Category: ‘Terry Gilliam’

EXCLUSIVE! New Horizons Film Festival (Poland) To Show Terry Gilliam Retrospective & New Book

July 20, 2011 Posted by Administrator

Terry Gilliam Istanbul Culture Fest 2011

EXCLUSIVE by Theresa Shell

I received an email from Terry Gilliam this morning telling me that,

“I’ll be attending the New Horizons Film Festival in Wroclaw, Poland from 25-28 July where they are doing a retrospective of my films and premiering a new book on me and whatever it is I’ve been doing for the last 40 years.”

CLICK HERE FOR MORE INFO ON THE NEW HORIZONS FILM FESTIVAL

Terry also sent a picture of the cover of the book that will be premiering on his work at the festival. It’s an amazing cover!

Congrats to Terry from all of us at the Man Who Killed Don Quixote Support Site. Can’t wait to get our hands on this book!

Terry Gilliam Short Film, “Wholly Family” To Be Part of LA Short Festival Opening Program 7/21/11

July 19, 2011 Posted by Administrator

"Wholly Family" A Terry Gilliam Short Film

Just received an email from Amy Gilliam with exciting news! Terry Gilliam’s short film, “Wholly Family” will be part of the opening night program for the LA Short Film Fest on July 21, 2011. Don’t miss it if you’re in LA! Here’s the film fest link and the Italian trailer link for you! http://lashortsfest.com/content.asp?PageID=2

Unfortunately, Terry will not be able to attend the opening but the Gilliam’s send their best and hopes you will be able to attend.

Italian Trailer: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=DA4sA4WHbrg

Terry Gilliam Joins Pythons As They Reunite In Graham Chapman Tribute Film

June 27, 2011 Posted by Administrator

Source: NY TIMES

LOS ANGELES — You can kill him, cremate him and (ostensibly) kick his ashes around the stage at a comedy festival in Aspen.

But you can’t keep a funny guy down.

Graham Chapman, whose death from cancer in 1989 forever closed the door on a full reunion of the Monty Python comedy troupe, will soon be back in what might be the next best thing: he will star in a 3-D animated version of his absurdist memoir, “A Liar’s Autobiography: Volume VI,” with most or all of the surviving Python members performing roles that are cut together with Chapman’s voice from a taped reading made shortly before he died.

Produced and directed by Bill Jones, Ben Timlett and Jeff Simpson, who are based in London, the project continues a chaotic afterlife for the creators of “Monty Python’s Flying Circus,” a BBC comedy series whose run ended in 1974. They have resurfaced in films, on Broadway and in a 1998 appearance at the Aspen Comedy Arts festival, during which Terry Gilliam of the group kicked over what appeared to be an urn containing Mr. Chapman’s ashes. (In fact, those were scattered elsewhere.)

In keeping with the scrambled nature of all things Python, the new film has 15 animation companies working on chapters that will range from 3 to 12 minutes in length, each in a different style.

READ MORE HERE

Terry Gilliam’s “Damnation of Faust” To Air On BBC!

May 28, 2011 Posted by Administrator

Our wishes are answered! Terry Gilliam’s “Damnation of Faust” is coming to television! Thanks to BBC!

Source: Intermezzo

Terry Gilliam’s Nazi-tasting ENO production of The Damnation of Faust is to air on BBC4 this autumn.

The director himself will introduce the work for TV.

In recent years, opera on BBC TV has been the near-exclusive preserve of the Royal Opera House. While ENO have teamed up with Sky Arts for a series of gimmicks like ‘”3-D Lucrezia” and “Multiview Bohème”, I can’t remember when one of their productions last aired on a terrestrial channel. Could this signal a longer-term switch in BBC affiliations?

Video Trailer – Terry Gilliam’s “Wholly Family”

May 20, 2011 Posted by Administrator

Check out the trailer to Terry Gilliam’s new short film, “Wholly Family”!

Video Trailer – “The Monster of Nix” Terry Gilliam, Tom Waits Animated Short!

May 18, 2011 Posted by Administrator

Check out this trailer for “The Monster of Nix” the Dutch animated short featuring the voices of Terry Gilliam and Tom Waits. Gilliam and Waits are an unbeatable pairing. The film should be fantastic!

