People have often pondered whether being alone is exclusively linked to being lonely, and whether they feel more connected to other people when they’re using technology, and isolated when they’re speaking to someone who’s actually in the same room as them. That question of how people relate to others in their lives in the ever-increasing connected world, and how they can learn to embrace being alone without getting lonely, is powerfully examined in the new sci-fi fantasy drama, ‘The Zero Theorem.’ Director Terry Gilliam effortlessly explored how people can only truly make sense of who they are when they’re alone through the script from first-time feature film writer, Pat Rushin. [ Read More ]
The post Interview: Terry Gilliam and Lucas Hedges Talk The Zero Theorem appeared first on Shockya.com.
The post Interview: Terry Gilliam and Lucas Hedges Talk The Zero Theorem appeared first on Shockya.com.
- 9/29/2014
- by Karen Benardello
- ShockYa
I've given up trying to understand my own life," Terry Gilliam says. "I'm just trying to make sense of the world this life is taking place in." The movie director emits a high-pitched giggle.
At the moment, Gilliam's "world" is located in the trendy restaurant in Manhattan's Tribeca Grand Hotel, but, just as he's done for decades, the director is continuing to parse the meaning of life on film. His latest movie, The Zero Theorem, focuses on a discontented misanthrope, played by Django Unchained's Christoph Waltz, who attempts to...
At the moment, Gilliam's "world" is located in the trendy restaurant in Manhattan's Tribeca Grand Hotel, but, just as he's done for decades, the director is continuing to parse the meaning of life on film. His latest movie, The Zero Theorem, focuses on a discontented misanthrope, played by Django Unchained's Christoph Waltz, who attempts to...
- 9/19/2014
- Rollingstone.com
Films from notables Nick Cave, Kevin Smith and Terry Gilliam, and another featuring Downton Abbey vet Dan Stevens are helping fill this weekend’s box office, despite studio blockbuster debuts for The Maze Runner and This Is Where I Leave You.
In all, 14 specialty films are debuting this weekend, at the front edge of awards season and the time of year when “serious” films hit the screens left and right. We have The Guest, with Stevens; The Zero Theorem by Gilliam; Smith’s Tusk; Tracks, the latest from the producers of The King’s Speech; and Cave’s doc 20,000 Days On Earth.
And, like a TV informercial, there’s more: the doc Pump, boundary-jumper Stop The Pounding Heart; and Swim Little Fish Swim. Just to fill out the marquees, we also have Tribeca-winning doc Keep On Keepin’ On; Flamenco, Flamenco; Hector And The Search For Happiness; Iceman; Hollidaysburg; and Not Cool.
In all, 14 specialty films are debuting this weekend, at the front edge of awards season and the time of year when “serious” films hit the screens left and right. We have The Guest, with Stevens; The Zero Theorem by Gilliam; Smith’s Tusk; Tracks, the latest from the producers of The King’s Speech; and Cave’s doc 20,000 Days On Earth.
And, like a TV informercial, there’s more: the doc Pump, boundary-jumper Stop The Pounding Heart; and Swim Little Fish Swim. Just to fill out the marquees, we also have Tribeca-winning doc Keep On Keepin’ On; Flamenco, Flamenco; Hector And The Search For Happiness; Iceman; Hollidaysburg; and Not Cool.
- 9/19/2014
- by Brian Brooks
- Deadline
It’s been a rough couple of decades to be a Terry Gilliam fan. Not just because he hasn't been as prolific as you’d like him to be, with several false starts or projects that never made it to a greenlight—most famously “The Man Who Killed Don Quixote,” which actually made it to production before falling apart. Because the films we have seen, at least since the start of the 21st century, have felt compromised (“The Brothers Grimm”), muddled (“The Imaginarium Of Doctor Parnassus”) or borderline-unwatchable (“ Tideland”). We’re always rooting for Gilliam, but the recent run of films had made us wonder whether it was becoming something of a fools’ errand to do so. Fortunately, his latest, “The Zero Theorem,” restores some of the faith. It’s not an unreserved return to form, but it’s an admirably ambitious and thoughtful sci-fi mindbender that movingly takes stock...
- 9/18/2014
- by Oliver Lyttelton
- The Playlist
The Zero Theorem
Written by Pat Rushin
Directed by Terry Gilliam
UK/Romania/USA/France, 2013
Stop me if you’ve heard this one already: a low-level cog in a comically large bureaucratic environment in a grotesque-looking “future” dystopia struggles in the face of obsolescence and oblivion. The character in question is fundamentally good, but incredibly weedy, their resolve and spirit having been ground to stumps by the world around them. People come in and out of the protagonist’s surroundings either to goad them into just rolling with the Orwellian punches, or to pull them out of a tight spot in a bizarre or humorous way. The ‘hero’ also creates elaborate fantasies and ideas to inhabit as a coping mechanism. If this sounds familiar, that’s because these broad plot points describe Terry Gilliam’s towering 1985 bad-vibes masterpiece Brazil. It also more or less describes his latest, The Zero Theorem,...
Written by Pat Rushin
Directed by Terry Gilliam
UK/Romania/USA/France, 2013
Stop me if you’ve heard this one already: a low-level cog in a comically large bureaucratic environment in a grotesque-looking “future” dystopia struggles in the face of obsolescence and oblivion. The character in question is fundamentally good, but incredibly weedy, their resolve and spirit having been ground to stumps by the world around them. People come in and out of the protagonist’s surroundings either to goad them into just rolling with the Orwellian punches, or to pull them out of a tight spot in a bizarre or humorous way. The ‘hero’ also creates elaborate fantasies and ideas to inhabit as a coping mechanism. If this sounds familiar, that’s because these broad plot points describe Terry Gilliam’s towering 1985 bad-vibes masterpiece Brazil. It also more or less describes his latest, The Zero Theorem,...
- 7/22/2014
- by Derek Godin
- SoundOnSight
This will be my third year attending the venerable Fantasia International Film Festival here in Montreal, and this year’s slate does not disappoint. I was asked to pick the five movies I was the most excited to see. This proved to be a difficult task, seeing as how my original list had upwards of thirty titles. But here are the five that have got me the most intrigued.
The Zero Theorem
Directed by Terry Gilliam
USA/UK/Romania/France, 2013
Even though this movie has been finished for a while and already released in certain territories around the world, there’s a sense that a new Terry Gilliam movie is some form of minor miracle. Stories of Gilliam’s distended budgets, lost projects, and squabbles with producers lend the director a kind of bizarre mystique. But by all accounts, this was the easiest time Gilliam had making a movie in a while.
