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Time Bandits

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Time Bandits
Film poster
Directed byTerry Gilliam
Written byTerry Gilliam
Michael Palin
Produced byTerry Gilliam
George Harrison
Denis O'Brien
StarringJohn Cleese
Sean Connery
Shelley Duvall
Ralph Richardson
Katherine Helmond
Ian Holm
Michael Palin
David Warner
David Rappaport
Craig Warnock
CinematographyPeter Biziou
Edited byJulian Doyle
Music byMike Moran
Songs by George Harrison
Production
companies
Distributed byAvco Embassy Pictures
Release date
  • 13 July 1981 (1981-07-13)
Running time
116 minutes
CountryTemplate:Film UK
LanguageEnglish
Budget$5 million
Box office$42,365,581

Time Bandits is a 1981 fantasy film, produced and directed by Terry Gilliam.

Gilliam wrote the screenplay with fellow Monty Python alumnus Michael Palin, who appears with Shelley Duvall in the small, recurring roles of Vincent and Pansy. The film is one of the most famous of more than 30 theatrical features produced by Handmade Films. The London-based independent company was backed in part by former Beatle George Harrison, who wrote and performed the closing credits song "Dream Away" especially for this film .

Gilliam would work with many of this film's cast again in 1985's Brazil, including Jim Broadbent, Ian Holm, Peter Vaughan, Katherine Helmond, Michael Palin and Jack Purvis.

Plot

Kevin is an 11-year-old boy whose parents ignore him in favour of keeping up with the neighbours by purchasing all the latest gadgets. Without their attention, Kevin has become a history buff, particularly of the Ancient Greek period. One night, Kevin is awakened from his sleep by a knight on horseback bursting through his wardrobe and riding off into a forest that has appeared in place of his bedroom wall. When Kevin looks back around, though, he finds his room returned to normal. The next night, he urges his parents to let him go to bed early; he is again woken by sounds from the wardrobe, but this time six dwarves stumble out. The dwarves seem to be on a mission and they initially mistake Kevin for someone whom they have stolen a map from. After realising Kevin is only a little boy, they discover that they can push his bedroom wall as if on wheels and they slide it to the end of a long hallway. A luminous, disembodied face—referred to by the dwarves as the Supreme Being—materializes suddenly, urges them to relinquish the map to avoid great danger, and chases them down this hall. The corridor ends abruptly in a black abyss through which Kevin and the dwarves fall, beginning their adventure through time and space.

Kevin learns that the dwarves, named Randall (the self-proclaimed leader), Fidgit, Strutter, Og, Wally, and Vermin, were employees of the Supreme Being, the creator of "all the big stuff" in the universe, while it was the regular job of the dwarves to create small bushes and trees. After designing a particularly foul-smelling tree, the dwarves were demoted to the job of repairing holes in the spacetime fabric. Instead, however, they spitefully stole the map of the holes' locations, which they are now using to travel around, stealing treasures from across history. Meanwhile, in secret, this journey is being observed via mystical powers by a malevolent sorcerer, known simply as Evil, who seeks the map for himself to recreate the universe to his liking.

Kevin and the dwarves all travel through several (largely mythical) places and time-periods, meeting Napoleon Bonaparte and Robin Hood. Kevin takes photographs of his travels and becomes separated from the group in Mycenaean Greece, where he meets King Agamemnon. After inadvertently helping Agamemnon slay a vicious minotaur, Kevin is welcomed to Agamemnon's royal court and treated like a son. Reflecting on his own life and family, Kevin wishes he can stay with the king forever. However, the dwarves catch up with Kevin, steal the king's valuables, and drag him away through another time hole for a brief stint on the RMS Titanic, which they do not realise will soon sink. Kevin becomes angry with them for ruining his happy respite.

Evil, meanwhile, begins to manipulate the adventure with his magical influence, so that Kevin and the dwarves end up in the Time of Legends. Here, circumstances become even more fantastical and the travelers barely escape a ship adorning the head of a giant. The dwarves believe an epic treasure, "The Most Fabulous Object in the World," awaits in this time-period within the Fortress of Ultimate Darkness, where Evil himself resides. Meeting an invisible wall, the dwarves begin to fight and dissent from Randall's authority, when they accidentally down the wall by smashing through it like a pane of glass. They step through the jagged opening to behold Evil's fortress lying ominous on the other side. Once inside, the dwarves are immediately deceived by Evil's shapeshifting abilities into handing over the map. Evil imprisons them and Kevin in one of many cages hanging over a bottomless void, but the group undoes the lock and swings from cage to cage until they are back within the fortress hall. They are able to use a photograph of the map Kevin had taken earlier to identify holes they can use to recruit help and recover the map. The dwarves begin putting their plan into action.

The dwarves accumulate soldiers and equipment from across time to build a small army against Evil just as he corners Kevin, who has stayed behind to divert Evil's attention all the while. Though the dwarves reveal gun-toting cowboys, medieval knights on horseback, Greek archers, a futuristic fighter jet, and a military tank, Evil uses magic to effortlessly defeat them all. As Evil is about to unleash his ultimate power, he is suddenly turned to cinder by the Supreme Being, now appearing as an elderly, well-dressed gentleman. The dwarves humbly apologize to the Supreme Being, who acknowledges that their act of rebellion was all part of his plan and he takes back the map. He orders them to remove all of the remaining cinders of "concentrated evil" from the area. Kevin is left behind as the Supreme Being disappears with the dwarves. Kevin finds that a piece of Evil has been left, but his vision goes dim as the smoke emanating from the chunk of black rock overwhelms him.

Kevin wakes up in his own room which is filled with smoke as the house is on fire. A firefighter breaks in and rescues him. The firefighters find that a toaster oven was the source of the fire, and hand the unit over to Kevin's parents. Kevin, upon seeing a fireman who exactly resembles Agamemnon, discovers the photographs of his travels still in his satchel. When his parents open the toaster oven to reveal a piece of concentrated Evil, Kevin warns them not to touch it, but they do anyway and the two promptly explode, leaving Kevin alone and bewildered. The camera zooms out from the town, the world, and the galaxy to reveal its location on the Supreme Being's map. The Supreme Being's hands then roll up the map, ending the film.

Reception

As discussed in a DVD interview with Palin and Gilliam, the film came out in the fall season (after the blockbuster summer films, but before the hit Christmas season) and became extremely successful at the U.S. box office, making over $40 million.[1] Critical reception since it came out in theatres has been positive overall,[2] and it still enjoys a good reputation on DVD. The film has received a 94% positive reviews[3] at the review aggregating website Rotten Tomatoes.

Legacy

Robert Hewison, in his book Monty Python: The Case Against, describes the dwarfs as a comment on the Monty Python troupe, with Fidgit (the nice one) as Palin, Randall (the self-appointed leader) as John Cleese, Strutter (the acerbic one) as Eric Idle, Og (the quiet one) as Graham Chapman, Wally (the noisy rebel) as Terry Jones and Vermin (the nasty, filth-loving one) as Gilliam himself.[4]

Cast

References

  1. ^ Time Bandits at boxofficemojo.com
  2. ^ External reviews listed at Internet Movie Database
  3. ^ Time Bandits Rotten Tomatoes
  4. ^ Hewison, Robert. Monty Python: The Case Against. Heinemann Educational Books, 1989. ISBN 0413486605

External links