Trailer for Gilliams TIDELAND

green

fear is the mind killer
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http://www.revolvergroup.com/tideland/trailers/tideland_trailer_large.mov

SYNOPSIS:
In the great tradition of child fantasy stories such as The Wizard of Oz and Alice and Wonderland, Terry Gilliam takes us on a wild adventure with his adaptation of Mitch Cullin's cult classic novel.

Welcome to the world of Jeliza-Rose, the young heroine and narrator of Tideland.

What has brought Jeliza-Rose from the big city to the prairies? And why is her former rockabilly guitarist father not talking to her anymore? And who is making all that noise in the attic?

Jeliza-Rose drifts from the harsh reality of her childhood and escapes into the fantasies of her own active imagination. This is a fantasy world to rival all others; here fireflies have names, bog-men awaken at dusk, monster sharks swim down railroad tracks, and disembodied Barbie heads share in her adventures.

Tideland is as optimistic as it is surreal, as humourous as it is suspenseful - a celebration of the power of a child's imagination.

website
http://www.tidelandthemovie.com/intro.html
 
poster

tideland.jpg
 
heh, I just watched Lost In La Mancha a couple nights ago and I can't believe Terry would get to direct another film.
 
I like Gilliam's work. But let's hope he does better with this than he did with the Brother's Grimm
 
http://www.aintitcool.com/node/30163

Harry gets blown away by Terry Gilliam's TIDELAND @ Fantastic Fest!!!
Every now and again at a festival you see a film that has a bad reputation – where you come out understanding the reputation, but TOTALLY DISAGREEING WITH IT. Where it so flipped in your mind what you thought going in… that you’ve just got to walk away from the festival and get to a quiet place – where the chatter and talk of a thousand excited film fans fades – and you’re left with your own internal monologue to explore at a keyboard.
Tonight, that took place at FANTASTIC FEST – and the film that absolutely blew my mind was TIDELAND from Terry Gilliam.

TIDELAND, for me, is a masterpiece. A children’s fairy tale version of THE FISHER KING. It is the world as seen through the eyes and experiences of an astonishingly talented and amazing young actress named Jodelle Ferland. You got a glimpse of her in SILENT HILL, but this was the film she made just prior to that at around the age of 10. She is astonishing… as is the world that she makes for herself after both of her aging musician drug addict parents OD – leaving her at an abandoned rundown house in the middle of nowhere, that was once owned by her Grandmother… where all she has to keep herself company are some doll heads and a precocious squirrel… till the lobotomized epileptic shows up and the one eyed ex-girlfriend of her father, who is an amateur taxidermist.

Her father, played by Jeff Bridges is genius as the living father, then as a corpse he’s amazing – and then… no, you shouldn’t have it spoilt. It’s just unbelievable. This feels like Gilliam untethered and unleashed. There’s scenes that you must endure, not because they’re clumsily written or acted or staged, but because we as an audience are not as innocent as a 10 year old girl or a lobotomized simpleton. There’s whole sequences of the film where Jodelle’s Jeliza-Rose is wandering the rolling fields of grain with these two doll heads on her fingertips – and all three of them talking to one another. Finding magical fairy lightning bug homes made from the burnt out remains of a school bus that some years before claimed the lives of many when it collided with a train.

The poster features an upside down tree – while not exactly an image from the film, the iconography is exactly reflected in the mentality of the fantasy at play here. It’s topsy turvy. It’s a little girl that can’t and won’t face reality, if she ever knew what reality was. Her two parents – Jeff Bridges and Jennifer Tilly have seemingly used her to prepare their fixes and cater to their disintegrating decaying existences – filling her mind with the stoned rantings of drug addled minds. The scene where Jeliza is preparing a hypo with smack… it’s astonishing because it’s so matter of fact, it’s almost cute… like how in an older film that was being edgy, it’d feature a child mixing a cocktail for mom or dad, here… it’s quite a bit more, yet all the same in tone. Horrifying, yet home-y.

Why is the film being waylaid by a vocal unit?