The Zero Theorem
Directed by Terry Gilliam
USA/UK/Romania/France, 2013
Even though this movie has been finished for a while and already released in certain territories around the world, there’s a sense that a new Terry Gilliam movie is some form of minor miracle. Stories of Gilliam’s distended budgets, lost projects, and squabbles with producers lend the director a kind of bizarre mystique. But by all accounts, this was the easiest time Gilliam had making a movie in a while.
- 7/15/2014
- by Derek Godin
- SoundOnSight
Say what you will about how successful Terry Gilliam's movies are or aren't, no one makes movies that look like Terry Gilliam's and the new trailer for Zero Theorem shows that Gilliam is still in fine visual form. The trailer promises a movie where a computer genius (Christoph Waltz and his X-Box controller) is tasked with discovering the reason for human existence via the zero theorem, which states that everything adds up to nothing. I know Terry Gilliam's mind-bending movies aren't for everyone, but I'm pretty excited for this one. Despite the surreal tone, the movie looks to be pretty loaded with social commentary on how every-day life and work distracts us from asking the big questions. Zero Theorem is directed by Terry Gilliam (12 Monkeys, Brazil, Fear and Loathing in Las Vegas), written by Pat Rushin and stars Christoph Waltz, Melanie Thierry, David Thewlis, Matt Damon, Ben Whishaw,...
- 7/9/2014
- by Matthew McKibben
- SmellsLikeScreenSpirit
Stars: Christoph Waltz, Mélanie Thierry, David Thewlis, Lucas Hedges, Matt Damon, Ben Whishaw, Tilda Swinton, Sanjeev Bhaskar, Rupert Friend | Written by Pat Rushin | Directed by Terry Gilliam
Terry Gilliam may be a national treasure but that doesn’t preclude him from making films which can at times sink a little too much into his fertile imagination at the expense of being particularly absorbing. The Adventures of Baron Munchausen was a late 1980’s financial disaster which found him being given a lot of toys to play with but not being able to make a film which really connected with the heart or head and his last effort The Imaginarium of Dr Parnassus is a film which seems to get by almost on the good will of the viewer alone. He is a man to be admired certainly, any man who makes Brazil must be, but he is also one prone to palpable flaws.
Terry Gilliam may be a national treasure but that doesn’t preclude him from making films which can at times sink a little too much into his fertile imagination at the expense of being particularly absorbing. The Adventures of Baron Munchausen was a late 1980’s financial disaster which found him being given a lot of toys to play with but not being able to make a film which really connected with the heart or head and his last effort The Imaginarium of Dr Parnassus is a film which seems to get by almost on the good will of the viewer alone. He is a man to be admired certainly, any man who makes Brazil must be, but he is also one prone to palpable flaws.
- 3/17/2014
- by Ian Loring
- Nerdly
Familiar themes from Brazil and Twelve Monkeys litter the dystopian landscape of Gilliam's ramshackle sci-fi drama
Terry Gilliam's latest begins with a naked man wrestling with a steam-punk console in an abandoned church, feverishly awaiting a call (from God?) on a wiry future-retro phone. Meet Qohen Leth, the bastard son of Sam Lowry and James Cole, enlisted by his corporate employer to solve the titular theorem and prove that all life is meaningless while attempting to alleviate his suffering via the all-engulfing portals of a cybersex site.
Although Gilliam has publicly debunked a supposed "trilogy" connection with Brazil and Twelve Monkeys, it's clear that screenwriter Pat Rushin has been marinated in the director's back catalogue, with riffs and preoccupations from previous works (wheezing machinery; intrusive surveillance; man against the state; imagination v reality) littering the landscape. From Waltz's shaven head to his worriedly distracted manner, we know this character – or,...
Terry Gilliam's latest begins with a naked man wrestling with a steam-punk console in an abandoned church, feverishly awaiting a call (from God?) on a wiry future-retro phone. Meet Qohen Leth, the bastard son of Sam Lowry and James Cole, enlisted by his corporate employer to solve the titular theorem and prove that all life is meaningless while attempting to alleviate his suffering via the all-engulfing portals of a cybersex site.
Although Gilliam has publicly debunked a supposed "trilogy" connection with Brazil and Twelve Monkeys, it's clear that screenwriter Pat Rushin has been marinated in the director's back catalogue, with riffs and preoccupations from previous works (wheezing machinery; intrusive surveillance; man against the state; imagination v reality) littering the landscape. From Waltz's shaven head to his worriedly distracted manner, we know this character – or,...
- 3/16/2014
- by Mark Kermode
- The Guardian - Film News
Before we start here’s a confession. I’m a fan of Terry Gilliam’s work. Unashamed, bordering on (but never becoming) an apologist. From the bedtime anarchy of Time Bandits to the dark satanic future of Brazil, from the dizzying false heights of Munchausen to finding myself washed up on the Tideland – each and every one of his films has connected with me, some inextricably so.
The more of them I saw, the more I became hooked on his dreamatic musings; a new Gilliam film is a big deal in my world. He was also my first film teacher with the BBC’s long forgotten series called The Last Machine taking in a whirlwind tour of the first century of cinema from sideshow contraption to documentarian to a gateway to other worlds. Gilliam knew cinema, and came across as a man possessed with a love of ideas and visual poetry.
The more of them I saw, the more I became hooked on his dreamatic musings; a new Gilliam film is a big deal in my world. He was also my first film teacher with the BBC’s long forgotten series called The Last Machine taking in a whirlwind tour of the first century of cinema from sideshow contraption to documentarian to a gateway to other worlds. Gilliam knew cinema, and came across as a man possessed with a love of ideas and visual poetry.
- 3/14/2014
- by Jon Lyus
- HeyUGuys.co.uk
Director: Terry Gilliam; Screenwriter: Pat Rushin; Starring: Christoph Waltz, Mélanie Thierry, David Thewlis, Tilda Swinton, Matt Damon, Lucas Hedges, Ben Whishaw; Running time: 106 mins; Certificate: 15
If you think too hard for long enough, you may come to the depressing conclusion that everything ultimately amounts to nothing. That's the theory driving Django Unchained's Christoph Waltz crazy in director Terry Gilliam's latest cinematic trip, a typically vivid portrait of humanity and chaos which deserves your patience despite an uneven pace.
The universe Waltz inhabits - as physics whiz and company pawn Qohen Leth - is a richly realised London in the not-too-distant future, a garish nightmare of a place where the Shard looms over streets lined with digital ad boards that stalk you on the morning commute. The neon gothic visuals and the frantic energy that pours off the screen are recognisable as our nation's capital, but it's also quintessentially Gilliam.
