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The Brothers Grimm

  • 2005
  • PG-13
  • 1h 58m
IMDb RATING
5.9/10
129K
YOUR RATING
POPULARITY
4,640
321
Matt Damon, Monica Bellucci, Heath Ledger, and Lena Headey in The Brothers Grimm (2005)
CT #1 Post
Play trailer2:32
1 Video
99+ Photos
Dark ComedyDark FantasyFairy TaleActionAdventureComedyFantasyHorrorMysteryThriller

Will and Jake Grimm are traveling con-artists who encounter a genuine fairy-tale curse which requires true courage instead of their usual bogus exorcisms.Will and Jake Grimm are traveling con-artists who encounter a genuine fairy-tale curse which requires true courage instead of their usual bogus exorcisms.Will and Jake Grimm are traveling con-artists who encounter a genuine fairy-tale curse which requires true courage instead of their usual bogus exorcisms.

  • Director
    • Terry Gilliam
  • Writer
    • Ehren Kruger
  • Stars
    • Matt Damon
    • Heath Ledger
    • Monica Bellucci
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    5.9/10
    129K
    YOUR RATING
    POPULARITY
    4,640
    321
    • Director
      • Terry Gilliam
    • Writer
      • Ehren Kruger
    • Stars
      • Matt Damon
      • Heath Ledger
      • Monica Bellucci
    • 519User reviews
    • 206Critic reviews
    • 51Metascore
  • See production info at IMDbPro
    • Awards
      • 4 wins & 5 nominations total

    Videos1

    The Brothers Grimm
    Trailer 2:32
    The Brothers Grimm

    Photos128

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    Top cast60

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    Matt Damon
    Matt Damon
    • Wilhelm Grimm
    Heath Ledger
    Heath Ledger
    • Jacob Grimm
    Monica Bellucci
    Monica Bellucci
    • Mirror Queen
    Petr Ratimec
    • Young Will
    Barbora Lukesová
    Barbora Lukesová
    • Mother Grimm
    • (as Barbara Lukesova)
    Anna Rust
    Anna Rust
    • Sister Grimm
    Jeremy Robson
    • Young Jacob
    Radim Kalvoda
    Radim Kalvoda
    • Gendarme
    Martin Hofmann
    Martin Hofmann
    • Gendarme
    Josef Pepa Nos
    • German War Veteran
    Harry Gilliam
    • Stable Boy
    Miroslav Táborský
    Miroslav Táborský
    • Old Miller
    Roger Ashton-Griffiths
    Roger Ashton-Griffiths
    • Mayor
    Marika Sarah Procházková
    Marika Sarah Procházková
    • Miller's Daughter
    • (as Marika Prochazkova)
    Mackenzie Crook
    Mackenzie Crook
    • Hidlick
    Richard Ridings
    Richard Ridings
    • Bunst
    Alena Jakobová
    Alena Jakobová
    • Red Hooded Girl
    • (as Alena Jakobova)
    Rudolf Pellar
    Rudolf Pellar
    • Watchman
    • Director
      • Terry Gilliam
    • Writer
      • Ehren Kruger
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews519

    5.9128.8K
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    Featured reviews

    4kylopod

    Does not do justice to its subject matter

    People have a curious tendency not to notice how bizarre and gruesome children's fairy tales often are. Terry Gilliam's "The Brothers Grimm" does notice. Unfortunately, that's just about its only insight into the subject. The film shows no understanding of what makes fairy tales memorable and exciting, or why they have endured through the ages.

    A much better handling of the subject is the 1962 film "The Wonderful World of the Brothers Grimm," which intersperses a realistic though nonfactual account of the brothers' lives with dramatic recreations of the tales they collected. I'm not saying that Gilliam had to do a retread of the same material. I would be very happy to see a remake with a radically new approach, as long as it respects the underlying subject matter. Gilliam's film does not. Its storyline is mostly a long string of fantasy and horror clichés that remind us far more of contemporary movies than of classic fairy tales. The Big Bad Wolf, for example, has been reduced to a standard-issue wolf-man (brought to life with digital effects that are just a tad too jerky to be excused in our age of high-tech movie-making).

    In this version, the brothers (Heath Ledger and Matt Damon, both inexplicably adopting English accents) are con artists who go from town to town posing as conjurers who can protect the local populace from evil spirits. A French general (Jonathan Pryce) catches on to what they're doing and forces them to work for him, on pain of death. But when they're sent to a new town, their old tricks prove useless against an age-old curse that really does haunt the woods.

    The movie belongs to the old genre where famous writers become characters in their own stories. It's a genre I've never much liked, maybe because it suggests a failure to comprehend the powers of human imagination. ("No one could have made up these stories; they must have really happened!") But I have enjoyed a few films of this kind, such as the 1979 movie "Time After Time," where H.G. Wells builds a time machine and travels to the 1970s in pursuit of Jack the Ripper. This type of story has to work hard to achieve the willing suspension of disbelief. "The Brothers Grimm" fails on that front because it changes its reality too often. In an early scene, we're shown an intense battle with an awesome-looking banshee. Then the whole battle is revealed to have been staged. And then, later on, we're asked to believe that magic really does exist in this world after all. These repeated shifts in the story's reality are profoundly disorienting.

