The Borneo Post

Terry Gilliam’s ‘cursed’ Don Quixote film hits new hurdle

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PARIS: One of the most cursed fi lms in the history of cinema hit a new snag on Wednesday which may sink its chances of being shown at the Cannes fi lm festival next month.

Terry Gilliam has spent nearly two decades trying to make “The Man Who Killed Don Quixote”, with his herculean efforts to adapt Cervantes’ “unfi lmable” novel for the big screen the subject of an acclaimed documentar­y, “Lost in La Mancha”.

But just as the Monty Python veteran has fi nished the fi lm, its former producer Paul Branco has obtained a French court order stopping it from being shown in cinemas.

Branco claims that the fi lm with “Star Wars” actor Adam Driver and Jonathan Pryce is “illegal” and that his Alfama Films rather than Gilliam own the rights to it.

Appeal court judges in Paris said on Wednesday they would rule on the dispute between the 77-year- old British director and the man who has previously referred to as “the Portuguese chap” in June.

A French court had earlier heard that there was a falling out between Gilliam and Branco when the Portuguese producer failed to raise the budget for a 2016 attempt to make the fi lm.

Branco claims the rights to the fi lm had been ceded to him.

When Gilliam found other backers to fi nally make the fi lm last year Branco went to the French courts to stop him.

Judges ruled last May that the new production could not but halted but that Branco held the rights to the movie.

‘Demands are laughable’

Gilliam, who did an improvised tap dance outside the courtroom, told AFP that Branco had “nothing to do with the (fi nal) fi lm”.

“There is no negotiatin­g with him — his demands are laughable, absurd. He is trying to make as much money as he possibly can from a fi lm he did not produce,” he added.

“In the meantime the fi lm is being delayed. I love this fi lm, it is really amazing, the actors are phenomenal... They all hate him to the point they are going to make the fi lm successful.”

And Gilliam said the fi lm — which he de s c r ib e d as “hugely beautiful” — may yet be shown at the world’s biggest fi lm festival in May.

“Cannes is still deliberati­ng. When they saw the fi lm they said it was wonderful. I don’t know what the rules of Cannes are. If you show the fi lm for free in the festival, there is no way it can be stopped.”

But Branco told AFP that the US$ 21 million fi lm had been shot “illegally, without the rights” and that he was confident the judges would side with him.

He said it was “absolutely false” that he had demanded 3.5 million euros from Gilliam and the new producers. “We have always wanted mediation, for this to be decided round a table, but the other side would not accept that.”

The producer said he hoped that “the fi lm will be released one day — fi lms are made to be seen — but legally.” — AFP

 ??  ?? Gilliam poses during a photo session last month at the Opera Bastille in Paris. — AFP file photo
Gilliam poses during a photo session last month at the Opera Bastille in Paris. — AFP file photo

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