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1* AcclaimedFlop: The film flopped in the United States, partially due to all the drama surrounding its release by Universal. However, the film was a huge hit in Europe (where it was instead released by 20th Century Fox) and made a profit from international sales.
2* ActorInspiredElement:
3** The toolbelt worn by Tuttle and all of its gadgets were supplied by Creator/RobertDeNiro himself.
4** The script had a scene where Jack extols the need for destroying the terrorists to Sam while they're at Information Retrieval offices. At Creator/MichaelPalin's suggestion the scene was changed to the Lint family home where he was playing with his children, driving home his status as FamilyValuesVillain.
5* CastTheRunnerUp: Creator/RobertDeNiro wanted to play the role of Jack, but Creator/TerryGilliam had already promised this to Creator/MichaelPalin. [=De Niro=] still wanted to be in the movie, so he was cast as Tuttle instead.
6* DoingItForTheArt: Creator/RobertDeNiro originally went uncredited, despite playing a major character, because he was under contract elsewhere. He took a role that he had not applied for and did it for free because he really wanted to be in the film.
7* ExecutiveMeddling: Oh, where do we begin? To be frank, the film probably stands out as one of the most contentious and publicly played-out instances of Executive Meddling ''ever''. Universal's COO, Sid Sheinberg, tried to hack the film down from its original run time of 142 minutes to 97. He also wanted to replace Michael Kamen's orchestral score with contemporary rock music hits so it would "attract the teens", spin its tone from a sci-fi epic into a love story, and lastly, to use a dream sequence scene filmed for earlier in the film literally to turn its bleak last scenes into an cuddly, romantic happy ending. Creator/TerryGilliam fought back-and-forth with Sheinberg, who was holding him to a clause on the length of the film, but even after the director edited 10 minutes from the film to fall under his contract's agreed-upon running time, Sheinberg continued to fight Gilliam on the film's Orwellian-like content. Gilliam then set up clandestine screenings for students & critics, which began to drum up buzz for the film. Film critics in both New York and L.A. began putting it on their top 10 lists -- without the film having yet been officially released. Finally, frustrated, Gilliam bought [[http://img.gawkerassets.com/img/18lpen71y9yhwjpg/ku-medium.jpg a full-page ad]] in ''Variety'' asking Sheinberg, "When are you going to release my film, ''Brazil''?" Gilliam eventually secured a theatrical release of his 132-minute cut. Sheinberg worked with outside editors to create his shorter cut (dubbed the 'Love Conquers All' version) which was also released theatrically, to massive indifference. Gilliam's original 142-minute cut was eventually released by Criterion on home video, side-by-side with the shorter 'Love Conquers All' cut, which actually still occasionally crops up on television in syndication.
8** Gilliam was able to compromise with Sheinberg on three things: to shorten the film by 10 minutes, to include the title song over the opening scene (so audiences would understand the relevance of the title), and to have the end titles superimposed over clouds. None of these changes are apparent in the European version or the Director's Cut.
9** ''Brazil'' was considered one of the more prominent examples of ExecutiveMeddling in recent years so much that a ''whole book'', ''The Battle of Brazil'', was written by L.A. Times' film critic Jack Matthews on how much Sheinberg & Universal screwed Terry Gilliam over. A documentary based on the book, hosted by Matthews, appears on Criterion's home video releases.
10** Matthews has argued that the "Love Conquers All" version was only released because Gilliam refused to shave a third of the film's running time to fit a two-hour time slot for TV, and that version conveniently ran in the allotted time slot.
11* FocusGroupEnding: The omission of the original ending, in which Lowry's escape was revealed to be a delusion after he broke under torture.
12* HalfRememberedHomage: Though ''Brazil'' was closely influenced by ''Literature/NineteenEightyFour'' (to the extent where three of its {{working title}}s are riffs on it), Creator/TerryGilliam admitted that he hadn't actually read the novel at the time and simply incorporated what he knew from hearsay.
13* RealLifeRelative: Jack's daughter Holly is played by Creator/TerryGilliam's daughter.
14* SparedByTheCut: The scenes where [[spoiler:Jill turns out to have survived being shot by the cops and Tuttle is seemingly fatally engulfed by a bunch of sentient newspapers]] are part of a dream sequence in the final cut but are real in the "Love Conquers All" alternate ending.
15* StarMakingRole: The first notable role by Creator/JonathanPryce, who you likely know from ''Film/TomorrowNeverDies'', ''Series/GameOfThrones'', or ''Franchise/PiratesOfTheCaribbean''.
16* StuntCasting: Despite prominent billing, Creator/RobertDeNiro and Creator/BobHoskins are hardly in the film.
17* TroubledProduction: The film was subject to such severe ExecutiveMeddling that it inspired a book, ''The Battle of Brazil'', and Gilliam felt obliged to place a full-page ad in Variety begging producer Sid Sheinberg to reverse the changes he had made and release the film as originally intended.
18* WagTheDirector: Creator/TerryGilliam and his crew were excited to have Creator/RobertDeNiro on board at first, but as time wore on they found De Niro's need for "research" and obsession with details increasingly irritating, saying that he "wanted to strangle him".
19* WhatCouldHaveBeen:
20** In early drafts, Jack Lint was actually the hero.
21** Creator/TerryGilliam tested more than half a dozen actresses to play the part of Jill, interviewing or testing Creator/RosannaArquette, Creator/RaeDawnChong, Creator/JamieLeeCurtis, Creator/RebeccaDeMornay, Creator/MichellePfeiffer, Creator/KathleenTurner and he even considered Music/{{Madonna}}. Gilliam's personal favorite was Creator/EllenBarkin.
22** Sam Lowry was originally meant to be a younger man, with Creator/TomCruise in mind for the role. Creator/RupertEverett was also considered.
23** There would've been more [[DreamSequence dream scenes]] with complex visuals such as huge flying rock ships. One in particular that [[https://youtu.be/qeyXADf1fyk?t=1483 almost made it into the film]] would've shown Sam flying over a vast sea of eyeballs that stare at him, which would've served to highlight the SinisterSurveillance aspect of the bureaucratic dystopia.
24** 20th Century Fox almost distributed the film in North America, but only on the condition that Gilliam would direct one movie for them. He didn't and a compromise was eventually made that they foot the bill internationally.
25* WorkingTitle: ''1984 and a 1/2'', ''The Ministry'', ''The Ministry of Torture'', ''How I Learned to Live with the System - So Far, and So That's Why the Bourgeoisie Sucks''.

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