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Saturday, December 05th, 2009 | Author: Administrator

Source: The Egyptian Theatre Los Angeles

December 6-13, 2009, Los Angeles! Visit the Imaginariums of Terry Gilliam starting December 6, 2009 at 7:30 with a Sneak Preview of The Imaginarium Of Doctor Parnassus at the historic Egyptian Theatre

Visionary director Terry Gilliam began his career as an animator. His unique body of work continues to be defined by an attention to aesthetic playfulness and experimentation, as well as a powerful awareness of the graphic potential of the image. His work first gained widespread acclaim while he was working as the only American-born member of Monty Python. It was with Python that he would evolve into a world-class feature-film director, starting with MONTY PYTHON AND THE HOLY GRAIL (1975, co-directed with Terry Jones). Gilliam went on to create a series of fantastic spectacles characterized by striking imagery, bold characterizations, and a strong mistrust of authority in films such as TIME BANDITS (1981), BRAZIL (1985), and TWELVE MONKEYS (1995), to name a few. Whether it’s conveying the inner state of a drug-addled but brilliant journalist (FEAR AND LOATHING IN LAS VEGAS, 1998) or the angst of a self-loathing shock jock (THE FISHER KING, 1991), Terry Gilliam is a master of using the visual to express the emotional – perhaps a residual effect of his eye for animation.

Join the Egyptian for a selection of Gilliam’s best-loved films, along with a sneak preview of his latest masterpiece, THE IMAGINARIUM OF DOCTOR PARNASSUS, Heath Ledger’s final film.

Sunday, December 6 – 7:30 PM

Sneak Preview! THE IMAGINARIUM OF DOCTOR PARNASSUS, 2009, Sony Pictures Classics, 122 min. Terry Gilliam reteams with his BROTHERS GRIMM star Heath Ledger for this, the actor’s final film. Christopher Plummer plays the film’s title character, the impresario behind a traveling theatrical company that offers its customers the chance to use a magical mirror to go beyond reality. When the devil, with whom Parnassus once struck a deal, comes around to collect, the company and an enigmatic outsider (played at alternate points by Ledger, Johnny Depp, Jude Law and Colin Farrell) join forces to save Parnassus’ daughter (Lily Cole).

Saturday, December 12 – 7:30 PM

Double Feature: BRAZIL, 1985, Universal, 142 min. Director Terry Gilliam’s groundbreaking science fiction satire is an anachronistic masterpiece. Winner of the Los Angeles Film Critics Award for Best Picture, Best Director and Best Screenplay (Gilliam, Charles McKeown and theatre legend Tom Stoppard). Inspired by George Orwell’s 1984 and Fritz Lang’s METROPOLIS, this darkest of comedies pits everyman Jonathan Pryce against a world of crushing conformity, pursuing elusive love, Kim Greist. Featuring fellow-Python Michael Palin as upwardly mobile Jack Lint and Robert De Niro as an outlaw heating engineer. Its jaw dropping retro-futuristic design helped give birth to the steam punk genre.

THE FISHER KING, 1991, Sony Repertory, 137 min. Jeff Bridges pulls out all the stops as a shattered shock jock trying to escape self-pity and remorse, and Robin Williams is the sanity-challenged homeless vagabond who helps him in director Terry Gilliam’s modern fable of love and redemption. Co-starring Mercedes Ruehl (who won an Academy Award as Best Supporting Actress), Amanda Plummer, and Harry Shearer.

Sunday, December 13 – 7:30 PM

Double Feature: TIME BANDITS, 1981, HandMade, 110 min. Dir. Terry Gilliam. When eleven-year old history buff Kevin discovers a time-and-space portal in his bedroom wall, a band of dwarves takes him on a series of rousing, funny, and scary quests, where they meet Robin Hood, Napoleon, and Agamemnon and search for “The Most Fabulous Object in the World.” As the Chicago Reader’s Dave Kehr pointed out at the time of its release, “All the hidden themes of the Disney films…are made brutally, and often hilariously, explicit. The film is resolutely, passionately antiadult, yet much of the humor has an adult sophistication and edge to it; this is one kids’ movie that doesn’t condescend.” [BR/DMX Digital Cinema Presentation]

THE ADVENTURES OF BARON MUNCHAUSEN, 1988, Sony Repertory, 126 min. Dir. Terry Gilliam. Terry Gilliam’s third fantasy film (following TIME BANDITS and BRAZIL) is yet another terrific children’s film that’s just as entertaining (if not more so) for adults. The title character (John Neville) sets off with a little girl (Sarah Polley) to save a city in trouble, stopping off along the way for encounters with Oliver Reed, Eric Idle, Jonathan Pryce and Robin Williams as the Moon King. “The worlds Gilliam has created here are like the ones he created in his animations for Monty Python — they have a majestic peculiarity. And you’re constantly amazed by the freshness and eccentricity of what is pushed in front of your eyes.” —Hal Hinson, Washington Post.

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6 Responses

  1. This is great. I envy all those lucky people in L.A. that are going to get to see all these films on the big screen once again. I’ve seen them all and I really can’t tell you which is my favorite. I love them all! Getting to see Parnassus at the Egyptian is a very special treat and I wish I could be there to see it. I can’t wait to see this film!

  2. Unfortunately Snowy, this was posted a little too late to still get tickets for The Imaginarium of Doctor Parnassus screening tomorrow :( (Maybe they’ll have a wait-list line). But I’ll bet I can still get tickets for Brazil on the 12th!! That will be so coool. I’ve never seen it on a big screen! :D

  3. Oh, we’d love something like this happening in a theater near us… how completely dreamy! :)
    ENJOY L.A.!

  4. I wish I had found this before. :(

  5. Seeing it in the Egyptian must have been really magical. I just saw it again and loved it, but the setting wasn’t as “in tune” with the themes of the film.

  1. Social comments and analytics for this post…

    This post was mentioned on Twitter by ParnassusPal: SNEAK PREVIEW OF IMAGINARIUM OF DR. PARNASSUS ON 12/6/09 at 7:30 PM Los Angeles http://tinyurl.com/yjprjw7...

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