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Brewster McCloud

  • 1970
  • R
  • 1h 45m
IMDb RATING
6.8/10
6.4K
YOUR RATING
Bud Cort in Brewster McCloud (1970)
An introverted loner living in the bowels of the Astrodome plots to develop - with the aid of a mysterious guardian angel - a pair of wings that will help him fly.
Play trailer2:47
2 Videos
95 Photos
Dark ComedyComedyCrimeFantasy

An introverted loner living in the bowels of the Astrodome plots to develop - with the aid of a mysterious guardian angel - a pair of wings that will help him fly.An introverted loner living in the bowels of the Astrodome plots to develop - with the aid of a mysterious guardian angel - a pair of wings that will help him fly.An introverted loner living in the bowels of the Astrodome plots to develop - with the aid of a mysterious guardian angel - a pair of wings that will help him fly.

  • Director
    • Robert Altman
  • Writer
    • Doran William Cannon
  • Stars
    • Bud Cort
    • Shelley Duvall
    • Sally Kellerman
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    6.8/10
    6.4K
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Robert Altman
    • Writer
      • Doran William Cannon
    • Stars
      • Bud Cort
      • Shelley Duvall
      • Sally Kellerman
    • 81User reviews
    • 62Critic reviews
    • 72Metascore
  • See production info at IMDbPro
    • Awards
      • 1 win & 2 nominations total

    Videos2

    Trailer
    Trailer 2:47
    Trailer
    Brewster Mccloud Clip
    Clip 2:44
    Brewster Mccloud Clip
    Brewster Mccloud Clip
    Clip 2:44
    Brewster Mccloud Clip

    Photos95

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    Top Cast32

    Edit
    Bud Cort
    Bud Cort
    • Brewster
    Shelley Duvall
    Shelley Duvall
    • Suzanne
    Sally Kellerman
    Sally Kellerman
    • Louise
    Michael Murphy
    Michael Murphy
    • Shaft
    William Windom
    William Windom
    • Weeks
    Rene Auberjonois
    Rene Auberjonois
    • The Lecturer
    Stacy Keach
    Stacy Keach
    • Abraham Wright
    John Schuck
    John Schuck
    • Johnson
    Margaret Hamilton
    Margaret Hamilton
    • Daphne Heap
    Jennifer Salt
    Jennifer Salt
    • Hope
    Corey Fischer
    Corey Fischer
    • Hines
    G. Wood
    G. Wood
    • Crandall
    Bert Remsen
    Bert Remsen
    • Douglas Breen
    Angelin Johnson
    • Mrs. Breen
    Dean Goss
    • Officer Ledbetter
    William Baldwin
    • Bernard
    William Henry Bennet
    • Band Conductor
    Gary Chason
    • Camera Store Clark
    • (as Gary Wayne Chason)
    • Director
      • Robert Altman
    • Writer
      • Doran William Cannon
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews81

    6.86.3K
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    Featured reviews

    joyce-e

    Obscure wonder! Wonderful film.

    This film, televised in Denmark in the mid-seventies, made a great impact on me. The story of Brewster and his dream of flying was wildly funny and poignant. And why it has become so obscure makes me wonder. I have been hoping for an opportunity to see it again. It is truly a great film as is the instructor Robert Altman!
    Puck-20

    *SPLAT* Bird doo-doo! Bird doo-doo!

    I saw this film long ago, when it first came out in the theaters. One of the things you have to remember is that Altman's style (now copied so much it has become a cliché.. of the odd camera angles, the everyone-talking-at-once dialogue and such) was, at the time, quite new and much different than anything else out there. Thirty years later, this film is still amazing to watch. Brewter McCloud is more like a cartoon, something to be viewed for pure entertainment value, even the dark parts (and there are many of those). Bud Cort (Harold and Maude) is delightful, and the supporting cast (many of whom are Altman regulars) is great......I think that people with little or no sense of humor will not like this movie, but those raised in the post-South Park era will enjoy its wonderful portrayal of neurotic characters...as only Altman can deliver 'em.
    8jamesrupert2014

    Funny, absurd comedy

    Brewster McCloud (Bud Cort), a young man with dreams of flying, lives in the fallout-shelter of the Houston Astrodome, where, with (perhaps) divine help, he is constructing a pair of wings. Meanwhile, a serial killer, whose victims are found strangled and covered in bird feces, stalks the city. The sometimes slapstick, sometimes subtle, comedy by Robert Altman has aged well (although it's now a showcase for the Texas city as it was in late-1960s). The cast, which is full of secondary players from Altman's breakthrough film MASH (1970) is excellent and there is a fun, self-referential cameo from Margret Hamilton (known to all as the Wicked Witch of the West). The film is dense with images (especially bird-themed) and dialogue as the strange, semi-mystical story plays out to an excellent ending. Probably not to everyone's taste (I was borderline for the first few particularly broad and crude minutes but then got caught up in the story and characters). An extra point is awarded for sexy Sally Kellerman's nude homage to her famously up-tight MASH character.
    8AlsExGal

    A time capsule and definitely not for everyone

    Bud Cort is the title character, an eccentric oddball secretly living in the Houston Astrodome who believes he has figured out how to fly like a bird. He is protected by a guardian angel (Sally Kellerman) with clipped wings. He then becomes a suspect in a series of murders of people who are found strangled and covered in bird droppings.

