Will and Jake Grimm are travelling con-artists who encounter a genuine fairy-tale curse which requires genuine courage instead of their usual bogus exorcisms.
Two men who have made a career out of spinning remarkable stories find themselves bringing them to life in this inventive fantasy inspired by the creators of some of the world's best-loved fairy tales. Will Grimm (Matt Damon) and his brother Jake Grimm (Heath Ledger) earn their living by traveling from village to village and vanquishing strange supernatural beasts that have been menacing the populace. Or at least that's what their clients think has been happening; as it happens, Will and Jake are confidence men who cleverly stage the ghostly attacks and then take payment for making the creatures they fabricated go away. One day, the brothers arrive in a town and offer to help its people drive away evil spirits, unaware that the community is bordered by a genuine enchanted forest, and that young girls in the village have been disappearing at a frightful rate. The Grimm Brothers must now learn how to deal with real magic, with the help of the lovely but fearless Angelika (Lena Headey). Directed by Terry Gilliam, The Brothers Grimm also stars Monica Bellucci, Peter Stormare, and Jonathan Pryce. — Mark Deming
AMG Review:
Incoherent and dull, Terry Gilliam's The Brothers Grimm feels like it was edited by someone who was never given access to the shooting script. After an interesting setup that offers some very funny moments from Matt Damon, the film bogs down, losing track of the story and seeming like it has no interest in returning to it anytime in particular. This might be excusable if Gilliam's visual imagination could fill the gap, but the vast majority of the film seems to take place in the same dreary outdoor location, whose nooks and crannies become overly familiar to the viewer fairly quickly. Instead of bringing back fond memories of the best aspects of Time Bandits or The Adventures of Baron Munchausen, the miscalculation that is The Brothers Grimm recalls another infuriating film that ransacked the audience's collective memory of beloved characters, Stephen Sommers' atrocious Van Helsing. — Perry Seibert
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Petr Ratimec | Young Will |
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Barbora Lukesová | Mother Grimm |
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Anna Rust | Sister Grimm |
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Jeremy Robson | Young Jacob |
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Matt Damon | Wilhelm Grimm |
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Heath Ledger | Jacob Grimm |
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Radim Kalvoda | Gendarme |
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Martin Hofmann | Gendarme |
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Pepa Nos | German War Veteran |
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Harry Gilliam | Stable Boy |
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Miroslav Táborský | Old Miller |
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Roger Ashton-Griffiths | Mayor |
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Marika Sarah Procházková | Miller's Daughter |
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Mackenzie Crook | Hidlick |
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Richard Ridings | Bunst |
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Alena Jakobova | Red Hooded Girl |
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Rudolf Pellar | Watchman |
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Dana Dohnalova | Twin Sister |
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Petra Dohnalova | Twin Sister |
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Hanus Bor | Twins' Father |
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Ota Filip | Tavern Owner |
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Audrey Hamm | Traveler |
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Annika Murjahn | Traveler |
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Lukás Bech | Barman |
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Karel Kohlicek | Bald French Soldier |
| Director | Terry Gilliam |
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| Writer | Ehren Kruger | |
| Producer | Daniel Bobker, Mishka Cheyko, Jonathan Gordon, Chris McGurk, Jake Myers, Andrew Rona, Charles Roven, John D. Schofield, Michael Solinger, Bob Weinstein, Harvey Weinstein | |
| Musician | Dario Marianelli | |
| Photography | Newton Thomas Sigel | |
| Packaging | Keep Case |
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| Nr Discs | 1 |
| Screen Ratios | Anamorphic Widescreen (1.85:1) |
| Audio Tracks | ENGLISH: Dolby Digital 5.1 |
| Subtitles | English |
| Distributor | Buena Vista Home Entertainment |
| Layers | Single side, Single layer |
| Edition Release Date | Dec 20, 2005 |
| Regions | 1 |