NEW! Terry Gilliam Interview 05/16/11

May 16, 2011 Posted by Administrator

Source: Dreams

By Phil Stubbs

What personal themes were you able to bung into the script of The Wholly Family?
My love of Pulcinella. My love of dancing in chapels! And my love of dysfunctional families. Garafalo Pasta has sponsored it. The rules of doing this little film were as follows: it has to be about Naples and nobody gets killed in it. There’s a place called San Gregario Armeno, which is a street in Naples which I’ve been fascinated with because they sell all these little carved figures, presepi, which are nativity scenes. They are wonderful elaborate things, and I’ve always liked that street in particular and what they do there.

One of the things they also carve out is Pulcinella, and I have always loved them. We started with that, and I though what better than an arguing unhappy family? One that can be transformed by an experience with Pulcinella.

Terry Gilliam - "Wholly Family"

You didn’t have to show anyone eating pasta
No, but we do. It’s not because I had to, it’s because I wanted to. That’s the good thing about it. I wrote the thing very quickly, and these were just the things that intrigued me.

Was the experience a happy one?
It was good fun. Nicola and I say we must keep making these one-reelers, these short films: 20 minutes long. That’s all we ought to keep doing, it’s good fun – one week’s shooting and off we go, and another one is done. It was great fun, great to be able to spend time in Naples, because I have always been intrigued by Naples, so I got to see a lot more of it and understand a lot more of it: a wondrous place.

You were shooting digitally, how did you find that?
It was fine. It’s got its limitations, but it’s fine. It still looks good. I’m not convinced though… and if I do another film, it’d probably still be on film.

How does it look blown up on to a big screen?
It’s fine, no problem, looks good. We used the Arriflex Alexa which is the best camera out there at the moment.

I understand you used a Canon 7D as well
Yes, Nicola has his own Canon 7D. He just went out grabbed some stuff on a Sunday without the crew, just with the camera. At one point, we needed a Steadicam shot and we didn’t have a Steadicam. We couldn’t afford a proper Steadicam rig, so Nicola built a little basic form of Steadicam. It’s very simple – anyone could have one, probably cost nothing. We did some shooting with that and the Canon – and it looks great. I think Canons are fantastic. That’s what we used when we did the Talledega movie – that was all done on a Canon.

I’ve seen great results from a Canon 7D online
Well, if you blow it up big, it looks really good.

Our chance to see it will be on the web
I think when they release it at the end of May it will be on their website. It’s not the way to see it. But it really looks good on a big screen. You really get absorbed by the whole thing.

In March, it wasn’t available at the Bradford Film Festival as advertised
I was just finishing it… actually we just couldn’t get the DVD done in time. The Wholly Family is supposed to get its premiere in Italy in May. I’m to go to Rome on the May 24 to present it. So that will be its first official viewing.

When the opera is finished, have you anything else in the pipeline?
We’re still battling away at Quixote. In the next few weeks, we might get a better idea of what our chances are of raising it. At the same time I’m just dredging up an old script – the one Richard LaGravenese and I wrote years ago after The Fisher King – The Defective Detective. And we are just snooping around to see if there is any way we can move that one forward.

I’ve just got to get something going, and this opera in many ways has just been standing in the way. I’m only able to do one thing at a time. It’s like until I get it out of my system, I can’t get on to the next thing.

I’ve got another script I’ve been reading, because I just know I’ve got to get moving. It’s April now and if we’re going to do anything this year with Quixote, money has to materialise very quickly.

How much will The Defective Detective cost in its present form?
A lot more than all my other films – but on the other hand, Richard and I have been talking about what will the traffic bear? Is there a way of trimming the script down, changing the way of doing things? One of the things I tried doing with Parnassus tried doing what I wanted to do with The Defective Detective. Particularly in the scene where the drunk goes through and finds himself in the forest and the trees are two dimensional but the space is three dimensional and that’s what I wanted to do in The Defective Detective. I know that kind of thing works.

Can you reveal anything about that script you’ve been reading?
No!

Do you have any ideas for anything that might be low budget, 5 or 6 million? There seems to be more funding at that level.
No – you can have a few people walk around, talk and get in the car, drive and talk. You can do that, but I’m just more interested in trying to get more spectacular imagery up on screen.

There’s something called The Monster of Nix that you have been involved with…
A friend of mine a Dutch animator named Rosto, he does really interesting stuff and he talked me into doing one of the voices on this animated film. I was in there for a day doing voices and convincing him I couldn’t sing the song he had written. I connected him with Tom Waits as well, who has done a voice for it.

Tom and I we keep in touch trying to find something we can do together. I love him, maybe we can find a project we can work on… I think we could do a musical together, a very dark musical. He’s deep into his next album. Like me, he disappears from the world when he’s busy. I won’t hear from him in a while.

