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Lost in La Mancha
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For years, one of filmmaker Terry Gilliam's great dreams was to make a screen adaptation of Miguel de Cervantes Saavedra's classic tale Don Quixote, and in 2000 it looked as if his dream was to become a reality. In collaboration with Tony Grisoni, Gilliam had written a script called The Man Who Killed Don Quixote, in which a 20th century advertising man accidentally travels back in time and is mistaken by Don Quixote for his faithful companion, Sancho Panza. After ten years of shopping the project to American studios with no success, Gilliam and his producers had secured financing for the film from a consortium of European sources, and Johnny Depp had been cast as the time-tripping adman, with the venerable French actor Jean Rochefort as Don Quixote. However, as the production moved closer to its start date, more and more things began to go wrong -- contracts went unsigned, key cast and crew members had not yet arrived, and the carefully prepared budget seemed stressed to the breaking point. Nevertheless, Gilliam soldiered on, but after a mere six days of shooting, during which Spanish Air Force jets ruined several takes, flash floods destroyed several sets, and Gilliam struggled to keep his dream afloat, Rochefort suffered a severe back injury. The film's financiers decided to cash in their chips and pulled the plug in order to cash in on their insurance, though Gilliam struggled for months afterward to find a way to put the production back on track. Documentary filmmakers Keith Fulton and Louis Pepe had been invited by Gilliam to make a film about the production of The Man Who Killed Don Quixote, and after shooting 80 hours of footage of the chaotic pre-production process as well as the aborted shooting schedule, they instead created Lost In La Mancha, a look at the "un-making" of the film, which along with the story of the project's brief rise and messy collapse, featured a look at several completed scenes from the film, as well as animated versions of the film's storyboards which offered a glimpse of the look and scale of the film Gilliam was attempting to create. ~ Mark Deming, All Movie Guide
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"Folks in the current economy just haven’t warmed to the whole Blu-ray concept just yet. So while they are still commercially viable (even though they are waning in popularity), there are still a number of special edition DVDs funneling into the market. As the holiday approaches, it can be confusing for consumers as they toggle between ch " [More]
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"Lost in La Mancha made me realize something... Terry Gilliam can't really make movies. He can come up with really captivating ideas and he can run them into the ground through self-destructive madness. I would put Gilliam in the same bin as Herzog in terms of sheer madness when making films. The sad thing is that Gilliam doesn't have nearly as many successes. In short, watch this movie. It is a great view into his life and mind. " [More]
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Review by All Movie Guide
All Movie Guide
is neutral about it.
Keith Fulton and Louis Pepe's Lost in La Mancha is a moderately engaging account of iconoclastic director Terry Gilliam's misbegotten attempt to film The Man Who Killed Don Quixote, an adaptation of Miguel de Cervantes' classic novel. Like Hearts of Darkness: A Filmmaker's Apocalypse and Les Blank's Burden of Dreams, Lost in La Mancha shows how a filmmaker's own obsessions can bring about disaster. Unlike those films, Lost in La Mancha is not brilliant filmmaking, and it doesn't stand nearly as well on its own, which is problematic. To begin with, the disasters that befall Gilliam's set aren't particularly dramatic. There's the illness of his leading man, Jean Rochefort, and a badly trained horse that doesn't follow Gilliam's direction as he tries to shoot a scene to impress a group of investors. The most dramatic setback is a particularly violent hailstorm that temporarily decimates the film's desert set. It's also interesting to watch some of the internal conflicts, as Gilliam tries to protect his embattled assistant director, Phil Patterson, who doesn't seem particularly eager to continue with the shoot. As a companion piece to a film that doesn't exist, this is pretty interesting stuff, but as a finished product, in and of itself, it's nothing special. The few teasing glimpses of Gilliam's unfinished film that Fulton and Pepe provide make one hope that some day, Lost in La Mancha will take its rightful place beside its subject on some kind of deluxe DVD package. ~ Josh Ralske, All Movie Guide
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