If you think too hard for long enough, you may come to the depressing conclusion that everything ultimately amounts to nothing. That's the theory driving Django Unchained's Christoph Waltz crazy in director Terry Gilliam's latest cinematic trip, a typically vivid portrait of humanity and chaos which deserves your patience despite an uneven pace.
The universe Waltz inhabits - as physics whiz and company pawn Qohen Leth - is a richly realised London in the not-too-distant future, a garish nightmare of a place where the Shard looms over streets lined with digital ad boards that stalk you on the morning commute. The neon gothic visuals and the frantic energy that pours off the screen are recognisable as our nation's capital, but it's also quintessentially Gilliam.
- 3/14/2014
- Digital Spy
Amplify and Well Go USA Entertainment have teamed up to acquire the U.S. rights to acclaimed director Terry Gilliam’s science-fiction opus,The Zero Theorem. The partners will release the film to theaters across the Us in late summer, with a home video release to follow. Amplify will handle theatrical and digital distribution rights, with Well Go USA releasing the film on DVD and Blu-ray.
Directed by Gilliam (Brazil, Twelve Monkeys, Monty Python and the Holy Grail), The Zero Theorem stars two-time Academy Award winner Christoph Waltz (Django Unchained, Inglorious Basterds) as Qohen Leth, an eccentric and reclusive computer genius plagued with existential angst. Living in isolation in a burnt-out church, Qohen is obsessively working on a mysterious project personally delegated to him by Management (Matt Damon) aimed at discovering the meaning of life – or the lack thereof – once and for all. Increasingly disturbed by unwanted visits from people he doesn’t fully trust,...
Directed by Gilliam (Brazil, Twelve Monkeys, Monty Python and the Holy Grail), The Zero Theorem stars two-time Academy Award winner Christoph Waltz (Django Unchained, Inglorious Basterds) as Qohen Leth, an eccentric and reclusive computer genius plagued with existential angst. Living in isolation in a burnt-out church, Qohen is obsessively working on a mysterious project personally delegated to him by Management (Matt Damon) aimed at discovering the meaning of life – or the lack thereof – once and for all. Increasingly disturbed by unwanted visits from people he doesn’t fully trust,...
- 3/5/2014
- by Michelle McCue
- WeAreMovieGeeks.com
Amplify and Well Go USA Entertainment have acquired U.S. distribution rights to director Terry Gilliam's sci-fi movie “The Zero Theorem,” the two companies said Wednesday. A late summer rollout is planned, with a home video release to follow. Amplify will handle theatrical and digital distribution rights, with Well Go USA releasing the film on DVD and Blu-ray. “Zero Theorem” stars two-time Academy Award winner Christoph Waltz (“Django Unchained,” “Inglorious Basterds”) as Qohen Leth, an eccentric and reclusive computer genius plagued with existential angst. Matt Damon, Melanie Thierry, David Thewlis and Tilda Sinton co-star. The script is by Pat Rushin,...
- 3/5/2014
- by Todd Cunningham
- The Wrap
The Zero Theorem
Written by Pat Rushin
Directed by Terry Gilliam
USA/Romania, 2013
Though writer Pat Rushin scripted and conceived the story of The Zero Theorem, one can be forgiven for assuming Terry Gilliam came up with the narrative himself, being that it comes across as the work of someone who either saw every film Gilliam’s ever made or just happened to direct them. Indeed, The Zero Theorem sees Gilliam very much in his storytelling and thematic comfort zones, though sadly to diminishing returns. It openly scrounges scraps from earlier efforts, especially Brazil, but has little idea how to develop its ever so slightly different ideas beyond thin sketches.
Qohen Leth (Christoph Waltz) is the jittery, button-pushing outsider of The Zero Theorem’s particular near-future dystopia. Eager to become a work-at-home employee, his attempts at a disability claim see him assigned to work on the titular theorem by the mysterious,...
Written by Pat Rushin
Directed by Terry Gilliam
USA/Romania, 2013
Though writer Pat Rushin scripted and conceived the story of The Zero Theorem, one can be forgiven for assuming Terry Gilliam came up with the narrative himself, being that it comes across as the work of someone who either saw every film Gilliam’s ever made or just happened to direct them. Indeed, The Zero Theorem sees Gilliam very much in his storytelling and thematic comfort zones, though sadly to diminishing returns. It openly scrounges scraps from earlier efforts, especially Brazil, but has little idea how to develop its ever so slightly different ideas beyond thin sketches.
Qohen Leth (Christoph Waltz) is the jittery, button-pushing outsider of The Zero Theorem’s particular near-future dystopia. Eager to become a work-at-home employee, his attempts at a disability claim see him assigned to work on the titular theorem by the mysterious,...
- 3/2/2014
- by Josh Slater-Williams
- SoundOnSight
Following last month's trailer , three behind-the-scenes featurettes on Terry Gilliam's The Zero Theorem have come online and can be watched below. The film opens in the UK on March 14 - a North American date has not been set yet. Featuring a screenplay by Pat Rushin, The Zero Theorem stars Christoph Waltz, Tilda Swinton, Ben Whishaw, Mélanie Thierry, David Thewlis and Lucas Hedges and revolves around an eccentric and reclusive computer genius (two-time Oscar winner Christoph Waltz) plagued with existential angst who works on a mysterious project aimed at discovering the purpose of existence or the lack thereof once and for all. However, it is only once he experiences the power of love and desire that he is able to understand his very reason for being.
- 2/18/2014
- Comingsoon.net
Having made its debut on the festival circuit out in Venice last year, Terry Gilliam’s latest fantasy/sci-fi The Zero Theorem will soon be heading into cinemas on our shores.
Sony launched the first trailer last month, giving us a great tease of what we can expect from the visionary filmmaker. And now the studio have released a new behind-the-scenes featurette, taking a look at their production of the colossal super mainframe, Mancom.
A computer hacker’s goal to discover the reason for human existence continually finds his work interrupted thanks to the Management; this time, they send a teenager and lusty love interest to distract him.
Christoph Waltz leads a stellar cast, joined by Mélanie Thierry, David Thewlis, Lucas Hedges, Matt Damon, Tilda Swinton, Sanjeev Bhaskar, Peter Stormare, and Ben Whishaw.
Gilliam directs from a script by Pat Rushin, making his feature debut as a screenwriter with the film.
Sony launched the first trailer last month, giving us a great tease of what we can expect from the visionary filmmaker. And now the studio have released a new behind-the-scenes featurette, taking a look at their production of the colossal super mainframe, Mancom.
A computer hacker’s goal to discover the reason for human existence continually finds his work interrupted thanks to the Management; this time, they send a teenager and lusty love interest to distract him.
