Posts Tagged: ‘The Man Who Killed Don Quixote’

Tickets On Sale For Terry Gilliam’s “Damnation Of Faust”

January 23, 2011 Posted by Administrator

Tickets are now available for “Damnation of Faust” an opera directed by Terry Gilliam. Below is the information needed from the London Colesium.

Former Monty Python star and cult film-maker Terry Gilliam will be making his opera-directing debut when he takes on Berlioz’s dazzling “La Damnation de Faust” at the London Coliseum.

His kaleidoscopic take on Goethe’s Faust tells the old legend of the ivory-tower intellectual who forfeits his soul for love.
Read more about “The Damnation of Faust”, by Terry Gilliam ~~ London Coliseum at www.londondrum.com.

Venue: London Coliseum, 8 St. Martin’s Lane, Trafalgar Square, LondonRead more about “The Damnation of Faust”, by Terry Gilliam ~~ London Coliseum at www.londondrum.com
Tel: +44 (0) 871 472 0800
Dates:
Date:

6th, 8th, 12th, 14th, 18th, 20th and 27th May 2011 —
(6.30 PM on the 14th, and 3 PM on the 8th)
2nd, 4th and 7th June 2011 — 7.30 PM; (6.30 PM on the 4th)

Happy New Year!

December 31, 2010 Posted by Administrator

We, here at the Man Who Killed Don Quixote Support Site, just want to take a moment to thank all of you for your support, enthusiasm and participation as we take the journey to making The Man Who Killed Don Quixote with Terry Gilliam. You are each and everyone so very much appreciated. May you have the most wonderful of New Years and may the new year bring you good health, love, happiness, joy, success and THE MAN WHO KILLED DON QUIXOTE!

EXCLUSIVE! Terry Gilliam Tells Support Site About “Wholly Family” New Short Film

December 29, 2010 Posted by Administrator

EXCLUSIVE!
By Theresa Shell

Like many of you I had heard the rumors of Terry Gilliam making a new short film in Naples so, I contacted him and asked him if this was true and if it was, did he have anything to share with The Man Who Killed Don Quixote Support Site about the film. I just heard back from him and he tells me

“I am indeed doing a little film in Naples. It is being paid for by the Garofalo Pasta company. They’ve been sponsoring short films about Naples every year for the last four. I wrote the script as an exercise. It’s called The Wholly Family.”

Gilliam went on to tell me that the film is based on his script, not on the Eve Merriam poem as some may have thought. He continued to say,

“Nicola [Pecorini] is behind the camera once again as well as Gabriella Pscucci stitching the costumes.”

Filming in beautiful Naples definitely has it’s perks. Gilliam has found

“…the food is fantastic!”

EXCLUSIVE: Terry Gilliam Confirms To Us That He Will Head Composite Fantasy 1884!

December 18, 2010 Posted by Administrator

I am so excited to share with you that this morning Terry Gilliam confirmed to the Man Who Killed Don Quixote Support Site that he will be heading up the retro sci-fi fantasy 1884! We are SO excited about this.

Terry’s brilliant, fantastic animation has been loved by audiences for decades.

The Film Stage reports that “the Monty Python animator will head “a retro sci-fi fantasy” set in a steam punk world. The film will feature live-action puppets with CGI heads and the actors’ eyes/mouths. The story is about a bumbling secret agent charged with stopping an imperalist’s plans for world domination with his steam-powered war machine. Some of Gilliam’s fellow Pythons will loan their voices to the characters, but they remain unnamed at the moment.”

Terry Gilliam’s “Man Who Killed Don Quixote” In Mexico?

October 21, 2010 Posted by Administrator

Source: Morelia Film Festival

By: Gobi Stromberg
At the press conference on Sunday, hosted by Daniela Michel, Director of the FICM, the media questioned the Festival’s featured Director, Terry Gilliam was asked about his plans for the next project which he is currently in the process of filming, The Man who Killed Don Quixote. After speaking of his personal enchantment with Cervantes’ character, he claimed: “All men are chasing after windmills.”
“Going to Mexico has been a secret in the back of my mind. I love the spirit of Mexico; especially the Day of the Dead…” He added that he is, “blown away by the architecture.” When he further speculated that he is considering filming his next film, The Man who Killed Don Quixote, in Mexico, he surprised –and delighted- his audience, who were hearing this news for the first time.

VIDEO: Teaser Trailer To Terry Gilliam’s “Legend Of Hallowdega”

October 11, 2010 Posted by Administrator

Check out the teaser trailer for Terry Gilliam’s short film, “The Legend of Hallowdega” which will premier on October 31, 2010. The film stars David Arquette and Justin Kirk. I can’t wait!

