In 1985, Universal Pictures released Terry Gilliam's film, Brazil,
under protest. Gilliam had mounted the first director's guerilla
campaign against a major Hollywood studio to circumvent his mo
being sliced to bits or shelved. LA Times film writer and writer
Jack Mathews was right in the th the battle, acting as intermediary
between the President of Universal, Sid Sheinberg and Gilliam and
producer Arnon Milchan. This is a blow-by-blow account of that epic
and historic fight as it happene 1985 as well as from the more
sober perspective of a dozen years after.
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