Seeing Gilliam's vision falter is simply painful and joyless.
Lost in La Mancha (2003)
Tomatometer
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Reviews Counted:97
Fresh:91
Rotten:6
Average Rating:7.5/10
Consensus: An engrossing look at what can go wrong on a movie set.
Theatrical Release:Jan 31, 2003 Limited
Box Office: $418,536
Synopsis: "Making a film is essentially about two things: belief and momentum" -- Terry Gilliam Lost In La Mancha may be the first "un-making of" documentary. In a genre that exists to hype films before... "Making a film is essentially about two things: belief and momentum" -- Terry Gilliam Lost In La Mancha may be the first "un-making of" documentary. In a genre that exists to hype films before their release, Lost In La Mancha presents an unexpected twist: it is the story of a film that does not exist. Instead of a sanitised glimpse behind the scenes, Lost In La Mancha offers a unique, in-depth look at the harsher realities of filmmaking. With drama that ranges from personal conflicts to epic storms, this is a record of a film disintegrating. In September 2000, when the cameras began rolling on Terry Gilliam's adaptation of Don Quixote, the production already had a chequered past including ten years of development, a series of producers and two previous attempts to start the film. Gilliam had achieved the difficult task of financing the $32 million budget entirely within Europe -- a feat that would provide him with freedom from the creative restrictions of Hollywood. The uphill journey was not, however, inconsistent with Gilliam's career: his more than fifteen year history of battling the Hollywood machine had cast him, like Quixote, as a visionary dreamer who rages against gigantic forces. Joining the Madrid based production team eight weeks before the shoot, Lost In La Mancha directors Keith Fulton and Louis Pepe witness the successes as well as the failures. Problems are quick to emerge: the multilingual crew struggles to communicate detailed ideas; actors remain absent as they run over schedule on other projects; and everything from untrained horses to a sound stage -- that isn't sound-proof -- threatens the film. But through it all, there is the palpable, mounting excitement that Gilliam's ideas will finally come to fruition: the crew watch test footage of marauding giants; puppeteers rehearse a troop of life-size marionettes; Gilliam and Johnny Depp brainstorm over the script. By the time Jean Rochefort straps on his Quixote armour, success, though far off, seems almost possible. Not long into production disaster strikes: flash floods destroy sets and damage camera equipment; the lead actor falls seriously ill; and on the sixth day production is brought to its knees. Uniquely, after Quixote's cameras have stopped rolling, the documentary continues to record events as they unfold: the crew waits, insurance men and bondsmen scramble with calculators and interpretations of "force majeure" and behind it Gilliam struggles to maintain both belief and momentum in his project. In the best tradition of documentary filmmaking, Lost In La Mancha captures all the drama of this story through "fly-on-the-wall" vérité footage and on-the-spot interviews. Gilliam's plans for the non-existent film come alive in animations of his storyboards, narrated and voiced by co-writer Tony Grisoni and Gilliam himself. And with the camera tests of the leading actors and the rushes from the only six days of photography, Lost In La Mancha offers a tantalizing glimpse of the cinematic spectacle that might have been. Lost In La Mancha is less a process piece about filmmakers at work and more a powerful drama about the inherent fragility of the creative process -- a compelling study of how, even with an abundance of the best will and passion, the artistic endeavor can remain an impossible dream. -- © IFC Films [More]
Starring: Terry Gilliam, Johnny Depp, Jean Rochefort
Starring: Terry Gilliam, Johnny Depp, Jean Rochefort
Director: Keith Fulton, Louis Pepe
Director: Keith Fulton, Louis Pepe
Producer: Lucy Darwin
Composer: Miriam Cutler
Studio: IFC Films
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Reviews for Lost in La Mancha
There's no higher message here - just the pleasure of watching hotshot producers, filmmakers and actors bicker with one another, with insurance companies, with fate.
A fascinating study in the cinematic arts, as we watch a talented director and a committed crew and cast thwarted by nature, human failings and just plain bad luck.
Things always fall apart, especially in film production, but never has it been so painfully apparent than in Lost in La Mancha.
Filmmaker Terry Gilliam is a genius…in a chitty chitty bang bang meets Orson Welles way.
[Works best] as an entry in the genre of Hollywood schadenfreude pioneered by the 1991 Apocalypse Now documentary Hearts of Darkness.
A frank and fascinating spectacle, as one man's 10-year cinematic odyssey painfully disintegrates.
I'd like Lost in La Mancha more if it didn't take the easy but misleading route of dovetailing Gilliam's frustrations into Welles's, and then dovetailing both into Quixote's.
You can interpret Lost in La Mancha as a sort of triumph of the creative spirit.
A funny, factual, and heartbreaking chronicling of what happens when man and God work in harmony to doom a film in mid-birth.
It's fascinating, and I bit off every one of my fingernails from the stress.
It seems more suited to the "extras" side of a DVD than a theatrical release.
It's been said that Reservoir Dogs inspired thousands of video store clerks to pick up movie cameras. I would suspect that Lost in La Mancha might make them get back behind the counter.
Should be required viewing for all film-school students, aspiring filmmakers and studio suits.
Latest News for Lost in La Mancha
October 08, 2009:
Gilliam Finds His Don Quixote ![]()
Wonders never cease: Terry Gilliam tells Empire that his Don Quixote movie finally has the right script, a budget, and a leading man -- although he's staying mum on who that... More...
July 01, 2009:
Gilliam's Don Quixote Moving Ahead Without Depp? ![]()
Terry Gilliam is looking ahead to his upcoming projects, including the long-tortured-by-delays "The Man Who Killed Don Quixote" -- which, it appears, will be filming without... More...
May 15, 2009:
Cannes 2009: Don Quixote Rides Again
Terry Gilliam's seemingly cursed adaptation of The Man Who Killed Don Quixote is set to be revived, nearly 10 years after his first crack at the material was abandoned.
The... More...
August 05, 2008:
Gilliam's Don Quixote Back On? ![]()
Its behind-the-scenes difficulties were so incredible that they spawned a movie of their own -- but will there be a happy ending after all for Terry Gilliam's The Man Who Killed... More...
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