Quote:"Don Quixote": Paulo Branco wins new lawsuit for Terry Gilliam's film rights
The producer of Paulo Branco reported that the London Court was right in another dispute around "The Man Who Killed Don Quixote." Now were the rights to the argument.
After the Tribunal de Grande Instance of Paris confirmed in May the validity of the contract between Alfama Films Production of producer Paulo Branco and director Terry Gilliam in the project "The Man Who Killed Don Quixote", the London Court ruled on 5 December rejected the request of the Recorded Picture, of the producer Jeremy Thomas, of the expiration of the option on the rights of the argument.
The information was advanced by Leopardo Filmes, also by Paulo Branco, who in a statement stressed that the decision "confirms that Alfama Films Production is in full possession of the rights over the argument and condemns the Recorded Picture to reimburse it all court costs. "
The statement from the producer of Paulo Branco adds that the two verdicts so far known are that "Alfama Films Production and Leopardo Filmes are the only ones that have all the rights to this film with all the consequences that result."
There is no official reaction from Terry Gilliam and the other producers involved in this co-production between Portugal, Spain, France, Belgium and England.
This is yet another chapter in the contractual dispute between Paulo Branco and Terry Gilliam, who in October 2016 ravaged Portuguese on social networks, formalizing the breach of trust for this allegedly failing to fulfill promises related to the financing of the project.
Although the contract dispute continues in the courts, the filming eventually progressed, with the Portuguese coproducer Ukbar Filmes. The budget was 16 million euros, of which 1.2 million euros were spent in our country, said in May producer Pandora da Cunha Telles.
With an argument by Terry Gilliam and Tony Grisoni, "The Man Who Killed Don Quixote" is a transposition of Miguel Cervantes' well-known novel for the present. It is a project of passion that the director tried to do for almost 20 years and whose filming began in 2000 with Johnny Depp. An acclaimed documentary, "Lost in La Mancha," from 2002, showed the misfortunes surrounding production, from actor-to-storm illnesses that wreaked havoc, scheduling conflicts, and financial problems.
In this new version, American actor Adam Driver ("Star Wars: The Awakening of the Force", "Paterson") is an advertiser who returns to Spain and meets a man who thinks he is Don Quixote, played by Jonathan Pryce. The French actress of Ukrainian origin Olga Kurylenko is also part of the cast.
Original article here (in Portuguese): https://mag.sapo.pt/cinema/atualidade-ci...ry-gilliam
Here's hoping Amazon steps in soon.