Christoph Waltz leads a stellar cast, joined by Mélanie Thierry, David Thewlis, Lucas Hedges, Matt Damon, Tilda Swinton, Sanjeev Bhaskar, Peter Stormare, and Ben Whishaw.
Gilliam directs from a script by Pat Rushin, making his feature debut as a screenwriter with the film.
- 2/10/2014
- by Kenji Lloyd
- HeyUGuys.co.uk
While Terry Gilliam rose to prominence as a member of the legendary comic troupe Monty Python, his 1985 film Brazil helped establish him as a filmmaking force in his own right. With his last feature coming in 2009, many were interested to see what he would tackle next, interest that was only heightened by news that the project would feature Christoph Waltz in the lead role. Gilliam takes on only directing duties this time around, working from a script by debut feature film screenwriter Pat Rushin. Starring alongside Waltz are David Thewlis, Ben Whishaw, Matt Damon, and Tilda Swinton. A trailer for the film has now been released, and can be seen below.
(Source: The Playlist)
The post ‘The Zero Theorem’, the newest film from Terry Gilliam, releases a trailer appeared first on Sound On Sight.
(Source: The Playlist)
The post ‘The Zero Theorem’, the newest film from Terry Gilliam, releases a trailer appeared first on Sound On Sight.
- 1/27/2014
- by Deepayan Sengupta
- SoundOnSight
After making its debut at Venice last year, Terry Gilliam’s anticipated The Zero Theorem will finally be heading into cinemas this spring.
The film marks the director’s first feature film since 2009’s The Imaginarium of Doctor Parnassus, which would of course become the late Heath Ledger’s incomplete final film.
With just a matter of weeks separating us from its arrival here in the UK, Sony has released the first trailer, giving us a brilliant look at the latest sci-fi/fantasy from the renowned filmmaker.
A computer hacker’s goal to discover the reason for human existence continually finds his work interrupted thanks to the Management; this time, they send a teenager and lusty love interest to distract him.
Christoph Waltz leads a brilliant ensemble, starring alongside Mélanie Thierry, David Thewlis, Lucas Hedges, Matt Damon, Tilda Swinton, Sanjeev Bhaskar, Peter Stormare, and Ben Whishaw. Very impressive.
Gilliam is...
The film marks the director’s first feature film since 2009’s The Imaginarium of Doctor Parnassus, which would of course become the late Heath Ledger’s incomplete final film.
With just a matter of weeks separating us from its arrival here in the UK, Sony has released the first trailer, giving us a brilliant look at the latest sci-fi/fantasy from the renowned filmmaker.
A computer hacker’s goal to discover the reason for human existence continually finds his work interrupted thanks to the Management; this time, they send a teenager and lusty love interest to distract him.
Christoph Waltz leads a brilliant ensemble, starring alongside Mélanie Thierry, David Thewlis, Lucas Hedges, Matt Damon, Tilda Swinton, Sanjeev Bhaskar, Peter Stormare, and Ben Whishaw. Very impressive.
Gilliam is...
- 1/27/2014
- by Kenji Lloyd
- HeyUGuys.co.uk
The trailer for Terry Gilliam's ( Brazil , 12 Monkeys ) latest, The Zero Theorem , is now online and viewable in the player below! Featuring a screenplay by Pat Rushin, The Zero Theorem stars Christoph Waltz, Tilda Swinton, Ben Whishaw, Mélanie Thierry, David Thewlis and Lucas Hedges and revolves around an eccentric and reclusive computer genius (two-time Oscar winner Christoph Waltz) plagued with existential angst who works on a mysterious project aimed at discovering the purpose of existence or the lack thereof once and for all. However, it is only once he experiences the power of love and desire that he is able to understand his very reason for being.
- 1/27/2014
- Comingsoon.net
BFI London Film Festival 2013: ‘The Zero Theorem’ a cacophonous, incoherent dirge from Terry Gilliam
The Zero Theorem
Written by Pat Rushin
Directed by Terry Gilliam
UK and Romania, 2013
In 1983, the final Monty Python film, The Meaning Of Life, was released with a rather ambitious title and intent to discover, well, the meaning of life. Thirty years later, and Terry Gilliam returns to these enterprising realms with his new film The Zero Theorem, a codex volcanic in enthusiasm yet insipid at its core. Terry does good press: he barks an intriguing sound bite, citing that his latest ode to chaos is an “impossible look at nothing,” which is certain to prick the interest of existentialists everywhere. But like that void-gazing ideology, the film is bereft of significance as it wanes and wavers as something of a chore, an extravagant, gelatinous mess of half-baked ideas and pasquinade profundity. Any original film that exists aside the morass of sequels, prequels, comic books, and young adult novel translations renders it welcome,...
Written by Pat Rushin
Directed by Terry Gilliam
UK and Romania, 2013
In 1983, the final Monty Python film, The Meaning Of Life, was released with a rather ambitious title and intent to discover, well, the meaning of life. Thirty years later, and Terry Gilliam returns to these enterprising realms with his new film The Zero Theorem, a codex volcanic in enthusiasm yet insipid at its core. Terry does good press: he barks an intriguing sound bite, citing that his latest ode to chaos is an “impossible look at nothing,” which is certain to prick the interest of existentialists everywhere. But like that void-gazing ideology, the film is bereft of significance as it wanes and wavers as something of a chore, an extravagant, gelatinous mess of half-baked ideas and pasquinade profundity. Any original film that exists aside the morass of sequels, prequels, comic books, and young adult novel translations renders it welcome,...
- 10/17/2013
- by John
- SoundOnSight
Director: Terry Gilliam; Screenwriter: Pat Rushin; Starring: Christoph Waltz, Matt Damon, Mélanie Thierry, David Thewlis, Ben Whishaw, Tilda Swinton; Running time: 107 mins
Described by esteemed filmmaker Terry Gilliam as the final part of his dystopian satire trilogy, following Brazil and Twelve Monkeys, The Zero Theorem is an uneven endeavour that feels thematically outdated despite its futuristic setting. Gilliam's visceral prowess constantly bolsters the fable, which follows Christoph Waltz's corporate worker bee Qohen as he tries to solve a mathematical formula that could unlock the meaning of life. Clearly The Hitchhiker's Guide To The Galaxy was out of print.
Increasingly reclusive, Qohen has to contend with his patronising boss Joby (David Thewlis) and the soul-sapping machinations of the 'Management' and Matt Damon's amusingly attired boss. But the apparently amorous affections of a mysterious femme fatale called Bainsley (Mélanie Thierry) pose a huge conundrum to the increasingly beleaguered drone.
The Zero Theorem...
