gilliam_quixote

Terry Gilliam’s film The Man Who Killed Don Quixote has had such a troubled birth that it has become the stuff of cinema legend. The project, once the subject of the great documentary Lost in La Mancha, was famously beset by natural disasters and an incapacitated lead actor when Gilliam originally tried to shoot it in 2000. The director is going to try again, with a new cast and slightly different script. And now he claims he’s got one of the principal actors locked.

Trouble is, he’s not revealing the name. Gilliam tells Empire “We’re up and running again, we’ve rewritten the script and finally got it back, the budget’s come in… and I think we’ve found our Quixote! But who’s it going to be?” Answer: wait until next year. Gah!

Jean Rochefort was the film’s original Don Quixote, but a back injury rendered him unable to ride a horse (a definite prerequisite for the part) and so, in concert with a flash flood and audio interference from military jets, Rochefort’s condition was responsible for the original production being scrapped. So if Gilliam has a new actor for the part he’s halfway towards rebuilding the core cast. Gérard Depardieu and Michael Palin have both been mentioned in connection with the role in the past few years; we’ll have to wait to see if one of that pair won the role.

Meanwhile, there’s another character to cast: Toby Grisoni, the “advertising executive, who finds himself unstuck in time, [and] unwittingly travels between modern day London and 17th century La Mancha, where he participates in the adventures of Don Quixote, who mistakes him for Sancho Panza.” That’s from the Wikipedia synopsis, but some things have changed as the script has gone under the knife in recent months. For one thing, the Grisoni character (if that is still his name) is now a screenwriter, rather than an advertising guy.

Johnny Depp was originally cast as the character, who is named after Gilliam’s frequent collaborator Tony Grisoni. But while the role had been left open for Depp for some time, Gilliam has recently said that the actor won’t be returning and the role will be recast.

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  • Daniel Day Lewis for Don. I might get that printed on a t-shirt as part of my campaign.
  • topheavy
    Do it, my modern-day Quixote!!!! I love this man.
  • nycTrax
    I saw Lost in La Mancha at the Austin Film Festival a number of years ago. Met the directors as well. It was incredibly entertaining...and heartbreaking. I do think Gilliam has some, eh, issues with logistics. Yes, he's an incredible visual stylist...but anybody who's ever made a movie knows that directing is 90% being a traffic cop and maybe 10% being an artist. And if you can't direct traffic, then you can be sure the art side of it is going over the edge of the road...
  • Ricky
    Anybody but Depp or Downey jr.!
  • Kevin
    Twenty bucks says it's Michael Palin. Which will rock.
  • lamesaucegilliam
    This movie is cursed.
  • freemachine
    This article is a gyp. Russ, didn't they teach you about yellow journalism in high school?
  • Could it be Christopher Plummer?
  • hellojacktoad
    Damn, beat me to it. Of course it's gonna be him.
  • plagueoftruth
    He would be perfect.
  • Guest
    "Terry Gilliam Has His New Don Quixote; And the Winner Is…"

    Your headline is irritatingly misleading.
  • shadow
    agreed, this isn't news, this is the authors attempt to rouse up a Gilliam discussion.
  • plagueoftruth
    Which I don't have a problem with, but the article could have been titled something like 'Terry Gilliam Has His New Don Quixote. Keeping name under wraps.' Even question mark at the end of "and the winner is" would have been better than an ellipsis (which implies an answer is forthcoming.)

    I don't think Russ had any malevolent intentions but it does smell of the kind of trick cable news would pull.
  • plagueoftruth
    Agreed.
  • Justin
    Is he wearing one of the doll heads from Tideland around his neck? Sho nuff looks like it. Man he's cool.
  • Octoberist
    i would really love Depp to do it, but he's got Pirates and Lone Ranger. darn it
  • jasonb26
    geofrey rush would be a fun quixote.
  • cAP lOCK oN
    Making this movie is an impossible dream.
  • JPX
    When doesn't Gilliam have problems making movies? Gilliam made 1 or 2 good movies a very long time ago. I can't believe anyone would get excited about another Gilliam movie. It's the same story every time, his shoots are always fraught with chaos. Who cares?
  • Bundy
    Simply not true. Goes to show that you only know about THREE of his shoots.
  • plagueoftruth
    I'm curious what you think his "1 or 2 good movies" are. Brazil? Time Bandits? Monty Python and the Holy Grail? The Fisher King? 12 Monkeys?

    As far I can see, in his filmography he's only had one or two movies that weren't incredible.

    Do you know who we're talking about here or were you thinking of someone else?

    Were you being a hyperbolic troll or do you just have bad taste in movies?
  • Jeff W.
    All of those films you list are decades old. He has not done anything of significance in 15 years. Here are a few examples of garbage; Tideland, The Brothers Grimm, Fear and Loathing in Las Vegas, The Man Who Killed Don Quixote (oh wait, he couldn't get that together could he?). I can't imagine that The Imaginarium of Doctor Parnassus will be anything less than a complete mess.
  • plagueoftruth
    @Jeff W

    Yeah... I'm sorry that you feel Tideland and Fear and Loathing in Las Vegas are garbage. I have to disagree. Also 12 Monkeys was within the last 15 years. I'll agree with @greggorybasore that Brothers Grimm was a disappointment but it's overstating it to call it garbage.

    I also think it's kind of a low blow to say Gilliam "couldn't get that together" in reference to Don Quixote. If you've seen 'Lost in La Mancha' you would know that most of what happened to that film was out of his control.

    With all that said, your comment was that Gilliam "made 1 or 2 good movies a long time ago." I listed four films that he did before 15 years ago that were terrific (not even including 'The Adventures of Baron Munchausen' and 'Life of Brian.') I simply believe you weren't thinking out your comment and were trolling Gilliam for no reason. If you truly believe 2 or 3 of those films I mentioned are not good, I'd love to hear your reasoning.

    It seems to me that with so many hack directors making true "garbage" we should be treasuring directors like Gilliam and supporting works of astounding originality rather than being negative about them for the sake of negativity.
  • greggorybasore
    In reference to your list of recent Gilliam movies
    Tideland - was awesome
    Brothers Grimm - a disappointment
    Fear and Loathing in Las Vegas - an amazing classic
    Lost in La Mancha - a fascinating look into the hollywood system from a unique perspective that give an interesting idea of what might have been... yeah I know you were talking about the movie that didn't get made yet, but I figure this one was relevant
    The Imaginarium of Dr. Parnassus - looks like it could rock the fucking block off of things

    Seems to me that Terry Gilliam just isn't your cup of tea. That's cool, out of curiousness what is your cup of tea movie wise?
  • Chris_Hanson
    I care.
  • Octoberist
    he's so chaotic that, even if he's not as good as he was before, he's still a talent to look for. even now. Moreso than Tim Burton (as much as I like him, he's gotten too comfortable)
  • jank
    I care.
  • cAP lOCK oN
    Making this movie is an impossible dream.
  • Kind of bummed about Depp not reprising his role.. Oh well. I trust Gilliam to do what's best. What's right.

    I hope Gilliam gets this out there without any Crazy Storm Shit happening. I really hope he catches a break and shoots this without any major hassles. Lost in La Mancha was a wildly entertaining documentary, but a terribly heartbreaking experience to witness.

    Godspeed, Gilliam.
  • Chingon
    Coming Soon: Lost In La Mancha II: The Squeakel
  • Supper/dinner, lets eat
    I'm praying for Palin
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