On the Big Board |
Position |
Staff |
In Brief |
58/60 |
Les Winan |
You have to think this wasn't the plan...but who knows what was. A total mess. |
102/166 |
David Mumpower |
As imaginative as one would expect of Terry Gilliam, but still a complete mess. Ledger and Damon do seem to be having fun, though, and that helps. |
When most people think of "fairy tales," sugarcoated stories and happy endings generally come to mind. What most people don't realize is that the real fairy tales from writers such as Hans Christian Andersen and the Grimm brothers are dark, often macabre morality tales, where the endings are gruesome as frequently as they are happy.
That is why it is so appropriate to put director Terry Gilliam at the helm of The Brothers Grimm, a story loosely based on the lives of Jacob Ludwig Carl Grimm and Wilhelm Carl Grimm. In the past, the former Monty Python troupe member put his twisted and offbeat touch on films such as The Fisher King, 12 Monkeys, Fear and Loathing in Las Vegas, and most famously, Brazil, so he seems a natural choice for what should be a most unusual project.
Based on a screenplay by Ehren Kruger (Arlington Road, The Ring), the movie will revolve around Jake (Heath Ledger) and Will Grimm (Matt Damon), brothers and well-known collectors of folklore. The pair has developed quite a reputation due to their ability to travel from village to village and rid each one of various enchanted creatures. It's actually all a sham, though, and their abilities and credibility are called into question when they are called to investigate a forest where girls are mysteriously disappearing. They uncover clues that lead them to a sorceress, and their adventures that follow will very closely mirror a number of the real life stories by the Grimms.
Two of the villains the brothers will face in their undertakings are Delatombe (Jonathan Pryce) and Cavaldi (Robin Williams). The inimitable Peter Stormare will also play a supporting role.
The planned budget for The Brothers Grimm, which will be filmed in the Czech Republic, is expected to be in excess of $75 million. As such, there should be plenty of eye candy and special effects, complemented with that dark touch that Gilliam does so well. Though the director's films are sometimes too off-center to appeal to a mainstream audience, the source material is so beloved that it may be one of his better opportunities to break out. (Kim Hollis/BOP)
September 29, 2003 Sexy Eurotart Monica Belluci has been added to the cast as an evil queen. Mmmmmmmm, naughty, naughty Monica in a white rubber Matrix dress. (Calvin Trager/BOP)
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