Described by esteemed filmmaker Terry Gilliam as the final part of his dystopian satire trilogy, following Brazil and Twelve Monkeys, The Zero Theorem is an uneven endeavour that feels thematically outdated despite its futuristic setting. Gilliam's visceral prowess constantly bolsters the fable, which follows Christoph Waltz's corporate worker bee Qohen as he tries to solve a mathematical formula that could unlock the meaning of life. Clearly The Hitchhiker's Guide To The Galaxy was out of print.
Increasingly reclusive, Qohen has to contend with his patronising boss Joby (David Thewlis) and the soul-sapping machinations of the 'Management' and Matt Damon's amusingly attired boss. But the apparently amorous affections of a mysterious femme fatale called Bainsley (Mélanie Thierry) pose a huge conundrum to the increasingly beleaguered drone.
The Zero Theorem...
- 10/13/2013
- Digital Spy
Terry Gilliam's junk-shop aesthetic clutters up this ramshackle take on existentialism, but its optimistic core is unwavering
The Zero Theorem casts Christoph Waltz as Qohen Leth, an egghead data processor who is given a mission to make order out of chaos. This being a production by Terry Gilliam – the rambling mad uncle of British cinema – Qohen Leth is clearly screwed from the outset. The Zero Theorem is a sagging bag of half-cooked ideas, a dystopian thriller with runaway dysentery, a film that wears its metaphorical trousers around its metaphorical ankles. In fits and starts, I quite enjoyed it.
The plot (by Pat Rushin) blunders merrily between the trite and the tangled as Qohan holes up in his big old house, tapping maniacally at his keyboard to make the numbers add up. But the theorem is unprovable, and the walls are closing in, and the sense of airless claustrophobia is...
The Zero Theorem casts Christoph Waltz as Qohen Leth, an egghead data processor who is given a mission to make order out of chaos. This being a production by Terry Gilliam – the rambling mad uncle of British cinema – Qohen Leth is clearly screwed from the outset. The Zero Theorem is a sagging bag of half-cooked ideas, a dystopian thriller with runaway dysentery, a film that wears its metaphorical trousers around its metaphorical ankles. In fits and starts, I quite enjoyed it.
The plot (by Pat Rushin) blunders merrily between the trite and the tangled as Qohan holes up in his big old house, tapping maniacally at his keyboard to make the numbers add up. But the theorem is unprovable, and the walls are closing in, and the sense of airless claustrophobia is...
- 9/2/2013
- by Xan Brooks
- The Guardian - Film News
★★★☆☆ It's been a long time since Terry Gilliam made an unambiguously great film. Flash floods, the death of a lead actor and shrinking budgets have plagued this visionary ex-Python, famed for Time Bandits, Brazil and Twelve Monkeys. Showing in competition at Venice, The Zero Theorem (2013) - Gilliam's first since 2009's The Imaginarium of Dr Parnasus (2009) - returns us to the rag-and-bone shop of a dystopian London where mathematician Qohen Leth (Christoph Waltz) is busy crunching entities for Mancom, a company run by the 'Management' (Matt Damon, a dead ringer for Cannes organiser Thierry Frémaux).
Qohen is waiting for a phone call which will explain to him the meaning of life, and pesters his supervisor Joby (David Thewlis) to let him work from home. However, when his wish is granted and he's placed on a project to prove the 'Zero Theorem' - an attempt to confirm the essential meaninglessness of existence - Qohen,...
Qohen is waiting for a phone call which will explain to him the meaning of life, and pesters his supervisor Joby (David Thewlis) to let him work from home. However, when his wish is granted and he's placed on a project to prove the 'Zero Theorem' - an attempt to confirm the essential meaninglessness of existence - Qohen,...
- 9/2/2013
- by CineVue UK
- CineVue
It’s been a rough couple of decades to be a Terry Gilliam fan. Not just because he hasn't been as prolific as you’d like him to be, with several false starts or projects that never made it to a greenlight—most famously “The Man Who Killed Don Quixote,” which actually made it to production before falling apart. Because the films we have seen, at least since the start of the 21st century, have felt compromised (“The Brothers Grimm”), muddled (“The Imaginarium Of Doctor Parnassus”) or borderline-unwatchable (“ Tideland”). We’re always rooting for Gilliam, but the recent run of films had made us wonder whether it was becoming something of a fools’ errand to do so. Fortunately, his latest, “The Zero Theorem,” restores some of the faith. It’s not an unreserved return to form, but it’s an admirably ambitious and thoughtful sci-fi mindbender that movingly takes stock...
- 9/2/2013
- by Oliver Lyttelton
- The Playlist
Terry GIlliam's "The Zero Theorem" will World Premiere at the Venice International FIlm Festival. Toh! got a glimpse of footage at 2013's Comic-Con, where a new trailer debuted along with the first four scenes--ten minutes. The story, written by Florida academic Pat Rushin (inspired by "Brazil"), revolves around an eccentric bald computer genius (Christoph Waltz) who wanders around naked and wrestles with existential angst. When he falls in love, his project to solve the meaning of life takes on new meaning. Tilda Swinton, Ben Whishaw, Melanie Thierry, Peter Stormare and David Thewlis also star, and Matt Damon is in there somewhere, Gilliam promised.Gilliam didn't show in San Diego, but sent an entertaining video clip about being held prisoner until he finished the movie. The video was more entertaining than the film scenes. "'Zero Theorem' is a small intimate impassioned film," he said. "I know you're tired of superheroes.
- 8/30/2013
- by Anne Thompson and Beth Hanna
- Thompson on Hollywood
Every Labor Day weekend, cinephiles journey out to a small town nestled in a remote corner of southwest Colorado’s San Juan mountain range for the Telluride Film Festival. Production staff are hard at work building state-of-the-art theaters for more than a month before the event and readying for a sudden influx of dedicated filmgoers. Veteran pass holders, staff, and volunteers make the trip largely out of faith in the festival’s superb programming that’s famously kept completely secret up until the day before it begins. The shroud of mystery, the breathtaking scenery of a box canyon and the fact that there are no press lines, competitions, or paparazzi lend a sanctified awe to this complete cinematic immersion. Venturing deep into uncharted storytelling territory with old or new friends make the cost of getting out here and the intensive labor involved with putting it all together worth it each and every time.
