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It turns out the scariest part of the dystopian future in Terry Gilliam's “Brazil” isn’t the bureaucratic capitalist police state it presents, but the lack of duct and tube management! Lowly government worker Sam Lowry dreams of a brighter future in his dead-end life when he encounters a woman named Jill, whom he keeps seeing in his dreams. Famously, the film does not take place in Brazil itself.
Not since “Friday the 13th: The Final Chapter” has a title been this misleading. This is: The BRACcast!
Your Cinematic Reviewers:
Trevor Gregory: Host, Producer
Ryan Wagner: Host, Editor
Aref Aboud: Host, Producer
Christian Starck: Host, Writer
Socials:
Gmail: [email protected]
YouTube: @TRAC_Cast
Instagram: @trac_cast
Letterboxd: TheTRACcast
By TRAC-CastIt turns out the scariest part of the dystopian future in Terry Gilliam's “Brazil” isn’t the bureaucratic capitalist police state it presents, but the lack of duct and tube management! Lowly government worker Sam Lowry dreams of a brighter future in his dead-end life when he encounters a woman named Jill, whom he keeps seeing in his dreams. Famously, the film does not take place in Brazil itself.
Not since “Friday the 13th: The Final Chapter” has a title been this misleading. This is: The BRACcast!
Your Cinematic Reviewers:
Trevor Gregory: Host, Producer
Ryan Wagner: Host, Editor
Aref Aboud: Host, Producer
Christian Starck: Host, Writer
Socials:
Gmail: [email protected]
YouTube: @TRAC_Cast
Instagram: @trac_cast
Letterboxd: TheTRACcast