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Monty Python's Life Of Brian - The Immaculate Edition [Blu-ray]

Monty Python's Life Of Brian - The Immaculate Edition [Blu-ray]
Director: Terry Jones
Actors: Terence Bayler, Carol Cleveland, Kenneth Colley, Susan Jones, Chris Langham
Studio: Sony Pictures

List Price: $28.95
Buy New: $14.99
You Save: $13.96 (48%)



New (29) Used (9) Collectible (1) from $14.99

Rating: 4.0 out of 5 stars 6 reviews
Sales Rank: 5918

Format: Anamorphic, Color, Dolby, Subtitled, Widescreen
Languages: English (Original Language), Latin (Original Language), Arabic (Subtitled), Chinese (Subtitled), Croatian (Subtitled), Czech (Subtitled), Danish (Subtitled), Dutch (Subtitled), English (Subtitled), Greek (Subtitled), Hebrew (Subtitled), Hungarian (Subtitled), Korean (Subtitled), Norwegian (Subtitled), Polish (Subtitled), Portuguese (Subtitled), Spanish (Subtitled), Swedish (Subtitled), French (Dubbed), Hungarian (Dubbed)
Rating: R (Restricted)
Media: Blu-ray
Region: 0
Aspect Ratio: 1.85:1
Number Of Items: 1
Running Time: 93 Minutes
Shipping Weight (lbs): 1
Dimensions (in): 6.7 x 5.3 x 0.5

MPN: 22594
UPC: 043396225947
EAN: 0043396225947
ASIN: B000VECAC6

Theatrical Release Date: August 17, 1979
Release Date: January 29, 2008
Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days
Shipping: Expedited shipping available
Shipping: International shipping available
Condition: BRAND NEW, Factory Sealed items direct from the Studios. 30 Day Satisfaction Guarantee. Quick International Airmail!

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  • The Monty Python Box Set (Monty Python & The Holy Grail/ And Now For Something Completly Different/ The Adventures of Baron Munchausen)

Editorial Reviews:

Amazon.com essential video
"Blessed are the cheesemakers," a wise man once said. Or maybe not. But the point is Monty Python's Life of Brian is a religious satire that does not target specific religions or religious leaders (like, say, Jesus of Nazareth). Instead, it pokes fun at the mindless and fanatical among their followers--it's an attack on religious zealotry and hypocrisy--things that that fellow from Nazareth didn't particularly care for either. Nevertheless, at the time of its release in 1979, those who hadn't seen it considered it to be quite "controversial." Life of Brian, you see, is about a chap named Brian (Graham Chapman) born December 25 in a hovel not far from a soon-to-be-famous Bethlehem manger. Brian is mistaken for the messiah and therefore manipulated, abused, and exploited by various religious and political factions. And it's really, really funny. Particularly memorable bits include the brassy Shirley Bassey/James Bond-like title song; the bitter rivalry between the anti-Roman resistance groups, the Judean People's Front and the People's Front of Judea; Michael Palin's turn as a lisping, risible Pontius Pilate; Brian urging a throng of false-idol worshippers to think for themselves--to which they reply en masse "Yes, we must think for ourselves!"; the fact that everything Brian does, including losing his sandal in an attempt to flee these wackos, is interpreted as "a sign." Life of Brian is not only one of Monty Python's funniest achievements, it's also the group's sharpest and smartest sustained satire. Blessed are the Pythons. --Jim Emerson

Amazon.com
"Blessed are the cheesemakers," a wise man once said. Or maybe not. But the point is Monty Python's Life of Brian is a religious satire that does not target specific religions or religious leaders (like, say, Jesus of Nazareth). Instead, it pokes fun at the mindless and fanatical among their followers--it's an attack on religious zealotry and hypocrisy--things that that fellow from Nazareth didn't particularly care for either. Nevertheless, at the time of its release in 1979, those who hadn't seen it considered it to be quite "controversial." Life of Brian, you see, is about a chap named Brian (Graham Chapman) born December 25 in a hovel not far from a soon-to-be-famous Bethlehem manger. Brian is mistaken for the messiah and therefore manipulated, abused, and exploited by various religious and political factions. And it's really, really funny. Particularly memorable bits include the brassy Shirley Bassey/James Bond-like title song; the bitter rivalry between the anti-Roman resistance groups, the Judean People's Front and the People's Front of Judea; Michael Palin's turn as a lisping, risible Pontius Pilate; Brian urging a throng of false-idol worshippers to think for themselves--to which they reply en masse "Yes, we must think for ourselves!"; the fact that everything Brian does, including losing his sandal in an attempt to flee these wackos, is interpreted as "a sign." Life of Brian is not only one of Monty Python's funniest achievements, it's also the group's sharpest and smartest sustained satire. Blessed are the Pythons. --Jim Emerso

