home
***
CD-ROM
|
disk
|
FTP
|
other
***
search
/
Usenet 1994 January
/
usenetsourcesnewsgroupsinfomagicjanuary1994.iso
/
answers
/
movies
/
brazil-faq
< prev
next >
Wrap
Internet Message Format
|
1993-12-07
|
49KB
Path: senator-bedfellow.mit.edu!bloom-beacon.mit.edu!gatech!howland.reston.ans.net!spool.mu.edu!news.sol.net!news.sol.net!not-for-mail
From: eschat@solaria.sol.net (David Eschatfische)
Newsgroups: rec.arts.movies,rec.answers,news.answers
Subject: BRAZIL (Movie, 1985) Frequently Asked Questions (FAQ)
Followup-To: rec.arts.movies
Date: 5 Dec 1993 15:10:55 -0600
Organization: Solaria Public Access UNIX - Milwaukee, WI
Lines: 1004
Sender: eschat@solaria.mil.wi.us
Approved: news-answers-request@MIT.Edu
Expires: 1994/1/16
Message-ID: <2dtiov$cu9@solaria.mil.wi.us>
Reply-To: eschat@solaria.mil.wi.us
NNTP-Posting-Host: solaria.mil.wi.us
Summary: Frequently Asked Questions about Terry Gilliam's film BRAZIL.
Keywords: gilliam brazil cult film
Xref: senator-bedfellow.mit.edu rec.arts.movies:148118 rec.answers:3262 news.answers:15531
Archive-name: movies/brazil-faq
Last-modified: 1993/12/5
Version: 1.1
===========================================================================
BRAZIL
Frequently Asked Questions
Copyright (C) 1993 David S. Cowen
Release 1.10
===========================================================================
This _Brazil_ FAQ was created, compiled and collated by David S. Cowen
(2609cowend@vms.csd.mu.edu). Portions of the information in this FAQ were
taken without permission from Jack Mathew's fine hardcover _The Battle of
Brazil_, published by Crown Publishing, New York, 1987 ISBN 0-517-56538-2.
INTRODUCTION
Eight years after its release, Terry Gilliam's _Brazil_ remains one of the
most hotly discussed movies on the net, due to its complex plot, unique
style and the legendary battle about _Brazil's_ release between Terry
Gilliam (the director) and Sidney Sheinberg (then president of Universal
Studios). This FAQ has been created to answer frequently posted questions
pertinent to all matters about the film.
This list will be posted on the 16th of every month to rec.arts.movies,
news.answers, and rec.answers.
The followup field is set to rec.arts.movies.
This FAQ is available for anonymous FTP wherever news.answers is archived,
for example:
rtfm.mit.edu:/pub/usenet/news.answers/movies/brazil-faq
Sites in Europe include:
nic.switch.ch
cnam.cnam.fr
ftp.win.tue.nl
This FAQ contains spoilers.
===========================================================================
TABLE OF CONTENTS
1. I didn't understand the film at all. What's it all about?
2. I heard that there were problems with _Brazil's_ release in America.
Why?
3. How many versions of _Brazil_ have been released?
4. What is the title _Brazil_ supposed to mean?
5. How does _Brazil_ fit in with Gilliam's other movies?
6. What are the lyrics to the song _Brazil_? Is a soundtrack available?
7. The sets are stunning. Where were they filmed?
8. What do all the signs say?
9. What is Information Retrieval Charging?
10. What does the singing telegram girl sing?
11. Miscellaneous questions, answers and observations.
12. Notable Quotes.
13. Appendix: Who is <so-and-so>? What else were they in?
===========================================================================
1. I didn't understand the film at all. What's it all about?
_Brazil_ is a film rich in depth -- the plot does not focus on just
one subject, but instead many different plots which weave together. The
main focus is Sam Lowry, who works in the records department of a huge
government bureaucracy, the Ministry of Information. Sam alternates
between being trapped as a mere "cog in the machine" in a grim world of
paperwork and escaping from his grim existence by becoming a hero in his
own elaborate dreams. His life and these dreams begin to merge together...
until the government finds him guilty of none other than "wasting the
Ministry's time and paper" after the messy pursuit of his dream girl --
who happened to be wanted by the Ministry as a terrorist.
Terry Gilliam, the director of _Brazil_, has given us a film which
rolls up many of the problems of the century into one big plot:
industrialization, terrorism, government control and bureaucracy (from
both capitalist and socialized countries), technology gone wrong, inept
repair people, plastic surgery, Love and even modern filmmaking -- all
woven into the main plot which shows the dehumanizing effect all of these
problems have on the people in today's society. Gilliam shows that in the
world of _Brazil_, set "8:49 p.m., somewhere in the 20th century", fantasy
is the only escape. Gilliam approaches this with his trademark wit and
visual style, honed during his years as the animator for _Monty Python's
Flying Circus_.
Words from Gilliam himself, part of an interview for The South Bank Show,
filmed 6/29/91:
"_Brazil_ was a film that sat around for some years, I mean like 10
years I'd been sort of thinking about this thing. I mean on a very simple
level it's just its just very cathartic for me. It's all about my own
frustrations and my seeming inability to achieve what I wanted to achieve
and my inability to affect a system that is clearly wrong. The fears of
_Brazil_ are not so much that the world is spinning out of control because
of the system, because the system is us. What _Brazil_ is really about is
that the system isn't great leaders, great machinating people controlling
it all. It's each person performing their job as one little cog in this
thing and Sam chooses to stay a little cog and ultimately he pays the price
for that.
