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Baron Munchausen Rides Again
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15098 |
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Section : |
THE ARTS
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| Issue
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4 / 1989 |
2,186 Words |
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Lawrence O'' Toole Lawrence O'Toole writes for Entertainment Weekly and a number
of other national publications. |
When the screen opens upon Terry Gilliam's new extravaganza, The Adventures of Baron Munchausen, which, according to some reports, has cost as much as $75 million, the audience is confronted with a peaceful panorama of tents of Turkish forces laying siege to a nameless European city.
"The Late 18th Century," superimposed titles announce somewhat grandly.
Next, even grander: "The Age of Reason."
Then, "Wednesday."
Terry Gilliam knows that nothing validates reality as much as specificity.
Quickly the camera sallies forth to find rapid-fire images of death and destruction--falling bricks and structures, various explosions, fresh red wounds everywhere, bodies squashed like insects under thumbs, smoke and dust covering everything like a huge scrim. The Turks are using cannons whose mouths have gargoyles' features engraved around their openings, from which spew forth balls of fire. Back at the site of disaster and destruction, the camera swoops around in long, vertiginous takes as if it were the eye of God on a binge. And you realize that there's more filmmaking in the first five minutes of Baron Munchausen than there is in endless hours of most current movies.
Ages of Reason
As in most Ages of Reason, which of course each age assumes it is, the world has
... (1994 of 12870 Characters)
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