    The source of disarray in the woods is an undead queen (Monica Bellucci) trying to regain her youth in an elaborate spell that will be completed once she sacrifices a series of children from the town. She resides in a tower in the woods, appearing as a skeleton on one side of a mirror and as a beautiful woman on the other. Her magical control over the woods serves as an excuse for numerous scenes of mysterious enchantment, most of which have a very tenuous connection to the central plot. The trees in the forest seem to have a life of their own, walking around when no one's looking. A mysterious creature lurks at the bottom of a well. The wolf-man is a servant of the mirror queen, using magic to ward off would-be visitors. But a coherent story never emerges from these elements. The screenplay seems to make up the rules as it goes along, inventing whatever is convenient at any given moment. Every now and then, some familiar quote is referenced--"Who is the fairest of them all?"; "What big eyes you have"; "You can't catch me, I'm the Gingerbread Man"--but always gratuitously. The movie's magical story is formless and convoluted, lacking any consistent narrative logic. It comes off as a series of elements arbitrarily glued together.

    As a result, the magical sequences lack payoff. We keep waiting for something wondrous to happen, then nothing does. In one sequence, for example, two children named Hans and Greta are making their way through the woods, leaving a trail of bread crumbs in their wake. We eagerly await the children's encounter with the gingerbread house run by the cannibalistic witch, or at least something of comparable interest. But just about the only thing that happens is a mysterious sequence involving a levitating shawl. Like many other sequences in the film, this one doesn't go anywhere and has only the faintest connection with the mirror queen story.

    No doubt there's an important theme at work in scenes like this. The movie is suggesting that the classic fairy tales are the result of accounts that have been embellished over time. But other writers have handled this theme much more effectively. Gregory Maguire's novel "Wicked," for example, turns "The Wizard of Oz" into a sophisticated adult fantasy with complex character motives and sly social satire. In that novel, there is a definite implication that we are being told the "real" story, and that the conventional version is the corruption. But the novel handles this conceit by expanding on the story, not degrading it. There's no point in creating a revisionist fairy tale if it's going to be less fleshed out than the original.
    6TheLittleSongbird

    Flawed, but well-performed fantasy-horror!

    Terry Gilliam's Brothers Grimm tells the story of the disappearances of several girls, and so enter the Brothers Grimm. Matt Damon and Heath Ledger are both excellent in the title roles, Ledger especially with a more sympathetic portrayal than expected. I liked Peter Stromare and Jonathan Pryce here too. The film is full of clever nods to their fairy tales. The production design is a wonder, with lavish sets and colourful costumes, and there is some evidence of some detailed direction, if a little too serious. However, I wasn't keen on Lena Headey's performance as the main female character, and the storyline is very daft, and sometimes in the middle half bordered on getting a bit too silly. The script was okay, but perhaps because of the story it was underdeveloped, and cheesy in some places, and it was further undermined by a rather anti-climatic conclusion, that left me a little confused. Still, not a bad film, not awful but not great either. It is well performed and well designed, but is let down by the story and script mainly. 6/10 Bethany Cox.
    9sschwa

    Do people read any more? A folk tale for adults.

    Like his Baron Munchhausen, Gilliam's Brothers Grimm has been horridly misunderstood by critics and public alike. What I get from the comments and reviews is the sense of thwarted expectations, although I have little idea what the anti-Grimms expected in the first place. People dislike the kitten scene because it's a cute kitten. This I find entirely in the grotesque spirit of the original folk tales. We've learned to take our fairy tales Disneyfied, apparently. I've also heard complaints about the quality of the special effects as sub-ILM quality. Frankly, that's what I liked about them. They *didn't* look like ILM; they looked personal. I admit I found the basic premise a cliché (two con men who make their living on the superstitious gullible find out that, in this case, the magic is real), but its working-out overcomes this basic flaw. This is a movie that shuns cliché. The brightest scenes, for example, almost always contain the greatest menace. Relative safety is drab, dirty, brutish, nasty, and short. Ledger gives an amazing performance -- I had previously regarded him as a Troy Donahue update. Matt Damon shows he has the chops to cross over from small "indies" to big performances in the old leading-man vein. Peter Stromare and Jonathan Pryce do a highbrow Martin & Lewis -- Stromare all over the place and Pryce coolly self-contained -- to hilarious effect. The faces alone in this movie are wonderful, hearkening back to the glory days of Leone. There are so many telling details in the background ("Bienvenue a Karlstadt") -- let alone the foreground -- that show Gilliam's mastery. Harry Potter (which I enjoyed), Lord of the Rings, and Chronicles of Narnia are for the kiddies and show us worlds we can, with effort, control. Gilliam doesn't offer any such comfort, not even at the end. The sense of menace is overwhelming, and Gilliam achieves it without super-special effects, usually camera movement (the shots following Little Red Riding Hood through the forest made my jaw drop). A brilliant film, operating at a high level we don't see much of these days. Someone compared the movie to Burton's Big Fish, another film dismissed or ignored by critics and public. Although Burton's and Gilliam's sensibilities differ, I take the writer's point. The confident, poetic handling of myth and archetype in both astonishes.
    BigHardcoreRed

    Definitely An Interesting Interpretation.

