VideoDetective.com
The Adventures Of Baron Munchausen (1989)
Released By: Sony Pictures Home Entertainment   Rating: PG   In Theaters: N/A
Your video will start shortly...



More Videos:
Preview Details
User Reviews
Studio: Sony Pictures Home Entertainment
Genre: Action-Adventure
MPAA Rating: PG
Director: Terry Gilliam
Language: English
Official Website: N/A
Theatrical Release: N/A
Home Video Release: N/A
Cast: Eric Idle, John Neville, Oliver Reed, Robin Williams, Sting, Uma Thurman
Published ID: 1370
UPC: 043396769892, 043396162198, 043396191747,
Plot: Director Terry Gilliam adroitly applies his Monty Python sensibilities upon the career of famed German prevaricator Baron von Munchausen. Played herein by John Neville, the baron is seen quelling a war that he himself started, flying into the stratosphere on the back of a cannonball, ballooning to the moon, exploring the innards of a volcano, being swallowed by a whale....In short, all of Munchausen's fabulous lies are here presented as truth, played out in full view of nonplussed witnesses Eric Idle, Charles McKeown, Jack Purvis, and Sarah Polley. Fringe benefits include several loving medium shots of jaybird-naked Uma Thurman as Boticelli's Venus and an extended unbilled cameo by Robin Williams -- that is, by the head of Robin Williams -- as the King of the Moon. Filmed under considerable duress on a budget eventually exceeding 45 million dollars, The Adventures of Baron Munchausen never quite caught on with moviegoers, though it has enjoyed a lucrative afterlife on videocassette. ~ Hal Erickson, All Movie Guide
IDDateTimeTitleReviewHelpfulVotesTotalVotes
Baron Munchausen is a classic.
Added 2/9/2010

"The Adventures of Baron Munchausen" is a one-of-a-kind movie. It has incredible film quality, amazing actors, action, comedy, fantasy, all in one. It also has some of the most amazing film sets ever shot. Robin Williams is so funny as the "moon king", he almost steals the show, but not quite, since the movie is so good, he's just a piece of this creative, grand, delightful epic tale. It has a magic and a charm about it that is hard to quantify, and is right up there with Monty Python and The Holy Grail in my book, it's that good. Terry Gilliam hit it out of the park with Baron Munchausen, as his direction keeps it all together in a way only Gilliam could do. It's a grand adventure that has few equals in cinematic history, it has deservedly achieved cult status. The story is quite deep, so it takes a few viewings to truly get it, it stands up under repeated viewings and has aged quite well. The movie is a flawless, original, unique adventure that will leave you delighted and intrigued at the same time. Baron Munchausen is a major winner.
0 out of 0 people found this helpful.
Bit of a relic...
Added 1/9/2010

"Classic" in the sense that it's somewhat dated - it'd take a more thoughtful child to be entertained, as it has none of the glitz and glamour of current special effects...
0 out of 2 people found this helpful.
A crazy fictional experience
Added 10/9/2009

One of the craziest films ever made but enjoyable all the time. This is the only movie I've ever seen where Uma Thurman really looks terrific. A rather confusing plot that jogs along with pure entertainment. You'll like it.
0 out of 0 people found this helpful.
Imagination Triumphant!
Added 9/21/2009

A thrilling, lively Classical-era fanfare heralds the Columbia logo and signals high adventure and romance, as we open in "the late 18th Century", the "Age of Reason", on a "Wednesday." Already we know that we are in the universe of the man behind Brazil, Terry Gilliam as the expectation caused by the opening chords is quickly subverted by the grim wartime feeling of a starving city under siege by the Turks. Even death itself makes an early appearance, a black winged skeletal angel that will continue to show up throughout the film and which seems to presage an ominous and early end indeed for the characters we meet in the beginning. Young Sally is the daughter of a traveling actor (and head of his theatrical troupe) who plays the magical Baron Munchausen, a fabulous hero famed for his tall tales revolving around such feats as a trip to the moon and the theft of a sultan's treasure. The pathetic troupe puts on its poor mockery of theater in a disintegrating, cavernous building as the town's leader, the Right Ordinary Horatio Jackson (note that title), only to be upstaged by the "real" Baron (John Neville), a drunken and crazy old man - with a real and sharp sword - who proceeds to tell the story of how the town got into this mess....