"Now on the other hand I also felt that there's the ideal that if we
all do our bit the world will become better. Then there's the pessimistic
side that says enough of this 'do our bit, ain't gonna make a blind bit of
difference as we're all gunna, lemming like, go over the abyss'. And so
then there was 'how do you escape from that world?' and Sam escapes by
going insane. I actually started this film with that idea of 'can one make
a film where the happy ending is a man going insane?'"
However, in typical Gilliam wit, Gilliam has been quoted as saying
"Because I dislike being quoted I lie almost constantly when talking about
my work."
===========================================================================
2. I heard that there were problems with _Brazil's_ release in America.
Why?
In January of 1985, Terry Gilliam delivered his completed _Brazil_ to
Universal studios, on time and on budget. _Brazil's_ complex and
interweaving plot demands a lot of screen time in order to tie up all the
loose ends -- and Gilliam was happy about the way the film worked in its
142 minute cut. Fox Pictures International had just signed the
international agreement to the film and had accepted the 142 minute length
without any sort of protest, so Gilliam expected Universal to accept it for
distribution in America.
Not so. Sidney Sheinberg, the president of Universal studios had
taken an interest in _Brazil_ -- Sheinberg "liked many parts of _Brazil_,
and thought there were many moments of bravura filmmaking," but what
Sheinberg saw lacking was commercial potential. The cure for this, in
Sheinberg's eyes was a re-edit, one that took the various parts of _Brazil_
that were commercially viable, namely Sam's pursuit of his dream girl, the
stunning set design and Gilliam's off-beat style of humor, while removing
those things that were not, namely the film's dark ending, the overtones
of the dehumanizing effects of the government, and Michael Kamen's
orchestral score.
This began a personal battle between Terry Gilliam and Sidney
Sheinberg for control of the film. Sheinberg had forced Gilliam to sign a
time provision which said that the running time of _Brazil_ would have to
be 132 minutes for Universal to accept it, and that even then Universal
could follow up with any editing it deemed necessary. A rough cut of
_Brazil_ which ran at 132 minutes was created by Gilliam's editor Julian
oyle in order to fulfill the contractual obligation on time, and was sent
o Universal pictures. Gilliam worked on his own final 132 minute edit
while Sheinberg himself proceeded to begin work on his own edit of the
film.
Scheinberg's editors Bill Gordean and Steve Lovejoy created an edit
which cut out many of the dream sequences and essential threads in the plot
of _Brazil_, while splicing in all elements of humor and all usable footage
involving Sam's pursuit of Jill Layton, his dream girl. If that wasn't bad
enough, Gordean and Lovejoy also lopped off the entire ending sequence
which involved Sam Lowry's interrogation by his coworker Jack Lint.
Instead, they chose to end the film where Sam finally consummates his
relationship with Jill, and escapes with her to the country. Also
suggested was the replacement of the symphonic score with one of
contemporary rock music.
Ultimately, this edit subverted the entire point of _Brazil_, making
the movie a futuristic fairy tale about a man's quest for a dream woman,
with a lot of action and a sub-plot about terrorism thrown in. Gilliam's
original message of dehumanization and technology gone wrong was subverted
by Scheinberg's edit, which sent the message that if you play the game and
stay a good little cog in the machine, that one day you'll end up with your
dreams come true.
Scheinberg, after seeing Gilliam's second 132 minute edit, decided
to test the studio's version. Of course, Gilliam would not stand for this.
Arnon Milchan, the producer of the film, began making public declarations
on how the studio had taken away Gilliam's film because it was only a few
minutes over contractual obligation, and began calling for critics to
see the film in England, where it was available from Fox Pictures.
Sid Sheinberg responded back by saying that no amount of critical praise
could reverse the studio's decision about _Brazil_. Gilliam told
Sheinberg that if he was going to release to studio's edit of _Brazil_
that he wanted his name off of the credits, and then started out and out
publicity war. In Gilliam's own words:
"It became a stalemate situation and Arnon Milchen, the producer said,
"We've got to get lawyers in here and we've got to deal with this" and I
said "Nah, can't get lawyers in. They've got all the lawyers in the world.
They've got all the money. They don't have to release the film, it's not
going to kill them. They can sit on it". and I said "we'll just have to
approach it in a much more personalized way". So the first thing I did was
to take a full page ad out in Variety which was this blank page except for
this black border and in the middle of it it said:
Dear Sid Sheinberg,
when are you going to
release my film 'BRAZIL'?
Terry Gilliam.
and eventually what happened was the LA critics became very interested in
the film and some had seen it and they set up a whole series of clandestine
screenings of this film around Hollywood in peoples homes. It came time to
vote at the end of the year for their films and they realized in their
bylaws it didn't say that a film had to be released to be able to be voted
upon and so they all voted upon whether _Brazil_ could be voted upon and
they agreed it could be and then it went out and it won Best Picture, Best
Direction and Best Screenplay. [The awards were] announced the very night
of the premiere of Out Of Africa in New York which was Universal's big film
that year. All the big brass were there in their ties & DJ's and they were
told that Out Of Africa had won nothing and _Brazil_, this film that they
won't release has won all these awards. They had to release it and what was
wonderful was I was getting all these phone calls from people saying "Oh
well done, maybe now the flood gates will open we'll get films out,
blahblahblah". Of course it didn't, just like _Brazil_, the system doesn't
change, you just escape in your madness, that's all."
