Tuesday, 1 May 2018

The Man Who Killed Don Quixote trailer

quote [ Toby, a disillusioned advertising executive, becomes pulled in to a world of time jumping fantasy when a Spanish cobbler believes him to be Sancho Panza. He gradually becomes unable to tell dreams from reality. ]

The old man's rhyme has lost its reason
[SFW] [tv & movies] [+4 Good]
[by ScoobySnacks]
<-- Entry / Comment History

cb361 said @ 7:42am GMT on 1st May
What? This is actually happening? I can't wait to watch this movie! Right after I finish playing through Half Life 2 Episode 3.

I watched Lost in La Mancha many years ago, and remember the footage from when they started filming. The desert was dry and, yellow and beautiful, and Jean Rochefort on his horse looked incredible. In fact the whole thing looked incredible, and clearly the film was being made. I should have switched off the documentary there and then. Back in the real world, it started to rain.

I'm reading Walking on Glass by Iain Banks. I'm 80% of the way through, and I still don't understand what the fuck is going on, but I don't think I've ever read a book that seemed such a natural fit for Terry Gilliam's style. For example, two of the main characters are trapped in a massive fortress built from books and serviced by an army of blackly comic midgets, and which they can only escape by answering a paradoxical riddle. It screams Gilliam.


cb361 said @ 7:46am GMT on 1st May
What? This is actually happening? I can't wait to watch this movie! Right after I finish playing through Half Life 2 Episode 3.

I watched Lost in La Mancha many years ago, and remember the footage from when they began filming. The desert was dry and, yellow and beautiful, and Jean Rochefort on his horse looked incredible. In fact the whole thing looked incredible, and clearly the film was being made. I should have switched off the documentary there and then, and sat quietly to wait for the film premier. Back in the documentary world it started to rain.

I'm reading Walking on Glass by Iain Banks. I'm 80% of the way through, and I still don't understand what the fuck is going on, but I don't think I've ever read a book that seemed such a natural fit for Terry Gilliam's style. For example, two of the main characters are trapped in a massive fortress built from books and serviced by an army of blackly comic midgets, and which they can only escape from by answering a paradoxical riddle. It screams Gilliam.



<-- Entry / Current Comment
cb361 said @ 7:42am GMT on 1st May [Score:1 Interesting]
What? This is actually happening? I can't wait to watch this movie! Right after I finish playing through Half Life 2 Episode 3.

I watched Lost in La Mancha many years ago, and remember the footage from when they began filming. The desert was dry and, yellow and beautiful, and Jean Rochefort on his horse looked incredible. In fact the whole thing looked incredible, and clearly the film was being made. I should have switched off the documentary there and then, and sat quietly to wait for the film premier. Back in the documentary world it started to rain.

I'm reading Walking on Glass by Iain Banks. I'm 80% of the way through, and I still don't understand what the fuck is going on, but I don't think I've ever read a book that seemed such a natural fit for Terry Gilliam's style. For example, two of the main characters are trapped in a massive fortress built from books and serviced by an army of blackly comic midgets, and which they can only escape from by answering a paradoxical riddle. It screams Gilliam.




Posts of Import
Karma
SE v2 Closed BETA
First Post
Subscriptions and Things

Karma Rankings
ScoobySnacks
HoZay
Paracetamol
lilmookieesquire
Ankylosaur