Brand Upon The Brain! - The Criterion Collection
Criterion (2006)
Drama, Fantasy
In Collection
#2015
0*
Seen ItYes
715515031127
IMDB   7.4
1 hr 39 mins USA / English
DVD  Region 1   NR
Gretchen Krich Mother
Sullivan Brown Young Guy Maddin
Maya Lawson Sis
Katherine E. Scharhon Chance Hale / Wendy Hale
Todd Moore Father
Andrew Loviska Savage Tom
Kellan Larson Neddie
Erik Steffen Maahs Older Guy Maddin
Cathleen O'Malley Young Mother
Clayton Corzatte Old Father
Gretchen Lee Krich
Andy Loviska Tom
Susan Corzatte Old Mother
Megan Murphy Murderous Sister
Annette Toutonghi Murderous Sister
David Lobo Oarsman
Director
Guy Maddin
Producer A.J. Epstein
Joy Fairfield
Gregg Lachow
Writer Guy Maddin
George Toles

In the weird and wonderful super-cinematic world of Canadian cult filmmaker Guy Maddin, personal memory collides with movie lore for a radical sensory overload. This eerie excursion into the Gothic recesses of Maddin's mad, imaginary childhood is a silent, black-and-white comic science-fiction nightmare set in a lighthouse on grim Notch Island, where fictional protagonist Guy Maddin was raised by an ironfisted, puritanical mother. Originally mounted as a theatrical event (accompanied by live orchestra, foley artists, and assorted narrators), Brand Upon The Brain! is an irreverent, delirious trip into the mind of one of current cinema's true eccentrics.
Edition Details
Distributor Criterion Collection
Release Date 8/12/2008
Packaging Keep Case
Screen Ratio Widescreen 1.85:1 B&W (Anamorphic)
Subtitles English
Audio Tracks ENGLISH: Dolby Digital Stereo
Layers Single Side, Dual Layer
No. of Disks/Tapes 1

Features
- New, high-definition digital transfer
- Narration tracks by Isabella Rossellini, Laurie Anderson, John Ashbery, Crispin Glover, Guy Maddin, Louis Negin, and Eli Wallach
- 97 Percent True, a new documentary featuring interviews with the director and his collaborators
- Two new short films directed by Maddin exclusively for this release: It's My Mother's Birthday Today and Footsteps
- Deleted scene
- Trailer
- PLUS: A new essay by film critic Dennis Lim