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The Boys from Brazil
A Nazi hunter in Paraguay discovers a sinister and bizarre plot of a doctor who clones Hitler 95 times, and hopes to raise the resulting boys in Brazil, giving them childhoods identical to Hitler's to rekindle the Third Reich.
31 May 1922, Ealing, London, England, UK
27 February 1910, Nuremberg, Bavaria, Germany
23 November 1915, Richmond [now Staten Island], New York City, New York, USA
29 May 1923, Berlin, Germany
15 May 1909, Huddersfield, Yorkshire [now in Kirklees, West Yorkshire], England, UK
20 September 1929, Brooklyn, New York City, New York, USA
12 June 1919, Göttingen, Lower Saxony, Germany
23 November 1916, Kuala Lumpur, British Malaya [now Malaysia]
22 May 1907, Dorking, Surrey, England, UK
24 August 1958, Brooklyn, New York City, New York, USA
22 March 1941, Zürich-Seebach, Switzerland
March 03, 2008
It's more a silly and unbelievable pic than a bad one, but very watchable.
November 16, 2006
Schaffner conduz a trama com segurança absoluta, permitindo que o espectador junte as peças do quebra-cabeças ao mesmo tempo em que seu diligente e improvável herói, vivido de forma espetacular por Olivier (mas Peck também merece aplausos).
June 24, 2006
The answer should have made a great thriller, but the film is sunk by a series of preposterous performances.
January 18, 2004
Gregory Peck is miscast, but the film is entertaining enough.
March 27, 2009
Fast-paced, gripping and totally ludicrous.
March 26, 2009
With two excellent antagonists in Gregory Peck and Laurence Olivier, The Boys from Brazil presents a gripping, suspenseful drama for nearly all of its two hours -- then lets go at the end and falls into a heap.
March 27, 2009
Dark thriller that does its best but ultimately doesn't completely convince.
January 05, 2015
This is a terrifically chilling entertainment, one that deserves a spot alongside the best paranoid thrillers of the 1970s.
April 11, 2007
The film loses the little credibility that Ira Levin's potboiler had, but helmer Schaffner was smart to cast Olivier as Nazi hunter Simon Wiesenthal and to surround him with superb actors
April 02, 2003
Too funny to dislike.
March 27, 2009
The plot is less suspenseful than the overacting contest between the two leads, Laurence Olivier and Gregory Peck, who spend most of their screen time one-upping each other in affectations.
September 24, 2004
Silly.