- Terry Gilliam, The South Bank Show, 6/29/91
Universal finally opened Gilliam's 132 minute cut of _Brazil_ at two
theaters in Los Angeles on Christmas Day, 1985, later bringing it across
the country.
===========================================================================
3. How many different versions of _Brazil_ have been released?
Three versions of _Brazil_ have been released commercially thus far.
These three are the 142 minute European Release (to be referred here as ER,
later released to theaters in America as the "director's cut"), the 132
minute American film and video release (AR), and Sid Sheinberg's edit (SE),
which has been shown on television. There are reports of two different
ER's being shown in American theaters, and television stations have been
known to do their own editing on the AR. Soon to be released is the
Criterion Collection's laserdisc release of _Brazil_, which will feature a
new director's cut from Gilliam, plus running commentary from Gilliam on
the analog tracks, deleted scenes, storyboards and other "special treats
from Gilliam's personal collection." The preliminary date of release was
November 24th, 1993, but it looks as though the release has been pushed
forward to March 1994.
The AR of _Brazil_ omits many scenes found in the ER. These are:
A brief scene involving Sam and his mother Ida entering the
restaurant where they meet Mrs. Terrain and Shirley. They
have to pass through a metal detector in order to gain
entrance, and Ida's present to Sam (one of the "Executive
Decision Makers", seen later in the movie) sets off the alarm.
Part of the beginning of the first "Samurai" dream sequence, where
Sam explores through the concrete labyrinth he finds himself in.
In the European release, the Samurai sequence is one long sequence,
whereas in the American version is is divided into three separate
sequences.
A scene where Sam and Jill lie in bed after the implied
consummation of their relationship. Jill has taken off the
wig she was wearing in the scene before, and has a pink bow
tied around her naked body. She says to Sam: "Something
for an executive?" and he unwraps her.
The "Interrogation" scene, where Sam is charged with all of
the violations of the law he committed throughout the film,
including "wasting Ministry time and paper."
The "Father Christmas" scene where Helpmann visits Sam after
his booking, Helpmann is dressed as Santa Claus. Among other
things, Helpmann informs Sam that Jill Layton has been killed...
twice.
However, the AR adds a few features:
There are clouds that open and close the film in the AR. Some
of the footage of these clouds was extraneous footage from
_The Never Ending Story_.
After watching Mrs. Lowry's first plastic surgery treatment,
Sam exclaims "My god, it works!"
Some versions of the ER are known to omit the scene featuring Sam and
Jill after their consummation.
The SE makes the following changes (it is likely a number of versions of
the SE have been shown on television, as the stations themselves may have
done their own editing for time)
The scene between Jill and Sam described above is included.
Afterwards, only Sam is captured. Jill is not killed.
The film ends with a brief sequence where Jill wakes Sam in their
country hideaway. Sam says "I don't dream anymore," looks at a
picture on the wall of himself wearing the dream-sequence wings,
and the film ends with them flying up into the heavens.
Many of the fantasy sequences were missing, or slightly different.
After Sam blows up the Ministry of Information, a piece of paper
flutters down. It's got a wanted message for Sam on it.
Extended dialogue between Jill and Sam outside his apartment, and
while in the truck.
Extended dialogue in the scene where Sam meets Jack at Information
Retrieval, and Jack has his daughter in his office.
A cut of Casablanca featuring the line "Here's lookin' at you, kid."
right after Sam leaves Kurtzmann's office.
Jack says "You look like you've seen a ghost, Sam..." to Sam at the
entrance of the Ministry of Records when Sam sees Jill Layton in the
monitors.
===========================================================================
4. What is the title _Brazil_ supposed to mean?
Certainly, _Brazil_ is an enigmatic title for a movie that seems to
have nothing to do with the country of Brazil. The first-draft screenplay
was entitled _The Ministry of Torture, or Brazil, or How I Learned to Live
with the System -- So Far_, and Gilliam also considered calling his
screenplay 1984 1/2. In the book _The Battle of Brazil_, Gilliam explains
where the inspiration stemmed from, while he was in Port Talbot, Wales:
"Port Talbot is a steel town, where everything is covered with gray
iron ore dust. Even the beach is completely littered with dust, its just
black. The sun was setting, and it was quite beautiful. The contrast was
extraordinary, I had this image of a guy sitting there on this dingy beach
with a portable radio, tuning in these strange Latin escapist songs like
'Brazil.' The music transported him somehow and made his world less gray."
Linking to the bureaucratic theme, in the country of Brazil you need 9
photos and 4 pieces of identification to get a part-time job. The
government also has a "Department of Debureaucratization"
Sid Sheinberg didn't like the title, and had the Universal staff
submit suggestions for a new title. These suggestions included the titles:
If Osmosis, Who Are You? Some Day Soon
Vortex Day Dreams and Night Tripper
What a Future! Litterbugs
The Works Skylight City
You Show Me Your Dream... Access
Arresting Developments Nude Descending Bathroom Scale
Lords of the Files Dreamscape
The Staplegunners Progress
Forever More The Right to Bear Arms
Explanada Fortunata Is Not My Real Name All Too Soon
Chaos Where Were We?
Disconnected Parties Blank/Blank
Erotic Shadow Time
Maelstrom Forces of Darkness
The Man in the Custom Tailored T-shirt Fold, Spindle, Mutilate
Can't Anybody Here Play the Cymbals? Sign on High
The Ball Bearing Electro Memory Circuit Buster
This Escalator Doesn't Stop At Your Station
Gnu Yak, Gnu Yak, and Other Bestial Places.