- 8/25/2013
- by Lane Scarberry
- SoundOnSight
Related: Fleming Q&As Terry Gilliam On His Venice-Bound ‘Zero Theorem,’ More Before he unveils it at the Venice Film Festival, director Terry Gilliam wanted to say a few things about his film The Zero Theorem, which stars Christoph Waltz and will be looking for a domestic distribution deal at the festival. Somebody leaked his statement on the matter before he had finished his thoughts. He’d like another shot at explaining and let’s face it, it is no easy task to explain a Terry Gilliam film in a short burst. Here is what he wanted to say: When I made Brazil in 1984, I was trying to paint a picture of the world I thought we were living in then. The Zero Theorem is a glimpse of the world I think we are living in now. Pat Rushin’s script intrigued me with the many pertinent questions raised in his funny,...
- 8/22/2013
- by MIKE FLEMING JR
- Deadline
via IMPAwards and The Film Stage. When I made Brazil in 1984, I was trying to paint a picture of the world I thought we were living in then. The Zero Theorem...
- 8/22/2013
- by Ryan Adams
- AwardsDaily.com
After all those weird images from The Zero Theorem, we finally have the very first poster and another pic with Christoph Waltz, aka an eccentric computer genius who suffers from existential angst. Give him a break, he only wants to determine whether life holds meaning! Anyway, what definitely sounds promising is that no zombies, no caped crusaders or alien spacecraft are involved in this sci-fi drama. That promise comes straight from director Terry Gilliam, head inside to read the rest of his statement… As we previously reported, Gilliam directs the whole thing from a script written by Pat Rushin, which revolves around the above mentioned...
Click to read original and full article: The Zero Theorem Reveals First Poster & New Image (Plus Terry Gilliam’s Statement) on http://www.filmofilia.com...
Click to read original and full article: The Zero Theorem Reveals First Poster & New Image (Plus Terry Gilliam’s Statement) on http://www.filmofilia.com...
- 8/21/2013
- by Jeanne Standal
- Filmofilia
IMPAwards
Director Terry Gilliam sure does have a crazy, twisted, and beautiful imagination. There's no doubt he's going to show it all off in his next film project The Zero Theorem, which stars Christoph Waltz, Tilda Swinton, Matt Damon, David Thewlis, Ben Whishaw, and a few others. We have a great new poster for you today, along with a statement from the director, which you can read below.
"When I made Brazil in 1984, I was trying to paint a picture of the world I thought we were living in then. The Zero Theorem is a glimpse of the world I think we are living in now. Pat Rushin’s script intrigued me with the many existential ideas he had incorporated into his funny, philosophic, and touching tale. For example: What gives meaning to our lives, brings us happiness? Can we ever be alone in our increasingly connected and constricted world?...
Director Terry Gilliam sure does have a crazy, twisted, and beautiful imagination. There's no doubt he's going to show it all off in his next film project The Zero Theorem, which stars Christoph Waltz, Tilda Swinton, Matt Damon, David Thewlis, Ben Whishaw, and a few others. We have a great new poster for you today, along with a statement from the director, which you can read below.
"When I made Brazil in 1984, I was trying to paint a picture of the world I thought we were living in then. The Zero Theorem is a glimpse of the world I think we are living in now. Pat Rushin’s script intrigued me with the many existential ideas he had incorporated into his funny, philosophic, and touching tale. For example: What gives meaning to our lives, brings us happiness? Can we ever be alone in our increasingly connected and constricted world?...
- 8/21/2013
- by Joey Paur
- GeekTyrant
Poster Ryan Lambie 22 Aug 2013 - 07:34
Director Terry Gilliam has a new science fiction film on the way called The Zero Theorem, and here's a poster to prove it...
Terry Gilliam's created some truly superb science fiction and fantasy films over the years, including our favourites, Brazil and 12 Monkeys. His latest film - Gilliam's first since 2009's The Imaginarium Of Doctor Parnassus - looks like a return to the dystopian realms of Brazil, and we can't wait to see it.
Starring Christoph Waltz as a computer scientist who aims to work out the mathematical formula for the meaning of life, its cast also includes Ben Whishaw, Peter Stormare, David Thewlis, Sanjeev Bhaskar, Matt Damon and Tilda Swinton. Production photographs have pointed towards a typically colourful and detailed visual style, with Damon seen sporting a strange white hairdo, and a shaven-headed Waltz photographed at a strange party with a man in tiger costume.
Director Terry Gilliam has a new science fiction film on the way called The Zero Theorem, and here's a poster to prove it...
Terry Gilliam's created some truly superb science fiction and fantasy films over the years, including our favourites, Brazil and 12 Monkeys. His latest film - Gilliam's first since 2009's The Imaginarium Of Doctor Parnassus - looks like a return to the dystopian realms of Brazil, and we can't wait to see it.
Starring Christoph Waltz as a computer scientist who aims to work out the mathematical formula for the meaning of life, its cast also includes Ben Whishaw, Peter Stormare, David Thewlis, Sanjeev Bhaskar, Matt Damon and Tilda Swinton. Production photographs have pointed towards a typically colourful and detailed visual style, with Damon seen sporting a strange white hairdo, and a shaven-headed Waltz photographed at a strange party with a man in tiger costume.
- 8/21/2013
- by ryanlambie
- Den of Geek
When you have Terry Gilliam delivering one of his keenly observed and beautifully twisted takes on life, there are plenty of reasons to get excited. With his latest, The Zero Theorem, he’s back in Brazil territory, which only adds to the anticipation. The first poster for the film is below, courtesy of The Film Stage. Theorem sees Christoph Waltz as the film’s main protagonist, Qohen Leth, a low-level genius programmer for “entity crunching” corporation ManCom. Obsessively waiting for a phone call that will change his life, he’s constantly befuddled by the world around him but also tempted by the beautiful Bainsley (Melanie Thierry).Gilliam himself has set out to define his aims with the film, in a director’s statement. Take it away, Mr. G…“When I made Brazil in 1984, I was trying to paint a picture of the world I thought we were living in then.
- 8/21/2013
- EmpireOnline
Terry Gilliam's "The Zero Theorem" finally premieres at the Venice Film Festival in a few weeks. In the meantime though, the first poster for the film has gone online which can be seen below.
At the same time, The Film Stage has posted a "Director's Statement" from Gilliam explaining why he wanted to make the film in the first place:
"When I made Brazil in 1984, I was trying to paint a picture of the world I thought we were living in then. The Zero Theorem is a glimpse of the world I think we are living in now. Pat Rushin’s script intrigued me with the many existential ideas he had incorporated into his funny, philosophic, and touching tale.
For example: What gives meaning to our lives, brings us happiness? Can we ever be alone in our increasingly connected and constricted world? Is that world under control or simply chaotic?...
At the same time, The Film Stage has posted a "Director's Statement" from Gilliam explaining why he wanted to make the film in the first place:
"When I made Brazil in 1984, I was trying to paint a picture of the world I thought we were living in then. The Zero Theorem is a glimpse of the world I think we are living in now. Pat Rushin’s script intrigued me with the many existential ideas he had incorporated into his funny, philosophic, and touching tale.