Terry Gilliam Champion Of The Little Film Makers

August 16, 2010 Posted by Administrator

Here’s a great article on Terry Gilliam and his continued fight for little film makers. A fight which as his fans we have all joined with him and believe in so strongly.

Source: Suite 101

Into the new Millennium Gilliam continues trying to make films his way in the face studio opposition and other set backs.

The Second Rise of Terry Gilliam

In 2000 Terry Gilliam made what is probably the most famous non-existent film ever. He began production on a long planned project called The Man Who Killed Don Quixote. The film starred Jean Rochefort as Cervantes’ character and Johnny Depp as a time-traveling ad executive Quixote mistakes for his squire, Sancho Panza.
Lost In La Mancha

The film was plagued with disasters. Floods, close proximity to a UN plane-testing site stalled filming. Jean Rochefort developed an intestinal virus that meant he had to return to France for treatment, and the financiers’ insurance company shut down the film indefinitely. The entire episode was chronicled in the film Lost in La Mancha by documentarians Louis Pepe and Keith Fulton. Gilliam always tried to keep the project alive, and has recently started preproduction on a new version that will now star Robert Duvall and Ewan McGregor.
Gilliam Versus Hollywood Round 2

Following the failure of his Quixote film, Gilliam didn’t make another film for five years. Since his last movie came out in 1998, it would be seven years in between completed films. The film that came next was another battle with studio heads for Gilliam, but it wouldn’t result in the same victory as Brazil.

READ MORE HERE

Terry Gilliam – “I’m just a really old groupie”

August 5, 2010 Posted by Administrator

Source: MTV

By Eric Ditzian

I’m just a really old groupie,’ the director jokes.

Terry Gilliam had been gearing up this summer for pre-production on “The Man Who Killed Don Quixote” — a famously troubled film the director first started shooting a decade ago only to see it collapse — when what Gilliam calls a financial “hiccup” again interrupted work. That’s when he got a call from the Arcade Fire, asking if he’d like to join the band on tour and direct a webcast of their concert at Madison Square Garden.

“I have to thank them for liberating me from weeks of depression,” Gilliam laughed.

And so since late last week, Gilliam has been riding on the band’s tour bus, checking out shows in support of their new album, The Suburbs, and figuring out exactly how he’s going to capture their epic sound for computer screens. The effort is part of American Express’ “Unstaged,” a series of concerts by artists like Alicia Keys and John Legend streamed over the Web.

As he readies plans to film the Arcade show on Thursday (August 5), Gilliam gave MTV News a call to chat about his existential connection with the band, the difference between making movies and making music and why he’s hoping not to inflict “too much Terry Gilliam” on the webcast.

MTV: It was surprising, in a very good way, to hear about an Arcade Fire/ Terry Gilliam collaboration. How’d the whole thing come together?

Gilliam: Less than two weeks ago, I got contacted by their manager asking if I’d be interested. There just happened to be a little gap in my life, and it’s something I’ve never done, and I’ve been a fan of the band since Funeral. I thought, “Why not? Just leap off the edge of the cliff and see what happens.”

MTV: Did they know that you were a fan or something?

Terry Gilliam: I don’t know. It turned out that they like my stuff, and maybe the band and I will develop a relationship, so this really has become a meeting as opposed to anything else. I hate the fact that this word “directing” is being slammed all over the place. I’m not directing. I’m just hanging out with them. I’m just a really old groupie.

MTV: So if you wouldn’t call it directing, what are you doing in preparation and then on the day of the show? Will you be in the control room calling for cameras?

Terry Gilliam: I’m still working it out, which is what is so wonderful. I’ve been with the band since Montreal on Friday night. I’ve seen three shows already. I’m just trying to work out what we’re doing. The reason I’m so relaxed about it is that the show is so good that I don’t have to do anything. You just point some cameras at it and it’ll be great. The cameras and the team that does that are already in place. All I’m trying to do is make sure what they capture is true to what the band is doing. The band has got guys mixing their own cameras up on the screen and pulling in material that they’ve already assembled. When I saw that, I realized, “I don’t have anything to do!” which is good, because they’ve got great stuff, and anything I might do is just unnecessary and may end up being too much Terry Gilliam.

MTV: There can never be too much Terry Gilliam!

Terry Gilliam: Oh, I’ve read the reviews. Come on!

MTV: So what have your conversations been like with Win Butler and the band as you hang out and get closer to the live stream?

Terry Gilliam: It’s all about knowing who they are and how they see things. They come from the suburbs and I come from the suburbs. The music resonated as much with me as it does with contemporary suburban kids or kids trying to get out of the suburbs. There are those that stay behind in this kind of Middle Earth that is neither country nor city, neither good nor bad, but a place that if you’re creative, you just need to get away from. You want to get where it’s painful.