===========================================================================
5. How does _Brazil_ fit in with Gilliam's other movies?
The films _Time Bandits_, _Brazil_ and _The Adventures of Baron
Munchausen_ form a trilogy, roughly outlining the various stages of life.
This is not an interpretation of the film begun on the net; it was
mentioned by Gilliam on talk shows promoting _Baron
Munchausen_, as well as in _The Battle of Brazil_. _The Battle of Brazil_
explains that Gilliam's trilogy is about the ages of man, and the
subordination of magic to realism. _Time Bandits_ was part one, about the
fantasist as a child. _Brazil_ was part two, the fantasist as a young man,
and _Baron Munchausen_ closes the series with its story about an old man
who, through the innocence and open mindedness of a small girl, regains his
belief in magic. Both _Time Bandits_ and _Brazil_ have bleak endings, but
_Baron Munchausen_ shows the final triumph of this sort of magic, as
Munchausen circumvents the reality of his death in his own tall tales.
Many have inquired as to how _The Fisher King_ fits into Gilliam's trilogy.
It does have certain links, and the general theme of merging fantasy with
reality, but _The Fisher King_ was not written by Gilliam.
===========================================================================
6. What are the lyrics to Brazil? Is a soundtrack available?
Brazil...
Where hearts were entertaining June
We stood beneath an amber moon
And softly murmured someday soon...
We kissed...
And clung together
Then...
Tomorrow was another day
The morning found me miles away *
With still a million things to say
Now...
When twilight dims the skies above **
Recalling thrills of our love
There's one thing I'm certain of
Return...
I will...
to old...
BRAZIL.
(NOTES: * In some versions, this line is "The morning found US miles away"
** In some versions, this line is "When twilight dims the STARS
above")
The soundtrack by Michael Kamen is available on compact disc, Milan
35636-2. The disc features music from the film as well as snippets of
dialogue and the title track sung by Kate Bush. The recording is
excellent, and the disc offers insightful liner notes written by Steven
Smith, Terry Gilliam and Michael Kamen.
Music From The Original Motion Picture Soundtrack BRAZIL (Michael Kamen)
CD: 1993 US (Milan 35636-2)
1:41 Central Services / The Office
2:10 Sam Lowry's 1st Dream / "Brazil" (vocal by Kate Bush)
0:42 Ducts
3:00 Waiting for Daddy / Sam Lowry's Wetter Dream
"The Monoliths Erupt"
1:15 Truck Drive
1:34 The Restaurant (You've Got To Say the Number)
1:14 Mr. Helpmann
0:45 The Elevator
2:07 Jill Brazil / Power Station
1:03 The Party (Part 1) / Plastic Surgery
1:53 Ducting Dream
3:26 Brazil (Performed by Geoff Muldaur, from the Geoff and
Maria Muldaur album _Pottery Pie_)
1:18 Days and Nights in Kyoto - The Party (Part 2)
1:46 The Morning After
1:03 Escape?
4:30 The Battle
1:50 Harry Tuttle - "A Man Consumed By Paperwork"
1:44 Mother's Funeral / Forces of Darkness
2:26 Escape ! No Escape !
2:51 Bachianos Brazil Samba
===========================================================================
7. The sets are stunning. Where were they filmed?
The sets in _Brazil_ were designed to look like "the century was
compacted into a single moment," the style being eclectic. In order to
create this sort of mood, Gilliam's film was shot at many locations in
Europe.
Sam's apartment building actually exists in France, at the Marne la
Vallee, a huge apartment complex designed by Ricardo Bofil. The truck
chase, with Sam and Jill outrunning the security pursuit vans as well as
shots of Sam walking home from the transporter station were filmed there.
Dr. Jaffe's surgery room, where Ida Lowry recieves her cosmetic
treatment early in the film, was shot in Leighton's House, the home of Lord
Leighton. Leighton was a Victorian artist and collector of moorish tiles.
The clerk's pool where Sam works in the Records Department was shot
in an abandoned grain mill in London's Dockland. The mill was sprayed
with gray paint, and flour sifters were turned into benches. This same
location was used for the corridors of the Information Retrieval
department where Sam goes after being promoted. The giant holes in the
ceiling are the bottoms of twelve-story-high grain silos.
The restaurant where Sam, Ida, Mrs. Terrain and Shirley have lunch
was shot in Mentmore Towers, part of the former Rothschild mansion in
Buckinghamshire.
Sam's mother's apartment was filmed in the Liberal Club in London,
located next to old Scotland Yard.
The Information Retrieval torture chamber where Sam is interrogated
was shot in a cooling tower at a power station in South London. The stunt
men who rescue Sam during his interrogation had to descend a distance of
170 feet to 9-inch wide metal spines 40 feet above the ground for Sam's
escape scene.
The Croydon power station was used for the setting of the basement
of the Ministry of Information, as well as an exterior scene where Sam
"arrests" Jill in her truck.
===========================================================================
8. What do all the signs say?
Few of the propaganda signs were in the original script of _Brazil_. They
can be credited to co-scriptwriter Charles McKeown, who also played Sam's
smarmy co-worker at Information Retrieval. Also, most every object in
the film has a stencilled part number on it.
In the Department Of Records:
"The Truth Shall Make You Free" - on statue
"Information Is The Key To Prosperity. A Ministry Of Information" - sign
above security stall.
