by NEW VIDEO GROUP
| Average Rating: |
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| Sales Rank: | 21430 (lower is better) |
| Price Used: | $7.71 |
| Shipping: | Free Shipping on most orders over $25* |
| Availability: | Usually ships in 24 hours |
| Director: | Louis Pepe |
| Release Date: | 2003-06-24 |
| Label: | NEW VIDEO GROUP |
| UPC: | 767685954836 |
| Binding: | DVD |
| Published By: | NEW VIDEO GROUP |
| ASIN: | B000096FUD |
| Category: | DVD |
Actors and Actresses
Editorial Reviews and Product Descriptions
Description
A tantalizing documentary as hilarious as it is tragic, the critically acclaimed theatrical hit LOST IN LA MANCHA tracks maverick filmmaker Terry Gilliam's madcap mission to film The Man Who Killed Don Quixote. As he struggles to complete his masterpiece,
Amazon.com
Because Terry Gilliam is unquestionably one of the great film directors of our time, Lost in La Mancha, a documentary that captures the collapse of his attempt to make a movie out of Don Quixote, makes for fascinating but painful viewing. Dogged by a reputation for being wasteful and out-of-control, Gilliam had to fight to gather the funding for the project, but the assembled cast (including French actor Jean Rochefort and Johnny Depp) and the fantastic design elements promised something glorious. Then jets flying overhead, flash floods, and the ill health of a lead actor completely sideswiped the already delicate production. The increasing stress and unhappiness of the filmmakers is gripping, but what truly tantalizes are the few bits of film that Gilliam managed to shoot--only two or three minutes of screen time, but enough to suggest a magnificent vision. --Bret Fetzer
Customer Reviews
one last chance to raise money - Reviewed on 2008-08-20
This film is, basically, about an effort to raise money. In that the film failed, literally due to circumstances beyond the film maker's control, doesn't alter the fact that the film failed in production. The lead actor, playing the elderly Don Quixote, simply is too old and broken to carry the film to completion. In that the initial scenes are of this particular actor, the film simply doesn't have the money to start over again. Tragic, really, because a great film about the tragicomic Don Quixote is long in coming.
Anyway, the film failed and, in my humble opinion, 'Lost' is truly lost and is an awkward and embarassing effort to raise a few more Euros. Although Gilliam's final 'Don Quixote' may have been fascinating, this documentary of its failure simply isn't.
Nevertheless, I wish Gilliam well and hope he can raise the funds to make an even better film of the fabulous mad man, El Hombre de la Mancha.
Ron Braithwaite author of novels--"Skull Rack" and "Hummingbird God"--on the Spanish Conquest of Mexico
Dreams washed away ... - Reviewed on 2008-02-25
2 customers found this review helpful.
Yes, Lost in La Mancha is the documentary that you've heard about and seen snippets of on TLC and IFC late at night. It's the film that chronicles the misadventure of Terry Gilliam and his crew trying to reclaim ground over one of the most seemingly cursed film projects in cinema history.
Lost in La Mancha was supposed to be the big budget film that was going to showcase Johnny Depp, who, during the documentary says that he supports his friend, but very wisely keeps the whole production at arms length. This was probably the vehicle Depp wanted to launch himself into blockbuster-dom, but would have to wait for Pirates a few years later. But, no worries, I'm sure Johnny will manage just fine without Terry Gilliam.
What the viewer does learn from all of this is that terry Gilliam isn't the flamboyant hack that everyone in the movie business tries to make him out to be, but a serious and dedicated filmmaker who has an incredible and very intense vision of the world in which he tries to bring to life through a community process called filmmaking. It does seems a bit strange regarding Gilliam's string of really bad luck that follows him from pillar to post, especially with the recent death of heart-throb Heath Ledger.
While the documentary isn't that long at all and will end just as you're heavily intertwined within the story, you're left searching the DVD for extras and more information, which is probably how it should be.
The 'Burden' of Terry Gilliam's Quixotic Dreams. - Reviewed on 2008-01-17
1 customer found this review helpful.
This film reminds me of Les Blank's Burden of Dreams, a documentary about the many hardships director Werner Herzog encountered in making Fitzcarraldo. Many directors have tried to adapt Don Quixote to film, and at least several (Orsen Welles, for example) have lost their shirts in the process. Lost in La Mancha is a documentary (narrated by Jeff Bridges) about Terry Gilliam's very own failed Quixotic quest in filming The Man Who Killed Don Quixote, a movie adaptation of the novel. As Gilliam (known for Brazil, The Fisher King, 12 Monkeys) soon discovered, the episodic adventures of Don Quixote and his dim-witted squire, Sancho Panza, do not translate easily into film. Gilliam's film was to be set in Spain, and French actor Jean Rochefort was to play Don Quixote, Johnny Depp was to play Toby Grisoni (a Hollywood marketing executive, whom Quixote mistakes for Panza), and Vanessa Paradis (Depp's real life partner) was to play Toby's love interest. On their first day of filming, Gilliam's crew discovered their outdoor location was beneath a NATO jet flight path and near a target range. On the second day of shooting, their set was destroyed by a flash flood and hail of almost Biblical proportions. Several days later, Rochefort suffered a herniated disc, leaving him unable to mount his horse. This plague of problems ended the production, resulting in a $15 million insurance claim. As a result, Gilliam's Quixotic vision as a filmmaker only became further overshadowed by his reputation for being a financially out-of-control director. Both Herzog and Gilliam are true film geniuses. Just as Burden of Dreams offers Herzog fans a fascinating window into his work as a director, Lost in La Mancha reveals the behind-the-scenes "Burden" of Terry Gilliam's own dreams as a Quixotic director.
G. Merritt
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