It isn’t for wide audiences. It isn’t watered down. This is Gilliam in STUNNING form. This isn’t churned out of a machine, it’s got blood, sweat and tears in it. The imagery is shocking, in your face and absolutely captivating. However, this isn’t a directly logical tale – it’s poetry, art -- One filmmaker that was present saw the film as a metaphor for becoming a woman, leaving the protective parental nest and empowering yourself through sexuality. OK – or it could be a tale about a 10 year old coping with having nobody to care for her, going into denial, creating her own death mythology and trying to survive without facing or encountering reality.

I was so incredibly blown away by this film. It’s the sort of film that’s images, subject matter and content can either repulse or captivate. Yoko completely did not care for it. Others “need to see it again” before deciding what they think. Then there are those like me that just absolutely had their minds blown.

It plays again tomorrow – seek it out – the film is an experience, something that very few films actually offer these days. It’s a film that challenges you, offends you and shakes up your perception of the world. And if you happen to know a little girl that ripped the heads off their Barbies – or if you were that girl – there’s a strong chance that this film will be a religious experience for you. If you kept your Barbies intact… maybe not so much.
 
Man, I hope this is the return of the Gilliam. Harry's blown away by a lot of crap, but I hope he's right about this one!
 
xwolverine2 said:
what else has this guy directed?



http://www.imdb.com/name/nm0000416/
Tideland (2005)
The Brothers Grimm (2005)
Fear and Loathing in Las Vegas (1998)
Monty Python & the Quest for the Holy Grail (1996) (VG)
Twelve Monkeys (1995)
The Fisher King (1991)
The Adventures of Baron Munchausen (1988)
Brazil (1985)
The Crimson Permanent Assurance (1983)
The Meaning of Life (1983) (segment "The Crimson Permanent Assurance")
... aka Monty Python's The Meaning of Life (UK: complete title)
Time Bandits (1981)
Jabberwocky (1977)
Monty Python and the Holy Grail (1975)
The Miracle of Flight (1974)
Storytime (1968)
 
SolidSnakeMGS said:
Man, I hope this is the return of the Gilliam. Harry's blown away by a lot of crap, but I hope he's right about this one!


I hope so too.
 
the brothers grimm??????????

ok.... i think ill skip this one.


maybe rental if i feel i cant find anything better to watch
 
xwolverine2 said:
the brothers grimm??????????

ok.... i think ill skip this one.


maybe rental if i feel i cant find anything better to watch


You judge directors by one film when they have several in their history that are masterpieces?...that's a shame.
 
This flick looks very Gilliam (meaning ****ed up :p)

Poster is amazing.
 
xwolverine2 said:
the brothers grimm??????????

ok.... i think ill skip this one.


maybe rental if i feel i cant find anything better to watch
Huh. I seriously suggest you to watch Monty Python and the Holy Grail, 12 Monkeys and Fear and Loathing in Las Vegas. They're all five star masterpieces.

Gilliam had lost his touch in The Brothers Grimm. Although I didn't think it was that bad.
 
green said:
You judge directors by one film when they have several in their history that are masterpieces?...that's a shame.

He is NOTORIOUS for that. He hates Scorsese for The Aviator, Casino, and a few other ones, despite the fact that he hasn't seen Taxi Driver, Goodfellas, Raging Bull, or any of what would be considered Scorsese's "top tier" movies. No movie fan would do something like that.
 
anyone here gonna give uwe boll another chance?

no?.........i thought so
 
xwolverine2 said:
anyone here gonna give uwe boll another chance?

no?.........i thought so
Comparing Uwe Boll and Terry Gilliam is one of the stupidest things I've ever read.
 
xwolverine2 said:
the brothers grimm??????????

ok.... i think ill skip this one.


maybe rental if i feel i cant find anything better to watch

Fool, Gilliam directed Brazil and 12 Monkeys, two of the greatest films ever made.
 