"Help The Ministry Of Information Help You" - poster on wall
"Be Safe: Be Suspicious" - sign on wall
"Loose Talk Is Noose Talk" - poster on the wall of the computer room
Kurtzmann's office:
"Suspicion Breeds Confidence" - sign
Ministry of Information logos are stamped on many of the small items in
Kurtzmann's office, such as the teacup given to Lowry and the fishbowl.
These are nearly impossible to see on video.
Shangri La Towers:
"Happiness: We're all in it together" - Billboard
(This billboard is copied from a sign that appeared throughout the United
States during the depression.)
"Mellowfields. Top Security Holiday Camps. Luxury without fear. Fun
without suspicion. Relax in a panic free atmosphere." - advert on wall
above children playing.
"Reality" - graffiti on wall
"Shangorilla Towers" - Shangri-la tower's defaced sign.
"DO NOT FOLD, SPINDLE, MUTILATE" - stencilled on concrete wall.
Mr Lime's Office at Info. Retrieval:
"Trust in haste, Regret at leisure" - poster on wall
"Don't suspect a friend, report him" - poster on wall (also seen in both
Lint and Kutzmann's offices)
Jack's Office at Info. Retrieval:
"Who can you trust?" - poster on wall
Processing Plant:
"Mind that parcel. Eagle eyes can save a life" - poster on wall
"Power today. Pleasure tomorrow." - poster seen when the house gets lifted.
Shopping Mall:
"Consumers for Christ" - banner carried by band in the mall.
"Utopia Railways" - ad in the street when Sam blows up the building.
"Keep your city tidy" - sign on the trash can.
===========================================================================
9. What is Information Retrieval charging?
A subplot that many viewers of _Brazil_ miss entirely is that of
Information Retrieval charging. "Information Retrieval" is a euphemism
for "interrogation." The extent of Information Retrieval Charging is
revealed in Deputy Minister Conrad Helpmann's interview, which is shown
on the telescreen while a technician swipes at the beetle which determines
the fate of the movie. The interviewer asks the Deputy Prime Minister
about the economics of the terrorist situation, and the Deputy Prime
Minister replies:
"I understand this concern on behalf of the taxpayers.
People want value for money. That's why we always
insist on the principal of Information Retrieval
charges. It's absolutely right and fair that those
found guilty should pay for their periods of detention
and the Information Retrieval procedures used in their
interrogations."
The check Lowry delivers to Mrs. Buttle is a check for the amount
debited from the Buttle's charge account when Mr. Buttle was interrogated
and killed early in the film. The police officer says to Sam after
he is strapped into the chair at the torture chamber "Don't fight
it son, confess quickly. If you hold out too long, you could
jeopardize your credit rating." Note that this is not merely
a funny line; a scene present only in the ER (and presumably in the
forthcoming laserdisc) has a MOI official arranging a way for Sam to
pay his charges.
===========================================================================
10. What does the singing telegram girl sing?
Mrs. Ida Lowry requests the pleasure
of your companyyyy
at her apartment tonight,
from eight thirtyyyyy
to midnight
to celebrate the completion
of her recent cosmetic surgeryyyy
The guest of honor will be
Mr. Conrad Helpmann,
Dep. Under Minister of State
for Public Informationnnn,
R.S.V.P. by singing telegram!
There's a reason for the singing telegram girl's rather odd dance
during the last bit of the recital -- in the original script, she
later asked if she could use Sam's bathroom.
===========================================================================
11. Miscellaneous Questions, Answers, and Observations.
Q. What kind of car did Sam drive to deliver the refund check?
A. It's a Messerschmidt. Gilliam obtained two from a collector's club
in order to shoot the film, one of which was destroyed for the scene
at Shangri-La Towers.
Q. What does Jack Lint's little girl say to Sam after Jack leaves?
A. "Put it on, big boy. I won't look at your willy." Holly, the
little girl, is Gilliam's daughter Holly Gilliam.
Q. Who is Sam's mother played by in the scene at Mrs. Terrain's funeral?
A. Its Kim Greist, who plays Jill Layton. Gilliam shot footage with both
Greist and Katherine Helmond playing the part, and decided to use the
footage of Greist with Helmond's voice dubbed in. However, if you look
closely, the last shot of Sam's mother is played by Katherine Helmond.
Gilliam denies oedipal overtones.
Q. Who is the rock man supposed to represent?
A. Sam's boss at the Department of Records, Kurtzmann.
Q. Who does Sam find when he lifts the faceplate of the Samurai?
A. Himself, which lends itself to the Quixotic nature of Sam's quest.
The samurai is a huge, monolithic, powerful machine, and is assumed
to represent technology -- and Sam finds his own participation
in the machinations of this technologically based society to be a
hindrance to his own self.
Q. Why the hideous masks, like the one Jack Lint wears for the
interrogation?
A. Gilliam's mother once sent him a mask like that, and it haunted him ever
since. Gilliam intended the effect of combining the masks and the
decaying bodies of the Forces of Darkness (the small, troll-like
creatures which Sam sees in his dreams) to be an intermingling of the
beginning and ends of life.
Q. Does Gilliam cameo in the film?
A. Gilliam himself appears as one of the lurkers in Shangri-La towers, the
one belching smoke as he runs into Sam. The lurkers were put in the
script to get the idea across that people were being arbitrarily picked
out for surveillance.
Q. How is the song "Brazil" used in the movie?
A. As well as frequently occurring as a theme in the orchestral soundtrack,
the song Brazil is hummed by Tuttle as he puts the panel back inside
Sam's apartment, and by Sam as he folds up Mrs. Buttle's check and puts
it in the pneumatic delivery tube. A few notes of the song are played
by the keypad as Sam punches in "EREIAMJH" in Mr. Helpmann's lift.
