DVDfever.co.uk - Charts, News and Reviews of DVDs, Games, Hardware, Laserdiscs, Cinema Films & more

This Week's Highlights
Swing Out Sister
Ali Eskandarian
Prison Break Season4
Episodes 1 & 2
New music charts
coming shortly
New DVD comp
Star Wars:
The Clone Wars
Walter Becker
Jade Goody on GMTV
@ DVDfever Youtube

Last updated
Sept 08 2008

Xbox Gamertag:
DVDfever co uk

Cashback
Just £9.98!

Day of the Dead
(2008) Just £9.98!

DVD / Blu-ray

Doomsday
Just £9.98!

DVD / Blu-ray

Yes:
The Director's Cut
Just £12.98!


Why Donate?

News & Views
Discussion Forum
News Archive
Announcements
All About Us
Email Dom
Write 4 DVDfever
Competitions
Music Charts
Chart Archive
Cinema: Whats on
Cinema Reviews
Press Releases
TV Issues

DVD List
R1 DVD Reviews
R2 DVD Reviews
R3-6 DVD Reviews
CD Reviews
PS2 Reviews
PSP Reviews
Xbox Reviews
Xbox 360 Reviews
Gamecube Revs
GBA Reviews
PC Reviews
Hardware Revs
Concert Reviews
Video Reviews
Comedy Reviews
Book Reviews
Screenplay Reviews
Movie Downloads
Interviews
TV Shows
PSX Reviews
N64 Reviews
Dreamcast Revs
Laserdisc Revs
Short Stories
DVDs In Brief

Right To Reply
Why Widescreen?
DVD Links
Music Links
WS Video List
WS PAL LD List

Me and my
Aortic Valve!

The Dominator reviews

Twelve Monkeys Widescreen Box-Set

The Future Is History...

Distributed by
Polygram Video

    • Cert: 15
    • Running time: 124 minutes (film)
    • Year: 1995
    • Cat.no: 0544183
    • Released: 17th March 1997
    • Sound: Dolby Surround
    • Widescreen : 1.85:1
    • Price: £19.99
    • Extras : Documentary about the making of the film, "The Hamster Factor and Other Tales of the Twelve Monkeys" (88 mins)

    Director:

      Terry Gilliam (Brazil, Time Bandits)

    Producers:

      Charles Roven

    Screenplay:

      David Peoples and Janet Peoples (Unforgiven)

    Music:

      Paul Buckmaster

    Cast:

      Cole : Bruce Willis (Die Hard, Pulp Fiction, Last Boyscout)
      Dr. Kathryn Railly : Madeline Stowe (Blink, Bad Girls)
      Jeffrey : Brad Pitt (Seven, Sleepers, Kalifornia)
      Dr. Goines : Christopher Plummer (Dolores Clairborne, Return of the Pink Panther)


Twelve Monkeys stars Bruce Willis as Cole, a man living in the year 2035 as a member of the 1% of the population left on Earth, thanks to a mystery virus which swept the planet back in 1997 killing five billion people, leaving the survivors no choice but to abandon the surface leaving the animals to rule the world once again.

The film begins with Cole as a child at the airport hearing a gunshot and seeing a long-haired man keel over, closely followed by a blonde woman screaming and running over to help him. Then we're back to the present as Cole wakes up, his job as a 'volunteer' to take samples on the surface of the planet for analysis.

Events take Cole back in time to April 12th, 1990, where he becomes a mental patient at Baltimore County Hospital, the doctors, including Dr. Kathryn Railly, played by Madeline Stowe, not understanding his ramblings about the world and its impending doom, although one of his fellow 'inmates' Jeffrey, played brilliantly by a psychotic Brad Pitt seems to appear in full agreement with him. After another chain of events, Cole is thrust forward to 1996 where he comes across Dr. Railly and Jeffrey again, and sees it as his destiny to find out what killed the planet's populaion, and just what the mysterious Army of the 12 Monkeys have to do with all of this. Can he succeed? In a typical Hollywood film you might say yes, but with director Terry Gilliam at the helm, nothing is typical, or predictable.


This film has so much going for it, that there's no way it can fail as superb entertainment, keeping Bruce Willis in the actor's A-list, and as he proved in Quentin Tarantino's Pulp Fiction, he's an all-round actor who can apply himself to much more than a straight-forward action role.

Madeline Stowe serves adequately in the role as the good doctor, but Brad Pitt, in a role which earned him an Oscar nomination, is excellent as the psyched-out mental patient who helps Bruce Willis escape from the institution, only to be captured again...


Picture quality of the widescreen video is very good indeed, the 1.85:1 aspect ratio capturing all of Gilliam's inspired visuals, and the surround sound accompanies the bizarre script perfectly, drawing you into Cole's world and the madness that inhabits it.

Also accompanying this box-set is a second video, the making of the film, entitled "The Hamster Factor and Other Tales of the Twelve Monkeys", the hamster factor being that Gilliam likes to include a hamster in all the films he makes. For a penny under twenty quid, this makes a superb buy, especially when you consider that the closest equivalent is the NTSC Special Edition laserdisc (which also includes a commentary track and Dolby Digital sound) for a mere $129.95 !

Full marks to Polygram for this package. Buy it now, before the future is history...

Review copyright © Dominic Robinson, 1997.

[Up to the top of this page]

DVDs reviewed by the editor are watched on a Panasonic TXW32R4 32" widescreen TV connected to either a Creative Dxr2 DVD-ROM player or Microsoft Xbox and played through a Sony STR-DB930 amplifier.

PC games reviewed by the editor are on:

  • Since Nov 2005: Intel Pentium D 830 3.0Ghz, 1Gb RAM, 128Mb nVidia GeForce 6700XL, Windows XP
  • Since Aug 2003: Intel Pentium 4 2.66Ghz, 512Mb RAM, 128Mb GeForce4 MX440 graphics, Windows XP
  • Since May 2003: Intel Pentium 4 2.6Ghz, 512Mb RAM, 128Mb ATI Radeon 9600TX graphics, Windows XP
  • Since Jun 2002: Intel Pentium III 600Mhz, 384Mb RAM, Windows 98 SE, 64Mb ATI Radeon 8500LE
  • Since May 2000: Intel Pentium III 600Mhz, 384Mb RAM, Windows 98 SE, Voodoo 3 3000 AGP