Documentary about director Stephan Elliott's career after making award winning, fan favourite and festival darling- Priscilla Queen Of The Desert. The film touches on Welcome To Woop Woop, b... Read allDocumentary about director Stephan Elliott's career after making award winning, fan favourite and festival darling- Priscilla Queen Of The Desert. The film touches on Welcome To Woop Woop, but mostly focuses on the making of his second follow up, Eye Of The Beholder. Directed by ... Read allDocumentary about director Stephan Elliott's career after making award winning, fan favourite and festival darling- Priscilla Queen Of The Desert. The film touches on Welcome To Woop Woop, but mostly focuses on the making of his second follow up, Eye Of The Beholder. Directed by Elliott's friend and collaborator, Lizzie Gardiner, you get an intimate and what feels lik... Read all
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That said, however, the truly fascinating part of the film is the singlemindedness with which the director views his project. Not only does he not see that "Beholder" is incoherrent and laughable, he actually believes that he is creating a visual masterpiece. Instead of scoffing at his naivety, however, I actually began to root for him and admire his dedication to his vision. This film almost succeeds as an expose of an artist's battles against the shallow studio system. The only problem, of course, being that the execs were justifiably upset by the fact that "Beholder" is such a god-awful film. The film succeeds almost accidentally, however, as an insight into the creative mind of the artist, and how dedication to one's vision is just as alive and well for the bad artists and hacks as it is in the work of the true visionaries.
Elliott is subjected to numerous meetings with "the suits", the money end of film making which require the charming and affable director to lie and assume a "in charge" attitude that will ensure his production funding. However, the inevitable interference by executive producer, Mark Damon, a B-list actor of the 50s, the distribution company, and assorted others work against the director to all but sabotage the film shooting schedule and completion.
It is to his credit that Elliot managed to maintain his drive against the Hollywood mentality that had little interest in the film except for its ability to bring in the audience dollars in the end. Actor rehearsals, costume tests, production meetings with stunt coordinators, and interviews with lead actor McGregor provide excellent backstage commentary. In the end, Eye of the Beholder is sunk by ambivalence and misguided American studio executives whose ideas about film register at the maudlin level of crass Adam Sandler juvenile humor and women exposed in their underwear for salacious effect.
Film students, aspiring film makers, and those interested in why Eye of the Beholder was such a befuddled mess should tune into Killing Priscilla to discover how everything can go wrong and did in this film.
This documentary shows us the movie business unadorned; the endless drafting, the constant lying and stroking of egos, the fact that a budget of 30mil only gives you about 8mil to work with after everyone down the line has skimmed a little. Watch as Stephan's vision and adaptation of the book are butchered, his set pieces are cut, the money dries up and the finished product (after many re-cuts) is left on the shelf for eighteen months and all but forgotten. This film is offputting but would make great preparation for anyone wanting to enter the business and anyone who ever dreamt of making movies.
Did you know
- ConnectionsFeatures The Adventures of Priscilla, Queen of the Desert (1994)
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