Q. Are there any references to other films in _Brazil_?
A. Past the obvious reference to Casablanca, there are two scenes which
are familiar to film buffs. The first is the opening dolly shot of the
clerk's pool at the Department of Records, intended as homage to
Stanley Kubrick, who used a similar dolly shot in _Paths of Glory_.
An even more striking similarity is during the scene where Lowry and
Tuttle escape from Information Retrieval. The actions of the soldiers
in this scene, marching mechanically in time and lowering their rifles,
mirrors shot-for-shot a famous scene in _Potemkin_. The scene in the
Russian classic takes place on the steps of Odessa, portraying a glimpse
of the Russian revolution. In _Potemkin_, we have a baby carriage
rolling down the stairs in the midst of battle. In _Brazil_, we have a
floor polisher going down the stairs -- the operator, like the mother in
Potemkin, is shot.
This famous scene is also alluded to in _The Untouchables_, during the
famous train station stand-off, and was re-drawn for _Stick Figure
Theatre_ on MTV's _Liquid Television_. Zbigniew Rybczynski's short film
"Steps" is all about what happens when modern day tourists get to walk
around in this famous film sequence...
Q. Are any of the character's names significant?
A. Mr Kurtzmann (German for ``short man'') stands for small in stature and
success. Named after the editor of ``Help'' (Harvey Kurtzman), a
magazine that Gilliam worked for in the mid-60s. It was at a photo
shoot for this magazine that Gilliam met John Cleese, who would later
invite him to join the Monty Python team.
Mr Warrenn works in a rabbit-warren style place: a maze of corridors
Q. What is the tool that Jack Lint uses during Sam's interrogation?
A. It is a device used to perform a frontal lobotomy. It is inserted
through the nose and then pushed up to sever the frontal lobe.
Q. What is the gift Sam keeps getting and giving?
A. An executive decision maker, a novelty gift in the Spencer's Gifts vain:
it has a plunger that can fall to one side of a divider, landing on
"YES" or "NO". The toy is of no value in the film...commentary on the
knee-jerk giving of useless gifts at Christmastime, and the
commercialization of the holiday.
The gift in real life was more expensive...it cost 2000 dollars to
design and make for the film.
Q. Why does Mrs. Terrain disintegrate over the course of the film?
A. Mrs Terrain reveals in the restaurant bombing sequence that she is
seeing Mr. Chapman for cosmetic surgery, also known as "the acid man".
From the gelatinous, bony mess found in her coffin, we can assume
the treatment would be ultimately unsuccessful.
Q. What does "'ere I am, J.H." mean?
A. This appears to be a continuity error. Jeremiah (the anagram of
"EREIAMJH") was Sam Lowry's late father, so we can assume his initials
were J.L. Helpmann's initials are C.H. (for Conrad Helpmann).
It is possible that H is a middle initial of one of the two men.
Q. How were the flying sequences filmed?
A. "We used either close ups of Jonathan....and the rest of the shots
were done on this model. This thing was so good we were able to come in
very close on it and still fool the camera. This whole thing was connected
by wires to a battery that was then run on a huge track. To make it look
like the size of a human being you've gotta slow the thing down so we shot
it at 4 or 5 times normal speed and the operator trying to follow this
thing was in a terrible state. We'd set this whole thing up and the clouds
would get going and we'd shout "Action!" and it would go Wham! and then
this thing would fly through the air "Berrrrrap!" and that was it and it
would take us another hour to set it up again. By the end of the day you
wouldn't know what you'd achieved, but come the next morning, you saw the
rushes and the film slowed down to the right speed...it's fantastic, you
saw this incredibly graceful, soaring, sweeping figure. That's what we
ended up with on film."
- Terry Gilliam, The South Bank Show, 6/29/91
Additional information:
Two of Lowry's "rescuers" are wearing comic masks -- one wearing a Father
Christmas mask, the other Pluto.
There are references to Egyptology in Ida Lowry's decor, and the brooch she
wears, the beetle, is the Egyptian symbol for eternal life. The "shoe hat"
she wears is based on an actual design from the 30's.
Ducts are pervasive throughout the film. These symbolized both the
umbilical relationship of the people to their centralized government and
the loss of aesthetics in our cities.
When Sam fights with Jill to get her parcel off her (in the lingerie
dept.) his head gets pressed against a mirror. For a brief second before
the next shot, the film gets reversed (or flipped from left to right).
Spiro loses his French accent after the bomb goes off in the restaurant.
In the lift at Information retrieval, on two occasions there appears to be
an elderly woman standing behind the metal sliding door. The first is when
Sam goes to find "officer 5001", and the second when after seeing "officer
5001" he is slammed against a wall by an escaping "informee".
Gilliam tested more than a half-dozen actresses to play the part of Jill,
interviewing or testing Jamie Lee Curtis, Rebecca De Mornay, Rae Dawn
Chong, Joanna Pakula, Rosanna Arquette, Kelly McGillis, Ellen Barkin, and
he even considered Madonna. Gilliam's personal favorite was Ellen Barkin.
===========================================================================
12. Notable Quotes
Arresting Officer:
"This is your receipt for your husband...and this is my receipt
for your receipt."
Bill, Department of Works:
"Mistakes? We don't make mistakes."
Charlie, Department of Works:
"Bloody typical, they've gone back to metric without telling us."