For example: What gives meaning to our lives, brings us happiness? Can we ever be alone in our increasingly connected and constricted world? Is that world under control or simply chaotic?...
- 8/21/2013
- by Garth Franklin
- Dark Horizons
When Terry Gilliam gets it right, his films are second to none; when he gets it wrong, there are few things more painful to watch. I think that you will all join me in hoping and praying that The Zero Theorem, set to premiere at the Venice Film Festival, will be more along the lines of Brazil and less along the lines of Tideland. With the first poster and an extended statement from Gilliam himself landing today, I think we have reason to be hopeful.
The Zero Theorem stars Christoph Waltz as a computer genius searching for the purpose of existence in a dystopian world. His work is constantly interrupted by Management (Matt Damon) who sends in all sorts of people to distract him from his pursuit of the so-called Zero Theorem. It’s a weird idea, made even weirder when we take at look at the images and clips...
The Zero Theorem stars Christoph Waltz as a computer genius searching for the purpose of existence in a dystopian world. His work is constantly interrupted by Management (Matt Damon) who sends in all sorts of people to distract him from his pursuit of the so-called Zero Theorem. It’s a weird idea, made even weirder when we take at look at the images and clips...
- 8/21/2013
- by Lauren Humphries-Brooks
- We Got This Covered
Zero Theorum director, Terry Gilliam, has released a statement about his fairly insane looking new film Zero Theorem about a computer programmer looking for the meaning of life.
Also, here's a new poster for the film.
Besides Christopher Waltz, Zero Theorem stars David Thewlis, Tilda Swinton, Melanie Thierry, Lucas Hedges, Ben Whishaw, and Peter Stormare.
The film debuts at the Venice Film Festival.
Director's Statement:
When I made Brazil in 1984, I was trying to paint a picture of the world I thought we were living in then. The Zero Theorem is a glimpse of the world I think we are living in now. Pat Rushin’s script intrigued me with the many existential ideas he had incorporated into his funny, philosophic, and touching tale. For example: What gives meaning to [Continued ...]...
Also, here's a new poster for the film.
Besides Christopher Waltz, Zero Theorem stars David Thewlis, Tilda Swinton, Melanie Thierry, Lucas Hedges, Ben Whishaw, and Peter Stormare.
The film debuts at the Venice Film Festival.
Director's Statement:
When I made Brazil in 1984, I was trying to paint a picture of the world I thought we were living in then. The Zero Theorem is a glimpse of the world I think we are living in now. Pat Rushin’s script intrigued me with the many existential ideas he had incorporated into his funny, philosophic, and touching tale. For example: What gives meaning to [Continued ...]...
- 8/21/2013
- QuietEarth.us
Terry Gilliam's The Zero Theorem is set to have its world premiere at the Venice Film Festival next week and today we have the first poster (via IMPAwards) and a director's statement to accompany the piece (via The Film Stage). When I made Brazil in 1984, I was trying to paint a picture of the world I thought we were living in then. The Zero Theorem is a glimpse of the world I think we are living in now. Pat Rushin's script intrigued me with the many existential ideas he had incorporated into his funny, philosophic, and touching tale. For example: What gives meaning to our lives, brings us happinessc Can we ever be alone in our increasingly connected and constricted worldc Is that world under control or simply chaoticc We've tried to make a film that is honest, funny, beautiful, and surprising; a simple film about a complex...
- 8/21/2013
- by Brad Brevet
- Rope of Silicon
The first official poster has been released for Terry Gilliam‘s The Zero Theorem. The film which is set to have its World Premiere at the Venice Film Festival this month, centres on Qohen Leth (Christoph Waltz), a reclusive computer genius working on a formula to determine whether life holds meaning. Gilliam has this to say about the film:
“When I made Brazil in 1984, I was trying to paint a picture of the world I thought we were living in then. The Zero Theorem is a glimpse of the world I think we are living in now. Pat Rushin’s script intrigued me with the many existential ideas he had incorporated into his funny, philosophic, and touching tale. For example: What gives meaning to our lives, brings us happiness? Can we ever be alone in our increasingly connected and constricted world? Is that world under control or simply chaotic? We...
“When I made Brazil in 1984, I was trying to paint a picture of the world I thought we were living in then. The Zero Theorem is a glimpse of the world I think we are living in now. Pat Rushin’s script intrigued me with the many existential ideas he had incorporated into his funny, philosophic, and touching tale. For example: What gives meaning to our lives, brings us happiness? Can we ever be alone in our increasingly connected and constricted world? Is that world under control or simply chaotic? We...
- 8/21/2013
- by Kyle Reese
- SoundOnSight
Here are some colorful and pretty weird images from Terry Gilliam‘s upcoming sci-fi drama The Zero Theorem. As you’re about to see, Christoph Waltz sure looks awesome as a reclusive computer genius (he’s working on a formula to determine whether life holds meaning, give him a break!), but what about his tiger-friend? Wait, that thing is actually… David Thewlis? Never mind, head inside to take a look! We will once again remind you that Gilliam directed the whole thing from a script written by Pat Rushin, which revolves around the above mentioned computer genius whose goal is to discover the reason for human existence. (Un)fortunately, he...
Click to read original and full article: The Zero Theorem Reveals New (Weird) Images With Christoph Waltz & Melanie Thierry on http://www.filmofilia.com...
Click to read original and full article: The Zero Theorem Reveals New (Weird) Images With Christoph Waltz & Melanie Thierry on http://www.filmofilia.com...
- 8/14/2013
- by Jeanne Standal
- Filmofilia
So far, after one day Summit's "Divergent" and "Ender's Game" presentation provided the big news at Comic-Con. (More on that later.) In other news, Hall H saw the long overdue first woman moderator of a movie panel in Hall H, the LATimes' Hero Complex editor Gina McIntyre. Jenna Busch has moderated one Sunday TV panel, according to Comic-Con staffers. McIntyre hosted a panel late Thursday afternoon, debuting a new trailer and the first four scenes--ten minutes-- from Terry Gilliam's new movie "The Zero Theorem." The story written by Florida academic Pat Rushin (inspired by "Brazil") revolves around an eccentric bald computer genius (Christoph Waltz) who wanders around naked and wrestles with existential angst. When he falls in love, his project to solve the meaning of life takes on new meaning. Tilda Swinton, Ben Whishaw, Melanie Thierry, Peter Stormare and David Thewlis also star, and Matt Damon is in there somewhere,...
