“Hannah Hannah and Her Sisters,” a warm, wonderful slice of life from writer-director Woody Al len, stays on the viewer’s mind long after the closing credits. It’s one of those rare films in which the viewer experiences everything from humor to heartache, and comes out of the theater feeling he’s seen some thing special. In short, “Hannah and Her Sisters” is a masterpiece. Allen, who with every film, cements his place among the world’s great directors, has crafted a loving look at every day life through the eyes of ev eryday people. It contains no heavy drama or broad comedy, just the simple observations of a man who wants to show us how special life is. Hannah and Her Sisters” covers two years in the lives of a and Her Sisters” hits home family of New York actors and the people whose lives they af fect. At the family’s emotional center stands Hannah (Mia Far row), a successful stage actress. She seems to have her life to gether, while everyone around her appears to be falling apart. One of her sisters, Lee (Bar bara Hershey), is in the last stages of a relationship with a domineering artist, while the other, Holly (Dianne Wiest), is a failed actress who cannot help but envy Hannah’s success. Around these three women revolves the rest of the cast, in cluding Hannah’s husband El liot (Michael Caine), who feels drawn to Lee against his better judgment, and Hannah’s ex- husband Mickey (Allen), a comedy writer and hypochon driac who thinks he has a brain tumor. everal funny situations arise from these in the film, but none is without a serious side as well. For example, Elliot’s affair with Lee, funny as it is, never lets us forget how devastated Hannah will be if she finds out. Allen’s neurotic writer gets most of the movie’s laughs when he under goes a religious crisis, dabbling in Judaism, Catholicism, and even the Hari Krishnas. At the film’s conclusion, Al len says, “The heart is a very re silient little muscle,” summing up, in one line, all that had happened before. It’s a wonder ful moment in a movie filled with them. Eventually he becomes in volved with Holly, who emerges as the film’s only truly hopeless character. Their tender relationship shows a lot of heart and is one of the reasons why the viewer leaves the the ater smiling. The cast under Allen’s direc tion solidifies the film’s success. Michael Caine shines as the in decisive Elliot. After such em barrassments as “Beyond the Limit” and “Blame It on Rio,” this is finally a role for which he is perfectly suited. The same can be said for the rest of the cast. Farrow, Hershey and Wiest create a be lievable trio of sisters, and Mau reen O’Sullivan and Lloyd No lan excel as their parents. In essence, “Hannah and Her Sisters” is simply about life, its sorrow and its joys. It speaks from the heart with an all-too- rare sincerity and is over all too fast. To miss it, is to miss the most rewarding film experience in many ayear. “Brazil” gives a glimpse at the future Terry Gilliam’s “Brazil,” just now reaching the Biyan-College Station area, already has quite a checkered past. Universal Pictures didn’t re lease it for almost a year, de manding that director Gilliam (of Monty Python fame) make extensive cuts and a more up beat ending for the picture. When the Los Angeles Film Critics Association voted “Bra zil” Best Picture of 1985, the studio did an about-face. The release didn’t net Gilliam any Oscar nominations, but it did give the public a chance to see the wondrous vision he creates. /Jrazil” takes place not in South America, but in a near future society reminiscent of George Orwell’s “1984.” The cornerstone of the society is the Ministry of Information, a mammoth organization that controls virtually every aspect of daily life. In this world of technology run amuck, the pursuit of knowledge, has entrapped man, not freed him. Sam Lowry (Jonathan Pryce) is an ordinary clerk in the min istry’s records department who claims to want nothing more out of life than what he already has. Yet much of the time he lives in a fantasy world, where he’s a winged warrior fighting to rescue a beautiful woman. When Sam sees the woman of his dreams in real life, he ar ranges a program of “Informa tion Retrieval” so he can learn more about the her. What Sam learns about her, and about the people he works for, sends his worlds of fantasy and reality on a disastrous colli sion course. “Brazil” is perhaps the most complete realization of a future world ever filmed. Every el ement, from the sets to the cos tumes, combines to form some thing completely new, creating a society full of bizarre ma chines, buildings and people. The viewer quickly gets caught up in it. Unfortunately, so does the director. Because he is so busy show ing us his fascinating new world, Gilliam loses sight of his storyline. As a result, the plot unfolds at an excruciatingly slow pace. 1 n spite of this structural flaw, “Brazil” works. Its stunning vi sual effects and wildly inventive sense of humor never let the viewer’s attention waver. Even when nothing’s happening, something’s going on. And “Brazil” doesn’t let you leave your brain at the door, as so many other movies do. Gil liam’s satiric view of the mod ern world gives the viewer something to think about, chal lenging the intellect and forcing the viewer to pay attention. The scenery tends to over whelm the actors but they all turn in fine performances none theless. The cast includes Mi chael Palin as Sam’s not-so- trusty friend, Katherine Hel- mond as Sam’s mother, Kim Greist as the woman of his dreams, and Robert DeNiro as a renegade plumber and sus pected terrorist. The controversial ending, which Universal left as Gilliam wanted it, seems downright op timistic given the grim nature of the world it takes place in. To make it any more upbeat would have been a cheat. “Brazil” is a movie jam- packed with diverse elements and wild contradictions. It is at once funny and sad, depressing and hopeful. While it may lack cohesion, “Brazil” succeeds in enthralling the viewer from start to finish. by Matt Diedrich movie reviewer