Terry Gilliam Still ‘Tired’ of #MeToo ‘Witch Hunt,’ White Men ‘Being Blamed for Everything’
According to the director of “The Man Who Killed Don Quixote,” the white male voice is simply being silenced these days.
According to the director of “The Man Who Killed Don Quixote,” the white male voice is simply being silenced these days.
Gilliam talks his long-suffering Cervantes epic, why he hated “Black Panther,” and how Marvel tells us “we all need to be superheroes to do anything worthwhile.”
“They can’t afford lawyers, clearly,” the filmmaker joked.
Screen Media has picked up the North American rights to the filmmaker’s plagued passion project.
While promoting “The Man Who Killed Don Quixote,” which received a mixed reception at Cannes, the director elaborated on the divisive nature of his films.
The filmmaker has been posting incredible one-sheets for his passion project on social media.
“He proved to be so much better than I ever imagined,” Gilliam says.
“It will be released all over the world,” Mariela Besuievsky says in a new interview.
The making of this film has been nothing if not quixotic.
Gilliam’s famously troubled project is finally finished and closing out the Cannes Film Festival. It’s far from perfect, but it might be his most personal movie.
After two decades of trying to get it made and a months-long legal battle against a former producer, Terry Gilliam finally premieres “Don Quixote” at Cannes this weekend.
“He Dreamed of Giants” is the third documentary from directing duo Keith Fulton and Louis Pepe.