Gilliam is a fantastic director and visionary storyteller. I think Brothers Grimm, while not the greatest movie in the world, is underrated. 12 Monkeys is genius...and I haven't seen Brazil or Fear and Loathing in Las Vegas Yet yet so I can't comment on those. And of course there's the Monty Python movies directed by Gilliam and Terry Jones. Tideland looks promising.
 
SolidSnakeMGS said:
He is NOTORIOUS for that. He hates Scorsese for The Aviator, Casino, and a few other ones, despite the fact that he hasn't seen Taxi Driver, Goodfellas, Raging Bull, or any of what would be considered Scorsese's "top tier" movies. No movie fan would do something like that.


Oh, the movies I wouldnt have enjoyed and experienced having that kind of attitude.

Anyway, another positive review.

http://www.aintitcool.com/node/30166

Darla Hood here and exhausted from only the second day of Fantastic Fest. The thing is that I couldn't have chosen two films that could have been more opposed on the emotional spectrum. And even though it was exhausting, I adored both of these films forextremely different reasons and emotions.

The first film I saw today was Terry Gilliam's TIDELAND. I really dothink that it's best to go into this film knowing as little as possible about it. I know that sounds like a cop out, but it's not. I went in with absolutely no prior knowledge of it. I even watched BARON MUNCHAUSEN this morning to "get ready" for a fun Terry Gilliam
film. I mean, I knew that the story had a little girl in it, so I assumed that it would be a great kid story like TIME BANDITS and MUNCHAUSEN. I was kinda wrong about that.

I'll just say this, the main character, Jeliza-Rose, is an extremely resourceful little girl who has seen far too much for her age. It was completely gutting to me to watch this poor child go through all that she goes through. However, she wanders through these experiences as if barely touched by them. Afterwards, I wondered if this was realistic at all...the way she lives. I decided that everything flowed so well in this film that her life is set-up perfectly from the beginning in order to believe her story. This is quite impressive, considering her age and experiences.

The writing on this picture is so well done that even while I was cringing at times (a lot of times), a line of dialogue would zip by that was so surprising and smart I would find myself laughing. When I say that I was cringing, it was solely due to the painful experiences that this girl goes through. My issue is that when I get into a film, I really let myself feel what the character could feel. And even though she never feels bad about the cards she's dealt, I couldn't help but feel the reality of the situation. And man, was it painful.

The acting is fabulous throughout. It took me a few moment to even realize that Jennifer Tilly plays Jeliza-Rose's mother. She is brilliant in her brief part in the film. And I would say that Jodelle Ferland was an amazing find for Jeliza-Rose, but this little girl already has a long resume behind her for her age. She is fantastic in this film. I could actually go down the cast list and praise each member separately for their work in this film. Wonderful stuff here.

By the end of TIDELAND, I felt as if I had been on such an intense emotional roller coaster that I was truly in a daze. I could have stared straight ahead and wept for a good thirty minutes. Seriously. This film is intense. And with that, I should say that it's also not for everyone. But if you get into the story and don't mind difficult emotions, you'll love this film.
 
xwolverine2 said:
anyone here gonna give uwe boll another chance?

no?.........i thought so

Um, Boll has not once given us a reason to expect good films from him. Scorsese and Gilliam have directed some near masterpieces.

Terrible comparison from a terrible idiot.:down:whatever:
 
Rac said:
Huh. I seriously suggest you to watch Monty Python and the Holy Grail, 12 Monkeys and Fear and Loathing in Las Vegas. They're all five star masterpieces.

Gilliam had lost his touch in The Brothers Grimm. Although I didn't think it was that bad.

It wasn't bad, it just dragged a little, other then that I liked it.

Anywho, is new one has some pretty crazy ideas going for it, in particular, I want to see the shark on the rail road.
 
Ok so I have no respect for wolverinex anymore. Disgustingly ignorant.
 
xwolverine2 said:
anyone here gonna give uwe boll another chance?

no?.........i thought so

okay...you have no idea what you're talking about. terry gilliam and uwe boll don't even belong in the same sentence.
 

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