The Brothers Grimm cover art

The Brothers Grimm Details

2005 Certificate 12
  • Rated:
  • 60
  • from 42,873 members

Director Terry Gilliam, who brought his magical storytelling talents to such films as Time Bandits and The Adventures of Baron Munchausen, sets his sights on the Brothers Grimm, turning their life into a playfully grim fairy tale all its own. Set in early 18th Century French-occupied Germany, The Brothers Grimm stars Matt Damon .. Read more

Starring Matt Damon, Heath Ledger, Lena Headey, Julian Bleach
Director Terry Gilliam
Genres Action/Adventure, Comedy, Sci-Fi/Fantasy

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The Brothers Grimm

Director Terry Gilliam, who brought his magical storytelling talents to such films as Time Bandits and The Adventures of Baron Munchausen, sets his sights on the Brothers Grimm, turning their life into a playfully grim fairy tale all its own. Set in early 18th Century French-occupied Germany, The Brothers Grimm stars Matt Damon as Will Grimm and Heath Ledger as Jake Grimm, siblings who travel the countryside as snake-oil salesmen, convincing unsuspecting towns that they are haunted and agreeing to get rid of the demons for a price. In the meantime, they set their tales down in writing, creating a wealth of oddball, offbeat, and frightening characters. But after they are caught by General Delatombe (Jonathan Pryce) and his sidekick, Cavaldi (Peter Stormare), they are sent to the tiny village of Marbaden to solve the mysterious disappearance of a number of young girls, placing them in the middle of a fantasy world unlike any they'd ever invented. They enlist the help of a peasant woman, Angelika (Lena Headey), and they set off for the evil forest to save the lives of the girls and themselves.

Starring Matt Damon, Heath Ledger, Lena Headey, Julian Bleach, Bruce McEwan, Peter Stormare, Monica Bellucci, Jonathan Pryce, Roger Ashton-Griffiths, Mackenzie Crook, Richard Ridings
Director Terry Gilliam
Studio WALT DISNEY STUDIOS HOME ENTERTAINMENT
Run time DVD: 1 hr 54 mins
Blu-ray: 1 hr 54 mins
Certificate Certificate 12
Genres Action/Adventure, Comedy, Sci-Fi/Fantasy
Language DVD: English
Blu-ray: English
Dubbed Italian
Hearing-impaired English
Subtitles DVD: English, Italian
Released DVD: 13 Mar 2006
Blu-ray: 12 Nov 2007
Production year: 2005
Format DVD
  • Critics' reviews (4) of The Brothers Grimm

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  • With dazzling, inspired imagery of the grotesque-caricature, lyrical-fairy-tale, and harrowing-nightmare variety, sometimes all at once.

    • Premiere
  • Its not magic, Will admits of his brother Jakes flashy armour. Its just shiny. The Brothers... read more on Time Out

    • Time Out
  • Most helpful member's review of The Brothers Grimm

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  • 31 out of 34 people found this review helpful

    Rated - 2 stars

    Disappointing

    I was really looking forward to seeing this film, it had a lot of promise, unfortunately however I found the result really quite disappointing. Don't get me wrong though there are elements to this film that are good - the cast are great, Gilliam's visions are as vivid as ever and in places it is both amusing and scary. Unfortunately the film as a whole just does not work. I found it incredibly boring in places, so much so, the only way that I really made it through the film completely was by dividing it into half hour chunks were I would turn off the DVD player and go and do something else for a while. It was truly difficult...although I'm not entirely sure why as the plot is straightforward and there is plenty of CGI to keep you amused. Possibly it was overlong, possibly it was underdeveloped, I'm not sure....but what I am sure of is that I won't be watching it again to try and work it out! Not one to avoid - but don't choose it unless you've got absolutely nothing better to watch.

    • Gromit
      • Gromit from Canterbury
  • Most recent members' review of The Brothers Grimm

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  • 1 out of 1 person found this review helpful

    Rated - 3 stars [Highly rated reviewer]

    brothers grimm

    Terry Gilliam’s always had something of a Grimm sensibility — his early movies had a grimy, cruelly comical fairy-tale feel, something that’s infected much of his work ever since. So the pairing of Gilliam with the titular story-weaving siblings should have formed the perfect match for the director’s long-awaited return to the big screen.

    Gilliam die-hards may be pleased to hear that that this fanciful fictionalisation of the Grimms’ early years couldn’t have been made by anyone else — it’s as ‘Gilliam’ a movie as Sleepy Hollow was a ‘Burton’. But, with its deliberately filth-slathered historical setting, its overly mannered comedy performances and its regular bursts of violent slapstick, this feels more like Gilliam circa 1980 than 2005; replace Heath Ledger and Matt Damon with Michael Palin and Eric Idle, switch the (frankly dire) CG with budget-defying physical effects and you have the movie he never made between Jabberwocky and Time Bandits.

    It’s a fitfully entertaining affair. Ledger and Damon prove a great double act, their banter and bicker-work eliciting most of the laughs, Damon’s Will being the dashing braggard, Ledger’s Jake the awkward romantic. But every chuckle dies once Peter Stormare’s faux-Italian goon Cavaldi blunders into frame, spitting every line with such elaborate gesticulation that you wonder why Gilliam didn’t point out that this is a film, not a panto, even if it does refer to magic beans and eldritch mirrors.

    Such references are, thankfully, neatly inserted, the idea being that Jake and Will were inspired to write their tales based on these ‘real’ events. Less neat, though, is this tale’s structure, which forever hops in and out of the dark, enchanted forest where Monica Bellucci’s undead queen has been abducting children, to such a degree that any suspense gradually evaporates.

    Yet despite its flaws The Brothers Grimm is no disaster. With slyly anachronistic references to special effects and budgets, scripter Ehren Kruger takes satirical swipes at Hollywood. And Gilliam has a ball when it comes to the more horrific scenes — among those sure to haunt you are one involving a child-swallowing horse that spews spider-web from its mouth, and another in which a portly mud-monster steals a kiddie’s face. You just can’t help wishing that the whole movie was as effective as its better moments...

    Gilliam at his best and his worst. His unleashed imagination yields some astounding results, but a lack of structural discipline and Stormare’s risible Cavaldi mean this is nothing more than an entertaining mess.

    • nated23
      • nated23 from Birmingham
  • News and features

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    Vertigo

    The Imaginarium of Terry Gilliam

    • 13 Oct 2009

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Rating breakdown

42,873 Member ratings
  • 100
1,544
  • 90
2,018
  • 80
4,462
  • 70
6,092
  • 60
9,032
  • 50
6,378
  • 40
5,462
  • 30
3,608
  • 20
2,816
  • 10
1,461

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