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:
Screenplay:
David Peoples and Janet Peoples (Unforgiven )
Music:
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.
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