You appeared in a film for Christophe Goffette?
Yes, he publishes a magazine in France called Brazil. He’s great, he’s passionate, he’s mad. He beat me into submission. I have no idea what the result will be. I did my duty, let’s put it that way.

What did you do?
I don’t know! I don’t know what his film is?

You must have turned up and worn a costume or something?
I was in Deauville, for this retrospective and they gave me the Hommage award. I called it the Fromage award. Christophe grabbed me one afternoon, and said now you’ve got to do it. We went into this building and shot four different scenes. I still don’t know what it was about!

You are also appearing in Dixiewood
I’m a voice in a telephone conversation. That’s Theresa, I couldn’t say no to her! She’s been such a great supporter!

Our sincere thanks to our friends at Dreams for sharing this great interview with us!

Terry Gilliam’s “Wholly Family” To Have Multicast World Premier Via Computer 5/25/11! Register Now!

May 13, 2011 Posted by Administrator

Source: Bleeding Cool

By Brendon Connelly

Terry Gilliam’s new film, The Wholly Family, is to receive a World Premiere “multicast” on the 25th of May. Essentially, it’s going to be streamed to viewers simultaneously, like a world premiere not happening in just one location, but still with just one audience. The multicast, it’s said, will be bringing us all together to enjoy the premiere collectively.

In order to see the stream you’ll need to register in advance at My Movies. There’s a limited number of “tickets”, so I’d suggest signing up soon. Hopefully the limited number of allocations being allowed will ensure a manageable audience with no server problems or hiccups.

As the event is being organised and centralised in Italy, I’d assume the premiere time of 21:30 given will be Italian time – so, 20:30 for me.

UPDATE: To clarify – the film, which I’ve covered plenty of times on Bleeding Cool in the past, is expected to be around fifteen minutes long.

It goes without saying that I’ve signed up, of course. I recommend you do just the same thing yourself.

Thanks to Little Bleeder Anto Blueberry for the tip.

VIDEO: Audience Reacts To Terry Gilliam’s “Faust” – “Brilliant! Absolutely Brilliant!”

May 11, 2011 Posted by Administrator

Check out this video of the audience’s reactions to director Terry Gilliam’s new ENO opera, “The Damnation Of Faust”. It’s wonderful!

Congratulations Terry Gilliam and the ENO!

Excellent Review For Terry Gilliam’s “Faust”!

May 9, 2011 Posted by Administrator

Source: The Guardian

By Andrew Clements

At first sight it seems really perverse to invite Terry Gilliam to cut his teeth as an opera director on a work that isn’t really an opera at all.

Berlioz labelled it a “dramatic legend” and intended it for the concert hall; the pacing of the score, with its extended orchestral interludes and ballads, and character pieces for many of the solo vocal numbers, hardly suggests a living, breathing piece of theatre.

But the hazy dramatic boundaries, and the latitude for interpretation that Berlioz’s recasting of the Faust legend allows, gives a maverick creativity like Gilliam’s the freedom to flourish.

Working together with a creative team of huge experience, he has refracted the story through 100 years of German history and culture, from the 19th century to the Third Reich, from the romantic imagery of Caspar David Friedrich, through the grotesqueries of Otto Dix and George Grosz to Leni Reifenstahl’s film of the 1936 Olympics.

Sometimes too much is packed into each scene – if one imaginative stroke doesn’t quite hit the mark, another is likely to comes very soon after. But the best of what Gilliam comes up with is by turns breathtakingly imaginative and horrifyingly vivid, whether it’s the Hungarian March serving as a backdrop to the outbreak of world war one, Faust’s seduction of Marguerite while Kristallnacht is taking place outside her window, Marguerite’s final scene awaiting the train that will take her to a concentration camp, or Faust and Mephistopheles’s ride to the abyss in motorbike and sidecar.

No punches are pulled, the use of video is perfectly judged, and everything on stage has a musical as well as visual purpose.

Gilliam’s direction of the singers, whether en masse or individually, is detailed and precise too. Christopher Purves, right, as Mephistopheles is the master of ceremonies, by turns suave, demonic or caricature, and commandingly incisve in everything he sings. Peter Hoare as Faust, far right, is a bizarre hybrid between Shockheaded Peter, Friedrich Nietzsche, and a mad scientist; he sings his numbers with great style and sense of line; Christine Rice as Marguerite has two solos, the Ballad of the King of Thule and the Romance, and the still points of beauty. Only the chorus lack of presence disappoints, along with Edward Gardner’s undemonic treatment of some orchestral passages.

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