    The Brothers Grimm is a different movie than what I expected. It turned out to be similar to Big Fish in a way, but a little darker and with some awesome special effects.

    Will (Matt Damon) and Jacob Grimm (Heath Ledger) start off as shysters, bamboozling local town people by setting up elaborate and "supernatural" schemes and charging heavily to ward off monsters, witches or anything else.

    The story actually starts getting interesting when they run into an actual supernatural occurrence (or fairy tale). It seems that children have been vanishing in some "enchanted woods" and the French believe it is a scam similar to ones the Grimms have pulled.

    While fighting off beasts and such, The Brothers Grimm encounter people who obviously inspire stories such as Little Red Riding Hood, Jack & The Beanstalk, Snow White and others. Altogether, things fill out quite nicely. It never comes straight out and says that Grimm's Fairy Tales comes from these stories but it gives the audience enough credit to figure that out on it's own, even though it is quite obvious.

    Lena Headey deserves to be mentioned as the lovely Angelika. She plays a hardened and tough hunter/trapper who helps The Grimms and is also the love interest, which I guess is expected. Also, Monica Bellucci was a good addition as the "mirror queen".

    I enjoyed this movie quite a bit. Like I said, more than I thought I would have. The special effects were very nice. The trees move realistically like snakes. More believable than some of the giant snake movies I have seen, anyways. I can recommend this movie. If you like Tim Burton style of movies, then you should like this one as well. 8/10
    6moonspinner55

    Not "the fairest one of all", though with marvelous compensations...

    Squabbling brothers in France-occupied Germany circa 1811 have manufactured a heroic image for themselves as witch-hunters and tall-tale tellers, but when a decrepit witch in an enchanted forest begins stealing maidens for their youthful blood, the duo find themselves up against real evil for the first time. Terry Gilliam-directed fantasy has incredible production values, cinematography and scoring (not to mention two appealing lead performances by Matt Damon and Heath Ledger), yet it takes a good hour to get this picture off the ground. The narrative is heavy-going and, while not a hodgepodge, the film could certainly use a bit more heart rather than CGI effects. Gilliam's handling takes on a more robust, old-fashioned flavor in the second hour, and the movie improves tremendously as a result. The witch's palace (set atop a skyscraper tree) is dazzling, and the initial entrance into her raven-laden lair is deliciously giddy. Jonathan Pryce is well-cast as an evil general who attempts to torch the two men in an impressive forest fire, however the charm of the piece (and the glue holding the adventure together) lies with Damon and Ledger, and they are by turns wily, funny, strapping, childish, and heroic. **1/2 from ****

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    Storyline

    Edit

    Did you know

    Edit
    • Trivia
      Matt Damon and Heath Ledger were originally cast in opposite roles. They petitioned and switched their roles.
    • Goofs
      Different characters are heard humming the famous lullaby by Johannes Brahms, who published it in 1868, many years after 1811 when action is supposed to be happening.
    • Quotes

      Jacob Grimm: It's this way, Will!

      Will Grimm: No, no, it's not, it's not. It's that way! Grandmother Toad told me!

      Jacob Grimm: What?

      Will Grimm: [dead serious] Trust the toad!

    • Crazy credits
      After the credits, a howling wolf can be heard over the Dimension Films tiger logo stylized to look a bit like the MGM roaring lion.
    • Connections
      Featured in Today: Episode dated 8 August 2005 (2005)
    • Soundtracks
      Happy Ending
      Composed and Performed by Ladislav Horak, Frantisek Matijovsky, Ivo Mrazek,

      Josef Vondracek and Lubos Harazin

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    Details

    Edit
    • Release date
      • August 26, 2005 (United States)
    • Countries of origin
      • Czech Republic
      • United Kingdom
      • United States
    • Official sites
      • Official Facebook
      • Official site
    • Languages
      • English
      • French
      • German
      • Italian
    • Also known as
      • Los hermanos Grimm
    • Filming locations
      • Prague, Czech Republic
    • Production companies
      • Dimension Films
      • Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer (MGM)
      • Mosaic
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Box office

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    • Budget
      • $88,000,000 (estimated)
    • Gross US & Canada
      • $37,916,267
    • Opening weekend US & Canada
      • $15,093,000
      • Aug 28, 2005
    • Gross worldwide
      • $105,316,267
    See detailed box office info on IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      1 hour 58 minutes
    • Color
      • Color
    • Sound mix
      • DTS
      • Dolby Digital
      • SDDS
    • Aspect ratio
      • 1.85 : 1

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