    An aggressively quirky counterculture time capsule, many modern viewers will be turned off by the bizarre story and outre characters. I happen to like it, and rank it among Altman's best. I enjoy the cast of weirdos, from Shelley Duvall (in her debut) as a stock-car driving tour guide who falls for McCloud, to Michael Murphy playing a San Francisco "supercop" named Shaft who sports turtlenecks and piercing blue eyes, to Margaret Hamilton as one of the murder victims who is found wearing ruby slippers. Stacy Keach is unrecognizable under heavy old age make-up, playing a miserly parody of Howard Hughes.
    7Quinoa1984

    the odd-ball slice of life of Altman's career, but somehow it's a good deal of fun in its schizo-storytelling

    Brewster McCloud was the kind of picture I could imagine having being written over many (count *many*) joints and after not getting a career going as an ornithologist (I might add, the screenwriter only had two or three other projects produced, and nowhere near as seen as this one is in comparison). It's as nutty as a Clark bar: a kid with the title name (Bud Cort, in an immediate precursor-type performance to his Harold in Harold and Maude as an awkward, shy outsider who has a some kind of desire behind his geeky exterior) is at the task of building wings so he can fly, and he builds it in the basement/boiler room of the Houstin Astrodome. Some mysterious woman played by Sally Kellerman is, I think, killing people that seem to end up really pestering Brewster, which include a craggy Mr. Burns figure (Stacy Keach, hilariously one-note), a narc, and a random dude with a chain. I'd guess she's the killer- there's a whole sub-plot, by the way, with a police investigation headed by Shaft (no, not talking about that one, Michael Murphy plays him here, that's right), who's more interested in the bird dung that keeps showing up on the deceased instead of regular police work.

    Meanwhile, Jennifer Salt gets off on the vibes of a half-nude Brewster doing chin-ups, Shelly Duvall with over-extended eye-lashes falls for Brewster one moment and then rats on him the next, and then there's still Kellerman doing her thing thwarting off, and...did I mention there's a professor/narrator who seems like a mental patient with a lot of facts about fowl? So much of this is hard to take, and towards the end it becomes very frustrating trying to put *any* sense to it (how is Duvall so good at evading the police, how is that one cop such a buffoon to read Captain America while on a stake-out, why does Jennifer Salt keep popping up and giving Brewster food/orgasms, and how much symbolic "ah, I'm a blonde angel" can we take from Kellerman?) But then again, why bother? Altman is after the sly humor of the quirky as opposed to real common sense, and it's in his dedication and intelligence in following through with these characters, no matter how strange or subtle or inexplicably charming or demented they are, that makes the film work up to the point that it does.

    And despite a sort of unsatisfying last twenty minutes with Brewster and some of the supporting characters (the whole sex angle is a little weak and too dated for me to buy), there's some experimentation for the director that would probably not come again. There's a car chase, for example, through the roads of Houston, and while it's not exciting on a Bullit type of level, it's fascinating to see when the sudden twists and turns pop up, unexpectedly (where did the little red car come from?), and there's even a remarkable slow-motion shot where, as part of a theme of the film, the cars fly above their intended plane. I also liked how Altman worked in an overly Felliniesque ending, as uncomfortable a catharsis it seems to be, with the Astrodome suddenly being flooded with carnival figures, and the main characters donned in costumes and wigs and such. Brewster McCloud is a funny bird, no pun intended, of a early 70s obscurity, a film that likely got a hundredth of the public attention that MASH got, but is probably just as strong in what it wants to deliver to its eclectic audience (albeit, personally, I think MASH is maybe Altman's most overrated). And it's probably the weirdest stoner movie that the director ever conceived, portentous cloud shots included!

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    Related interests

    Phoebe Waller-Bridge and Sian Clifford in Fleabag (2016)
    Dark Comedy
    Will Ferrell in Anchorman: The Legend of Ron Burgundy (2004)
    Comedy
    James Gandolfini, Edie Falco, Sharon Angela, Max Casella, Dan Grimaldi, Joe Perrino, Donna Pescow, Jamie-Lynn Sigler, Tony Sirico, and Michael Drayer in The Sopranos (1999)
    Crime
    Elijah Wood in The Lord of the Rings: The Fellowship of the Ring (2001)
    Fantasy

    Storyline

    Edit

    Did you know

    Edit
    • Trivia
      Robert Altman hated the script so much, he tossed it out and actors were coached on lines as they shot scenes.
    • Goofs
      In the scene where Brewster is supposed to have achieved independent flight while wearing birdlike apparatus, in a few places you can clearly see suspension cables attached to his bird costume.
    • Quotes

      The Lecturer: [First line] I forgot the opening line.

    • Crazy credits
      Introducing Shelley Duvall
    • Connections
      Featured in Altman on His Own Terms (2000)
    • Soundtracks
      Lift Every Voice and Sing (Black National Hymn)
      Written by J. Rosamond Johnson and James Weldon Johnson

      Performed by Merry Clayton

      [Played during the opening credits]

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    FAQ17

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    Details

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    • Release date
      • June 1971 (United Kingdom)
    • Country of origin
      • United States
    • Language
      • English
    • Also known as
      • Brewster McCloud's (Sexy) Flying Machine
    • Filming locations
      • Astrodome - 8400 Kirby Drive, Houston, Texas, USA
    • Production companies
      • Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer (MGM)
      • Lion's Gate Films
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Box office

    Edit
    • Budget
      • $5,600,000 (estimated)
    • Gross worldwide
      • $1,157
    See detailed box office info on IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      • 1h 45m(105 min)
    • Color
      • Color
    • Sound mix
      • Mono
    • Aspect ratio
      • 2.35 : 1

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