Shirley:
"Salt?"
"Pepper?"
"Oh, it's...it's all right. I don't like you either."
Tuttle:
"...well, that's a pipe of a different color."
"Listen, this old system of yours could be on fire and I couldn't
even turn on the kitchen tap without filling out a 27b/6...Bloody
paperwork."
"My good friends call me Harry."
"Listen, kid, we're all in it together."
Kurtzmann:
"It's been confusion from the word go!"
Mrs. Buttle:
"What have you done with his body?"
Jack:
"Until this whole thing blows over, just stay away from me."
"It's not my fault that Tuttle's heart condition didn't appear on
Buttle's file!"
Sam:
"Yes...No...I don't know. I don't know what I want."
"Mr. Helpmann, I'm keen to get into Information Retrieval. Mr.
Helpmann, I'm dying to get at this woman... no, no, no."
"Yes, I always used to wonder if she wore falsies. False ears..."
"Sorry, I'm a bit of a stickler for paperwork. Where would we be
if we didn't follow the correct procedures?"
"I assure you, Mrs. Buttle, the Ministry is very scrupulous about
following up and eradicating any error. If you have any
complaints which you'd like to make, I'd be more than happy to
send you the appropriate forms."
Helpmann:
Helpmann uses a variety of sporting references, including:
"Bad sportsmanship. A ruthless minority of people seem to have
forgotten good old-fashioned virtues. They just can't stand
seeing the other fellow win. If these people would just play
the game..."
"We're fielding all their strokes, running a lot of them out,
and pretty consistently knocking them for six. I'd say they're
nearly out of the game."
"Jill? Yes...Sam I think I ought to tell you. I'm afraid she's
upped stumps and retired to the pavillion. Thrown in the towel."
"All I can say is don't fall at the last fence. The finishing
post's in sight. See you in the paddock...keep your eye on the
ball."
Warren:
"An empty desk is an efficient desk!"
Dr. Lewis Jaffe:
"Just me and my little knife! Snip snip -- slice slice... can you
believe it?"
"Faces are a doddle compared to tits and ass. No hairline."
Spoor:
"Where'd you get this from, eh? Out yer nostril?"
"All you've got to do is blow your nose and it's fixed, in't it?"
Lime:
"Computers are my forte!"
Jill:
"Care for a little necrophilia?. . .Hmmm?"
===========================================================================
Appendix: Who is <so-and-so>?
Behind the scenes:
Terry Gilliam: Director of _Brazil_, as well as the films Jabberwocky,
Time Bandits, The Adventures of Baron Munchausen, and The Fisher King.
Gilliam also is known for his animation work with Monty Python's
Flying Circus, including the opening segment of the film The Meaning of
Life, "The Crimson Permanent Assurance."
Tom Stoppard: co-scriptwriter of _Brazil_, well known for Rosencrantz and
Guildenstern are Dead, as well working on the screenplays of Billy Bathgate
and The Russia House.
Charles McKeown: co-scriptwriter and Lime, Lowry's annoying co-worker in
Information Retrieval. Responsible for many of the propaganda signs
throughout the film. Also co-wrote The Adventures of Baron Munchausen.
Arnon Milchan: producer of _Brazil_.
Sidney Sheinberg: president of Universal studios during production of
_Brazil_. Called for studio edits of not only _Brazil_, but Mask and
Legend.
Roger Pratt: Director of Photography. Also worked on The Fisher King and
Mona Lisa.
Julian Doyle: Editor
Michael Kamen: Composer of _Brazil's_ orchestral score. Also worked on
The Adventures of Baron Munchausen, Die Hard I & II, Lethal Weapon 1 2 & 3,
Polyester, Robin Hood: Prince of Thieves, The Wall, among many others.
Cast:
Sam Lowry: the main character, an anesthetized bureaucrat who works
for the Ministry of Information filing records. Later chases after
his dream girl, Jill Layton. Played by Jonathan Pryce, known for
his performances as Mr. Dark in Something Wicked This Way Comes and
in Glengarry Glen Ross, Jumpin' Jack Flash, The Ploughman's Lunch, and
the Broadway production of Miss Saigon, among many others.
Archibald "Harry" Tuttle: A renegade heating engineer who is sought after
by the Ministry of Information for "Freelance Subversion". Allies with
Sam after fixing Sam's heating system. Played by Robert Deniro, best known
for Raging Bull, The Deer Hunter, GoodFellas, Taxi Driver among many
others.
Ida Lowry: Sam's youth-obsessed mother, responsible for getting Sam's
promotion. Played by Katherine Helmond, who performed in Time Bandits,
and is best known for the TV series Soap and Who's the Boss.
Harvey Kurtzmann: Sam's nervous supervisor at the Department of Records.
Played by Ian Holm. Also in Time Bandits, Kafka, Naked Lunch,
Alien among many others.
Spoor & Dowser: Department of Works employees who end up trashing
Sam's flat and getting a "sticky end". Spoor is played by Bob Hoskins,
best known for Who Framed Roger Rabbit, Mona Lisa, A Prayer for the Dying.
Dowser is played by Derrick O'Connor, also in Jabberwocky, Lethal Weapon 2,
and The Missionary.
Jack Lint: Friend of Sam and Ministry of Information officer 412/L,
who interrogates Sam at the end of the film. Played by Michael Palin,
best known for his work with Monty Python. Also in Jabberwocky, A Fish
Called Wanda, and Time Bandits.