- 7/19/2013
- by Anne Thompson
- Thompson on Hollywood
New images from The Zero Theorem at the San Diego Comic-Con Check out these 2 new photos from the Terry Gilliam film starring Christoph Waltz, which were released to coincide with the exclusive footage shared at Comic-Con today, July 18th in Hall H at 5:40 p.m.! In the first photos we have Christoph Waltz in the street, and the other has helmer Gilliam behind-the-scenes of the film from Voltage Pictures. Pat Rushin wrote the screenplay for the film which also includes Tilda Swinton,Ben Whishaw, Mélanie Thierry, David Thewlis and Lucas Hedges.
- 7/18/2013
- Upcoming-Movies.com
Terry Gilliam's new not-quite-sci-fi The Zero Theorem is promising to take him - and us - back to the giddily satirical bureaucratic heights of 1985 classic Brazil. Empire is proud to debut these new shots from the film, letting you into the colourfully dystopian playground Gilliam has created. Christoph Waltz, billiard-smooth of head, if not mannerism, is the film's ever-present protagonist. As Qohen Leth, a programmer for "entity-crunching" corporation ManCom, he is, Gilliam explains, "waiting for a phone call that will give meaning to his life". Like Brazil's Sam Lowry, Leth is befuddled by the info-dump world he lives in and the Heath Robinson tech tangle that surrounds him. Unlike Lowry, he's something of a hacker genius whose attempts to solve the "Zero Theorem" could unlock the key to life's meaning.The story, the first by American college professor Pat Rushin, was partly inspired by Gilliam's own work, so...
- 7/18/2013
- EmpireOnline
The Zero Theorem
Director: Terry Gilliam
Writer(s): Pat Rushin
Producer(s): Voltage Pictures’ Nicolas Chartier, Dean Zanuck
U.S. Distributor: Rights Available
Cast: Christoph Waltz, Matt Damon, Ben Whishaw, Tilda Swinton, David Thewlis and Mélanie Thierry
A filmmaker whose filmography is worthy of a full semester in any film theory seminar, Terry Gilliam has no limitations in his creativity so it’ll be of interest to see how he works still in the sci-fi realm but on a much smaller production in scope. His twelfth feature film reunites him with Matt Damon, but it’ll be Christoph Waltz’s time to shine.
Gist: Qohen Leth (Christoph Waltz) is an eccentric and reclusive computer genius who lives in an Orwellian corporate world and suffers from existential angst. Under the instruction of a shadowy figure known only as “Management” (Matt Damon), Qohen works to solve the “Zero Theorem” – a...
Director: Terry Gilliam
Writer(s): Pat Rushin
Producer(s): Voltage Pictures’ Nicolas Chartier, Dean Zanuck
U.S. Distributor: Rights Available
Cast: Christoph Waltz, Matt Damon, Ben Whishaw, Tilda Swinton, David Thewlis and Mélanie Thierry
A filmmaker whose filmography is worthy of a full semester in any film theory seminar, Terry Gilliam has no limitations in his creativity so it’ll be of interest to see how he works still in the sci-fi realm but on a much smaller production in scope. His twelfth feature film reunites him with Matt Damon, but it’ll be Christoph Waltz’s time to shine.
Gist: Qohen Leth (Christoph Waltz) is an eccentric and reclusive computer genius who lives in an Orwellian corporate world and suffers from existential angst. Under the instruction of a shadowy figure known only as “Management” (Matt Damon), Qohen works to solve the “Zero Theorem” – a...
- 1/12/2013
- by Eric Lavallee
- IONCINEMA.com
Terry Gilliam remains one of the few directors of today who is not afraid of risk. He thinks big, lives outside the box and creates films that have layers upon layers of metaphors. He also assumes his viewers are intelligent, so his stories are complex, multi-layered, yet I think they’re important, and humanistic. The themes of his films are usually about people at the crossroads of their lives, who see a dysfunctional world that gets ignored by most, and tries to make some sort of sense of it. And the more the odd, the more bizarre, the more fun Gilliam has. It tells me that he tries –and while sometimes fails at it- more than others to show his audience that being predictable and safe may make you feel comfortable, but it’s a false reality. I fear, at times, that his genius as a filmmaker, as an American treasure,...
- 10/1/2012
- by spaced-odyssey
- doorQ.com
Terry Gilliam‘s next high concept entry, The Zero Theorem, is adding to its already promising cast as David Thewlis has just signed on to join the film.
Thewlis, probably most recognizable as the lycanthropy-addled Remus Lupin from the last couple “Harry Potter” films, will join the film’s lead Christoph Waltz, as well as Jelanie Thierry, with Tilda Swinton also rumored to appear. Scripted by Pat Rushin, The Zero Theorem will follow Qohen Leth, an eccentric and reclusive computer genius obsessed with finding the reason for human existence.
Pretty heavy stuff, huh? Not according to Gilliam, who compared the film to 12 Monkeys saying:
“It’s very funny. That synopsis sounds much darker and broodier than it is. The main character is literally living in this burnt-out chapel which one could take as a metaphor for old beliefs and old systems. He’s a computer genius but he’s just...
Thewlis, probably most recognizable as the lycanthropy-addled Remus Lupin from the last couple “Harry Potter” films, will join the film’s lead Christoph Waltz, as well as Jelanie Thierry, with Tilda Swinton also rumored to appear. Scripted by Pat Rushin, The Zero Theorem will follow Qohen Leth, an eccentric and reclusive computer genius obsessed with finding the reason for human existence.
Pretty heavy stuff, huh? Not according to Gilliam, who compared the film to 12 Monkeys saying:
“It’s very funny. That synopsis sounds much darker and broodier than it is. The main character is literally living in this burnt-out chapel which one could take as a metaphor for old beliefs and old systems. He’s a computer genius but he’s just...
- 9/27/2012
- by Joshua Frost
- We Got This Covered
• Justin Timberlake is negotiating to star in The Last Drop, a romance about a food critic for New York magazine who realizes his love of alcohol is getting in the way of a budding relationship. Peter Sollett (Nick and Norah’s Infinite Playlist) is directing the indie from the Black List screenplay by Brandon and Phil Murphy. [Variety]
• Nicolas Cage is attached to star in Amicus, a thriller based on the true story of a hired assassin who used a book called Hit Man: A Technical Manual for Independent Contractors to help him carry out the murder of his client’s wife,...
• Nicolas Cage is attached to star in Amicus, a thriller based on the true story of a hired assassin who used a book called Hit Man: A Technical Manual for Independent Contractors to help him carry out the murder of his client’s wife,...
- 9/27/2012
- by Adam B. Vary
- EW - Inside Movies
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