MTV: So are you just going to be kicking back having a beer on show night?

Terry Gilliam: I’m in the middle of it! I don’t know what will happen! They said, “Just come along and we’ll see what happens.” In many ways, if we get on well, there’s something in the future that can be more thought-out. When Win and I first talked on the phone, I said, “Win, when I make a movie, I’m a couple years in preparation so that when I get to shooting, it’s so much a part of my being that I’m not even thinking about it. It’s not like we’re playing music and I’m at the piano and you come in with a guitar and we make a song.” The whole thing is very relaxed and we’ll see what else it leads to if I don’t make too many mistakes.

MTV: Are you guys thinking about a more in-depth documentary?

Terry Gilliam: Those conversations are floating around with other people and I’m staying out of them and seeing where this leads. It’s exploratory for us and for the band.

MTV: Have you gone back and looked at some classic concert documentaries?

Terry Gilliam: Nope! I don’t watch concerts very often. I’ve been in a couple. I was in the “Concert for George.” [Monty] Python was a big part of that. That was such a great night. The atmosphere was astonishing. When you see the DVD, it’s fine for people that weren’t there, but it was not what we experienced. That’s the problem with DVDs and webcasts — it’s just a fraction of the experience of being in the room. It’s always difficult to capture that. That’s why theater is theater. It’s that moment and no other moment.

MTV: You sound so chilled out! I think it’s great that you’re just going with the flow on this whole thing.

Terry Gilliam: It’s been so much fun. We’ve had a documentary camera running around following me when I’m talking to the band. I have no idea what that will end up being. When I work on a film, everything is so controlled. So the idea of someone with a camera, wiggling it around at us when we’re talking, I’m hoping it might be liberating. Because I don’t care!

Terry Gilliam to direct Arcade Fire webcast August 5th

July 27, 2010 Posted by Administrator

Terry Gilliam will be directing the YouTube webcast from Montreal based indie rock quintet Arcade Fire at Madison Square Garden on August 5, 2010. Check out the details below:

Source: Consequence of Sound

By Alex Young

We already have the details, but now we know who will be putting them all together. Terry Gilliam — best known for his work as a member of the Monty Python comedy troupe and as director of such films as Brazil, 12 Monkeys, and, most recently, The Imaginarium of Doctor Parnassus — will oversee the YouTube webcast of Arcade Fire’s August 5th performance at Madison Square Garden.

The performance, which is said to be featuring “special guests,” will be broadcast live, starting at 10:00 PM EST via a special YouTube channel. Viewers of the webcast will have the ability to select multiple camera angles as well as submit photos of their own “suburbs,” which may be featured on stage during the band’s performance of one song.

The broadcast will officially kick off “Unstaged,” a new online concert series being launched by American Express and streamed on YouTube. It’s the first in a planned series of five live streamed concerts, with John Legend and The Roots to follow. Others will be announced later.

In other news, Arcade Fire has a new album due out on August 3rd. It’s quite good.

Terry Gilliam’s New Take On The Man Who Killed Don Quixote

June 30, 2010 Posted by Administrator

I couldn’t wait to share this great new article by Brendon Connelly with all of you. Brendon has been such a great supporter of our goals at the Support Site and it is my privilege to call him friend. He is one of the best, most knowledgeable film journalists out there and has been a fan and student of all things Gilliam for years. Take a moment to read the new article he has written about the Terry’s big changes to The Man Who Killed Don Quixote below:

Source: Bleeding Cool

By Brendon Connelly

If everything goes to plan, Terry Gilliam will commence production this September on his new, improved, second version of The Man Who Killed Don Quixote. It’s a full decade now since cameras first turned on the project, and as the tragicomic documentary Lost in La Mancha so painfully showed, quite quickly stopped turning again.

There’s quite a few differences this time: Robert Duvall is the new Quixote, Ewan McGregor is the new “Sancho Panza figure” Toby Grosini and – as a result of Johnny Depp no longer being involved, I’m sure – the budget has been tightened up a little. Perhaps the most dramatic change, however, is one to the very concept at the heart of the film.

Last time around, it went something like this: Advertising ‘creative’ Toby Grosini is in Spain shooting a Quixote-themed commercial. He’s introduced to a man who claims to be the real Don Quixote. A little later, in the midst of a little trauma, Grosini finds himself transported to Quixote’s Spain by a little gypsy magic – either in reality, or by his imagination. Or indeed, in reality by his imagination.

The first big change has already been reported: McGregor’s Grosini is to be a screenwriter of movies, not an ad man. Here’s the second, fundamental difference though: this time, there’s to be no scenes set in period Spain. All of the scenes with Quixote and Grosini as his Sancho Panza are to be set in the here-and-now. READ MORE HERE

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