Product Description
On a Midnight Clear 2000 years ago three wise men enter a manger where a babe is wrapped in swaddling clothes. It is an infant called Brian...and the three wise men are in the wrong manger. For the rest of his life Brian (Graham Chapman) finds himself regarded as something of a Messiah yet he's always in the shadow of this Other Guy from Galilee. Brian is witness to the Sermon of the Mount but his seat is in such a bad location that he can't hear any of it ("Blessed are the cheesemakers?"). Ultimately he is brought before Pontius Pilate and sentenced to crucifixion which takes place at that crowded non-exclusive execution site a few blocks shy of Calvary. Rather than utter the Last Six Words Brian leads his fellow crucifixees in a spirited rendition of a British music hall cheer-up song "Always Look On The Bright Side of Life." The whole Monty Python gang (Chapman John Cleese Michael Palin Eric Idle and Terry Gilliam) are on hand in multiple roles playing such sacred characters as Stan Called Loretta Deadly Dirk Casts the First Stone and Intensely Dull Youth; also showing up are Goon Show veteran Spike Milligan and a Liverpool musician named George Harrison.System Requirements:Run Time: 94 Mins. Genre: COMEDY Rating: R UPC: 043396225947 Manufacturer No: 22594


Customer Reviews:   Read 1 more reviews...

5 out of 5 stars Sad and troubling story of a sadistic Southern bigot   October 18, 2001
Linda Linguvic (New York City)
9 out of 9 found this review helpful

Produced in 1991, and based on the novel by Peter Dexter, this film which was produced for theaters but wound up on HBO, stars Dennis Hopper as a sadistic Southern bigot in the late 1940s. Not only does he cruelly abuse his wife in a most humiliating way, he goes to the home of a poor black family to collect a debt and viciously shoots a woman several times and murders her 12-year old daughter. His lawyer, played by Ed Harris, defends him at his trial but gradually becomes disgusted with his client and befriends and then romances Hopper's wife, played by Barbara Hershey. Only tragedy can result from this; it is just a matter of how and when.

All performances are excellent, especially that of Hopper, who again plays the perfect villain. He's deranged and sinister, far beyond even the tolerated racism of the time, and his cruelty knows no bounds. His performance sent chills down my spine, as I stayed glued to the small screen holding my breath as the story unfolded. Darnita Henry played the role of the young girl with a combination of terror and innocence that endeared her to my heart. I identified with her and mourned her death with a sense of revulsion at the casual way in which Dennis Hopper perceives it. Tina Lifford, the young girl's mother who survives the attack, gives a fine performance as she testifies in court with a quiet dignity. The audience knows the truth and then sees the horror of the twisted justice meted out at that time. This film is sad, without a shred of humor or hope. It is not a pleasant experience and left me upset and troubled. But yet I recommend it to those not afraid of the emotional catharsis. Just be forewarned.


