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The Boys from Brazil: Difference between revisions
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{{Infobox Movie|{{PAGENAME}} | {{Infobox Movie|{{PAGENAME}} | ||
|name = The Boys from Brazil | |name = The Boys from Brazil | ||
|picture = | |picture = TBfB-poster.jpg | ||
|caption = '' | |caption = ''Cinema poster'' | ||
|country = [[Image: | |country = [[Image:USA.jpg|border|25px]] United States<BR>[[Image:UKD.jpg|border|25px]] UK | ||
|director = Franklin J. Schaffner | |director = Franklin J. Schaffner | ||
|date= 1978 | |date= 1978 | ||
|language = English | |language = English | ||
|studio= | |studio=Producers Circle<br>Incorporated Television Company (ITC) | ||
|distributor= | |distributor=Twentieth Century Fox Film Corporation | ||
|character1=Dr. Josef Mengele | |character1=Dr. Josef Mengele | ||
|actor1=[[Gregory Peck]] | |actor1=[[Gregory Peck]] | ||
Line 17: | Line 17: | ||
|character4=Esther Lieberman | |character4=Esther Lieberman | ||
|actor4=[[Lilli Palmer]] | |actor4=[[Lilli Palmer]] | ||
|character5= | |character5=Frieda Maloney | ||
|actor5= | |actor5=Uta Hagen | ||
|character6=Barry Kohler | |character6=Barry Kohler | ||
|actor6=[[Steve Guttenberg]] | |actor6=[[Steve Guttenberg]] | ||
Line 27: | Line 27: | ||
|character9=Professor Bruckner | |character9=Professor Bruckner | ||
|actor9=[[Bruno Ganz]] | |actor9=[[Bruno Ganz]] | ||
|character10= | |character10=Bobby Wheelock | ||
|actor10= | |actor10=Jeremy Black | ||
}} | }} | ||
'''''The Boys from Brazil''''' is the 1978 film adaptation of Ira Levin's novel of the same name. Sir [[Laurence Olivier]] stars as Ezra Lieberman, an elderly concentration camp survivor devoted to tracking down fugitive Nazi war criminals (a fictional version of real-life Nazi hunter Simon Wiesenthal), who is tipped off by one of his eager proteges that Dr. Josef Mengele ([[Gregory Peck]]), the "Angel of Death" of the Auschwitz concentration camp, is alive and well in South America, and engaged in an ambitious project to clone Adolf Hitler and restore the Nazis to power. | |||
The film was notable for its accurate description of cloning science (which, at the time of its release, was still regarded as far-fetched), and for bringing Olivier his ninth and last Academy Award nomination for an acting role - ironically, his previous one had been two years before for ''[[Marathon Man]]'' (1976), in which he played a Nazi war criminal. | |||
{{Film Title|The Boys from Brazil}} | {{Film Title|The Boys from Brazil}} | ||
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__TOC__ | __TOC__ | ||
<br clear=all> | <br clear=all> | ||
==M16== | ==M16== | ||
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== | ==Single Shot Shotgun== | ||
Henry Wheelock ([[John Dehner]]) has two | Henry Wheelock ([[John Dehner]]) has two [[12 Gauge Single Shot Shotgun|Single Shot shotgun]]s displayed above his fireplace mantle when Dr. Mengele comes to kill him. | ||
[[Image:IverJohnsonChampion410Gauge.jpg|thumb|none|450px]] | |||
[[Image:boysfrombrazil7.jpg|thumb|none|600px|Wheelock learns too late Mengele ''isn't'' Lieberman and his shotguns are of no use to him, now.]] | [[Image:boysfrombrazil7.jpg|thumb|none|600px|Wheelock learns too late Mengele ''isn't'' Lieberman and his shotguns are of no use to him, now.]] | ||
[[Image:boysfrombrazil3.jpg|thumb|none|600px|The shotguns are visible in the background.]] | [[Image:boysfrombrazil3.jpg|thumb|none|600px|The shotguns are visible in the background.]] | ||
==Browning Hi-Power== | |||
Dr. Josef Mengele ([[Gregory Peck]]) carries a [[Browning Hi-Power]] as his personal weapon. He uses it to kill Henry Wheelock ([[John Dehner]]) as part of his scheme to recreate the childhood of Adolf Hitler, as Wheelock's adopted son, Bobby, is (unknown to Wheelock) a clone of Hitler. | |||
[[Image:BrowningHiPowerPistol9mm.jpg|thumb|none|300px|Classic Commercial Browning Hi-Power (Belgian Mfg) - 9x19mm]] | |||
[[Image:boysfrombrazil6.jpg|thumb|none|600px|Mengele pulls his [[Browning Hi-Power]] at Henry Wheelock.]] | |||
[[Image:boysfrombrazil8.jpg|thumb|none|600px|Ezra Lieberman ([[Laurence Olivier]]) attacks Mengele in Wheelock's living room.]] | |||
[[Image:boysfrombrazilB.jpg|thumb|none|600px|Close up of his gun.]] | |||
{{DEFAULTSORT:Boys from Brazil, The}} | |||
[[Category:Movie]] | [[Category:Movie]] | ||
[[Category:Thriller]] | [[Category:Thriller]] | ||
[[Category:Science-Fiction]] | [[Category:Science-Fiction]] | ||
[[Category:British Produced/Filmed]] |
Latest revision as of 17:14, 29 July 2023
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The Boys from Brazil is the 1978 film adaptation of Ira Levin's novel of the same name. Sir Laurence Olivier stars as Ezra Lieberman, an elderly concentration camp survivor devoted to tracking down fugitive Nazi war criminals (a fictional version of real-life Nazi hunter Simon Wiesenthal), who is tipped off by one of his eager proteges that Dr. Josef Mengele (Gregory Peck), the "Angel of Death" of the Auschwitz concentration camp, is alive and well in South America, and engaged in an ambitious project to clone Adolf Hitler and restore the Nazis to power.
The film was notable for its accurate description of cloning science (which, at the time of its release, was still regarded as far-fetched), and for bringing Olivier his ninth and last Academy Award nomination for an acting role - ironically, his previous one had been two years before for Marathon Man (1976), in which he played a Nazi war criminal.
The following weapons were used in the film The Boys from Brazil:
M16
When the Nazis destroy Dr. Josef Mengele's (Gregory Peck) Paraguayan laboratory, Dietrich Hessen (Sky Dumont) and Arnold Schwimmer (Wolf Kahler) carry M16 assault rifles. The guns aren't used onscreen, but are presumably used to kill Mengele's Paraguayan servants and bodyguards offscreen, as we hear gunfire and see the people lying dead on the ground.
Single Shot Shotgun
Henry Wheelock (John Dehner) has two Single Shot shotguns displayed above his fireplace mantle when Dr. Mengele comes to kill him.
Browning Hi-Power
Dr. Josef Mengele (Gregory Peck) carries a Browning Hi-Power as his personal weapon. He uses it to kill Henry Wheelock (John Dehner) as part of his scheme to recreate the childhood of Adolf Hitler, as Wheelock's adopted son, Bobby, is (unknown to Wheelock) a clone of Hitler.