Gilliam's film is the summation of all of his work as director up until this point, blending the childhood wonder of Time Bandits, the satire on bureaucracy and the feeling for the importance of imagination in the face of hopeless "rationality" of "Brazil", the broad humor of Monty Python and the references to Alice in Wonderland and medieval romance and tall tales of "Jabberwocky". Most of the film charts in a relatively linear way the adventures of the (real) Baron and Sally as they fly off in a balloon made of ladies' underwear in search of Munchausen's four fabulous servants - all of whom we have glimpsed in the opening scene, denying that they are anything but actors. Is the Baron crazy? Is the child Sally the only one who believes him, or in fact the only one who can experience his exploits, or save him from death? The film explores these and many other questions of storytelling and belief and the Baron grows more youthful with success, ages with failure -- as his friends seem at first not to recognize him, and then to be too old and feeble to help him. The baron himself loses faith at times, and only Sally is there to prop him up. At the end, a mind-boggling mixture of battles, triumph, death and funeral, resurrection and above all the Story of The Way It Should End all fuse into one of the most joyous and potent conclusions in film.

The director draws on a wonderful array of sources for this film, which is certainly postmodern in the lightest yet most serious and beautiful sense - there are nods to "Alice in Wonderland", "The Wizard of Oz", "Pinocchio", Renaissance painting, "Cyrano de Bergerac" and the 1940 "Thief of Bagdad" among countless others, but the film never seems derivative or obvious; always it is focused on the pure joy of the tale and the strength and power of myth-making in the face of the tedium and joylessness represented by the unscrupulous and ultimately murderous Jackson - played with vicious glee by Jonathan Pryce in an ironic reversal of his role in Gilliam's previous film, "Brazil".

The cast is uniformly fine -- some may be irritated by Sarah Polley's admittedly shrill Sally though it seemed an appropriate (and necessary) characterization to me -- with standouts being Pryce, Eric Idle as the fleet-footed but somewhat dimwitted Berthold, and John Neville as the Baron in one of the most unjustly slighted performances from a banner year for film. Giuseppe Rotunno's photography makes much more of an impact on the big screen for sure but it is certainly beautiful enough (particularly in the outdoors/sky sequences) even on the DVD; and Michael Kamen's score is one of my all-time favorites and possibly the best work in his film career. The dialog may strike some as odd, in its mixture of late-20th-century idioms (particularly when voiced by the King of the Moon, Robin Williams) and the more carefully "authentic" 200-year-old jargon of characters like Jackson -- but like most elements of the film, this is carefully designed to throw us off and keep our sense of what is real and not always in doubt.

This is a film I've seen over and over - it scored a big impression when I saw it new, alas not on very many people - and it grows greater with each re-watch. Gilliam really manages here to articulate a very profound statement about how we are losing out way, about how the bottom line and the "rational" way of winning a war - or making a film - may in fact be heartless, cold, and ultimately more dead than the Baron seems to be just before the triumphant finish of the film. As much as I love "Brazil, this is easily my favorite Terry Gilliam film, and in its failure ultimately a signal for a new and less potent (though still interesting) direction in his work. A triumph then, and a tragedy - the film is the career, the career is the film.

2 out of 2 people found this helpful.
Melissa's Review
Added 9/11/2009

This movie is full of excitement and action. I recommend this for anyone who likes the unusual.
1 out of 4 people found this helpful.
Baron Munchausen is a classic.
Added 2/9/2010

"The Adventures of Baron Munchausen" is a one-of-a-kind movie. It has incredible film quality, amazing actors, action, comedy, fantasy, all in one. It also has some of the most amazing film sets ever shot. Robin Williams is so funny as the "moon king", he almost steals the show, but not quite, since the movie is so good, he's just a piece of this creative, grand, delightful epic tale. It has a magic and a charm about it that is hard to quantify, and is right up there with Monty Python and The Holy Grail in my book, it's that good. Terry Gilliam hit it out of the park with Baron Munchausen, as his direction keeps it all together in a way only Gilliam could do. It's a grand adventure that has few equals in cinematic history, it has deservedly achieved cult status. The story is quite deep, so it takes a few viewings to truly get it, it stands up under repeated viewings and has aged quite well. The movie is a flawless, original, unique adventure that will leave you delighted and intrigued at the same time. Baron Munchausen is a major winner.
0 out of 0 people found this helpful.
Bit of a relic...
Added 1/9/2010

"Classic" in the sense that it's somewhat dated - it'd take a more thoughtful child to be entertained, as it has none of the glitz and glamour of current special effects...
0 out of 2 people found this helpful.
A crazy fictional experience
Added 10/9/2009

One of the craziest films ever made but enjoyable all the time. This is the only movie I've ever seen where Uma Thurman really looks terrific. A rather confusing plot that jogs along with pure entertainment. You'll like it.
0 out of 0 people found this helpful.
Photos


There are currently no photos.
Shopping
IDPriceImageUrlPurchaseUrlIdTypeBindingStore
DVD
$9.40 @ Amazon
DVD
$49.54 @ Amazon
VHS
$19.99 @ Amazon
Video On Demand
$9.99 @ Amazon
DVD
$12.49 @ Amazon
Blu-ray
$19.99 @ Amazon