourful and fantastic dream sequences which provide an escape from Sams dull life. in spite of the simplicity of the main plot, the movie is full of subtexts and images carrying a message which you may not see them on the first viewing. In one scene, a man is buying clean air from a vend machine on the street. The sides of the streets are walls of billboards wh ich keeps the environment hidden from peoples eyes.In a holiday-decorated retentiveness a small child tells Santa she wants a credit card as a present for Christmas. The film is much more difficult, this may turn some people off. Makers had so many things to say in one movie. First of all this is a film slightly systems breaking down a out of work fly drops into a printer, causing a misprint which leads to a mans death penalisation (Just because of misprint ) heating systems break down, and they cannot repair them because the support system is overstretched. It is also a film about systems destroying humanity.With everyone having their own defined role in the heavyweight system that control every part of the life, nobody has to take personal responsibility for common problems mistakes are almost somebody elses problem, and nobody in reality feels they have do something to change the situation. Brazil is simply unlike anything you have ever seen before. The ending to the film i s particularly powerful, with Gilliam offering us a typical happily-ever-after ending, and then breaking in the final seconds. afterwards all, in such a dystopian society, a happy ending is not only unlikely, only if it is near impossible.
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