5 out of 5 stars A hidden, crude, poignant and remarkable work!   July 26, 2005
Hiram Gomez Pardo (Valencia, Venezuela)
4 out of 4 found this review helpful

First at all: you may argue the racism in movies have reached the saturation point, and may be you decide to pass down this offer. But let me tell you that this criterion may shadow the possibility to watch one of the most potent and admirable performances in years of an enviable cast.
Consider the Dennis Hopper's performance. I think Dennis has made through his career, six outstanding portraits: Hoosiers,The American friend,Blue Velvet, Black widow, True Romance and this one. Second argument Ed Harris as the implacable investigator is superb too. Third: Barbara Hershey makes a penetrating and brilliant acting as the sensitive wife of Hopper.
Finally,the script by itself: we have a crude and terrible drama in the forties: Hopper plays a role of a convinced racist (and facist too, if you want)who considers the brutal murder means less tha nothing. His out of mind actions are so enrooted in the most stinking beliefs and prejuices.
The sequence of the crime is plenty of high caliber realism and dramatic intensity that makes us to remind Parker's Mississippi burning, but the best is yet to come when the fury, rage and sick obsession becomes gradually in a true state mind, deeply neurotic and obsesive. His familiar relationship is just sinking; his progresive process isolation is told with superb handle camera.
I recommend this work due its undeniable virtues. Tension, hard to follow story due the merciless argument but plenty of good sequences.







1 out of 5 stars Gyllenhaal with a hook in his mouth   August 21, 2000
1 out of 10 found this review helpful

I partially blame Stephen Gyllenhaal for ending Debra Winger's film career. He mis-directed her in A Dangerous Woman, and after Billy Crystal tied a pigeon to her head in Forget Paris, she didn't have a chance. (Jessica Lange was great enough to survive her encounter with Gyllenhaal in Losing Isaiah). Perhaps he is only capable of supporting lesser actors like Barbara Hershey, who he has used a number of times. (Their Killing in a Small Town for TV is probably their best collaboration). Here Hershey is the narrator of the story of the trial of her husband Dennis Hopper for shooting a little black girl. Hopper's character is so mean that he can wear a buttoned-up stiff white-collared shirt in the humid South. His appearance recalls Robert Mitchum's homicidal preacher from Night of the Hunter, and his haircut screams psychotic. Since we are presented with the truth of the killing at the start, and because we are in the South and the victim is black, we know that the verdict is inconsequential. The all white jury tips you off too. Gyllenhaal even gives the courtroom audience hand-held fans which flap like insect wings and upstage the trial scenes. He seems more interested in the sado-masochistic relationship between husband and wife. Granted these scenes give some life to the otherwise sluggish pacing, and they also feature an odd fetish for glass. Glass is broken, a bottle is used to rape Hershey, and Hopper covers his bedroom floor with panes to ensure his wife does not enter. This kind of detail also carries over to Hopper's invalided mother, whom he watches being bathed in the opening scene, but who's condition is never given any payoff. The only thing remarkeable about the whole film is the formal dialogue, and the fact that people in the South tend to resist being shot. Hopper might have triumphed in his role with a better director. It seems as if he is ready to rage but hasn't been given the opportunity, since Gyllenhaal cuts away from him. Ed Harris initially brings some tenderness to his role as Hopper's lawyer, but the brutality of his sex with Hershey only reminds us of her bottle encounter. We are told that the oldest lesson of the South is: it is easier to bury than forget. Since this film was intended as a feature but then shown on TV, it seems the opposite is true for Gyllenhaal.


2 out of 5 stars a real downer   April 15, 2002
1 out of 8 found this review helpful

In case you missed the last 100 movies out of Hollywood on racism in the south---here's another one. Although it does remind us of the sickness history has taught us about,especially around the period the movie is set in(circa 1949),it is too shocking brutal and unforgiving to offer any hope,let along enjoyment.Dennis Hopper's performance is fantastic!He is sadistic and paranoid and eventually pathetic.Hersey and Harris are excellent as they almost always are.The problem lies with the pattness of the movie.It's the familiar plot taken a little(or a lot)further for the shock value.I don't think I like this director and the screenplay might have been done by one of those slasher/gore types.The two stars are for the performances and that's about it.


5 out of 5 stars CLASSIC!   September 4, 2008
Jeff Fielder (Lee's Summit, MO United States)
OK, so it's no Holy Grail, but if you're a fan (or even a partial fan) of Monty Python, this is pure pleasure. If for nothing else but the final song, Always Look on the Bright Side of Life. Not for the easily offended, as Monty Python take shots at every Christian tenet they can. Absolutely hilarious, in a totally blasphemous and disgusting way.


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