Warrenn: Head of Information Retrieval, played by Ian Richardson. Also in:
Cry Freedom, M. Butterfly, Rosencrantz and Guildenstern Are Dead, Whoops
Apocalypse among many others.
Helpmann: Deputy Prime Minister, offers Sam the promotion
to Information Retrieval. Played by Peter Vaughan. Also in Time Bandits,
The Missionary among many others.
Jill Layton: Sam's dream girl, and supposed terrorist. Played by Kim
Griest. Also in: Punchline, Throw Momma from the Train, Manhunter among
many others.
Dr. Jaffe: Ida Lowry's plastic surgeon, "the knife man." Played by
Jim Broadbent. Also in: The Crying Game, Enchanted April, among others.
Mrs. Terrain: Ida Lowry's friend, destroyed by her cosmetic surgery,
and mother of Shirley. Played by Barbara Hicks. Also in: Howard's End,
Petticoat Pirates among others.
Shirley: Mrs. Terrain's daughter, gets "set up" with Sam at Mrs. Lowry's
party. Played by Kathryn Pogson. Also in: The Company of Wolves.
Spiro: Maitre D' at the restaurant where Sam, Ida, Mrs. Terrain and
Shirley have lunch. Played by Bryan Pringle. Also in: 3 Men and a Little
Lady, Jabberwocky, Drowning by Numbers among others.
Mrs. Buttle: Wife of Mr. Buttle, Shoe Repair Operative, who makes
an agonized plea to Sam when he delivers her refund check for her
dead husband. Played by Sheila Reid. Also in: The Dresser and
Othello (1965).
T.V. Interviewer/Salesman: performed by John Flanagan. Also in: The Medusa
Touch, Arthur's Hallowed Ground.
Technician: Kills a beetle, which ends up killing Mr. Buttle. As well as
Jill Layton, for that matter. Played by Ray Cooper. Also in: The
Adventures of Baron Munchausen.
Mr. Buttle: Arrested early in the film, confused for Archibald Tuttle.
Accidentally killed during his interrogation. Played by Brian Miller.
Boy Buttle & Girl Buttle: Played by Simon Nash & Prudence Oliver.
Arresting Officer: arrests Mr. Buttle. Played by Simon Jones, best known
as Arthur Dent from the Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy, and Walter
Raleigh in Blackadder II. Also in Green Card.
Bill & Charlie: Department of Works employees, they attempt to plug the
hole in Mrs. Buttle's ceiling. Charlie is played by Nigel Planer,
formerly of the Young Ones, and Eat the Rich. Bill is played by Derek
Deadman, also in: National Lampoon's European Vacation, Robin Hood: Prince
of Thieves, among others.
M.O.I. Lobby Porter: Requires that Jill have the proper stamps on
her paperwork. Played by Gordon Kaye, of 'allo 'allo, and Jabberwocky.
Neighbor in Clerks pool: Tells Sam that Casablanca is on the tele.
Played by Tony Portacio.
Samurai Warrior: Played by Winston Dennis. Also in: The Adventures of
Baron Munchausen, The Commitments, and Nuns on the Run.
Telegram Girl: Sings Sam's invitation at the pitch of a dog whistle.
Played by Diana Martin.
Dr. Chapman: Cosmetic Surgeon, "the acid man." A midget. Played by Jack
Purvis. Also in: Time Bandits, The Adventures of Baron Munchausen, and
the Star Wars Trilogy.
Alison/Barbara Lint: Does not wear false ears. Played by Elizabeth
Spender.
Porter at Information Retrieval: Played by Antony Brown, also in Under
Siege.
Typist in Jack's Office: Transcribes interrogation sections. Played by
Myrtle Devenish. Also in: Tug of Love.
Holly: One of Jack Lint's triplets. Played by Holly Gilliam, Terry
Gilliam's daughter.
Basement Guard: Played by John Pierce Jones. Also in: The Wicked Lady.
Old Lady With Dog: Dog has an interesting bum. Played by Ann Way (the old
lady, that is), also in Haunted Honeymoon, Once Upon a Crime, and more.
Burning Trooper: Played by Terry Forrestal.
Black Maria Guards: Played by Don Henderson of The Adventures of Baron
Munchausen, Star Wars and more, and Howard Lew Lewis, of Chaplin and
Robin Hood: Prince of Thieves.
Interview Official: Played by Oscar Quitak.
Cell Guard: Played by Patrick Connor. Also in: Lifeforce,
Ragtime, among others.
Priest: Played by Roger Ashton-Griffiths. Also in King Ralph, Young
Sherlock Holmes, Dreamchild, among others.
===========================================================================
NOTES
Copious thanks to all involved in writing this thing, including:
Murray Chapman <muzzle@cs.uq.oz.au>
John Drukman <jdrukman%dlsun87@us.oracle.com>
Chuck Falzone <cjf49655@uxa.cso.uiuc.edu>
John Fletcher <jrf@psy.oxford.ac.uk>
Hyunsuk Seung <hseung@anat3d1.anatomy.upenn.edu>
and everyone else involved who I fergot...
I'm active in rec.arts.movies and alt.cult-movies, but my clunky old
newsrdr probably won't catch your post. Please E-mail all comments,
questions, corrections & suggestions directly to me at the address
eschat@solaria.mil.wi.us.
David S. Cowen (David Eschatfische) -----------------------------------------
2609cowend@vms.csd.mu.edu For personal correspondance and mailing lists.
eschat@solaria.mil.wi.us For requests and information about the BRAZIL FAQ.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------------