(2000 Video)

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9/10
Compulsory viewing for all would-be directors
Muzman7 July 2000
This film a remarkable insight into Hollywood and film making. No glitz, glamour or incessant sales-pitch spin here. Just long hours and endless struggles with the studio system. The film follows director Stephan Elliot during the making of EYE OF THE BEHOLDER (A fairly successful film that was generally considered to be mediocre at best; and I should add that I haven't seen it at the time of this post). After the massive world wide success of THE ADVENTURES OF PRISCILLA: QUEEN OF THE DESERT, Elliot's follow up, WELCOME TO WOOP WOOP, practically got him thrown out of the business. EYE had to be a success. With the casting coup of Ewan McGregor and Ashley Judd, both on the cusp of superstardom, as leads in a psycho-sexual thriller there was little chance it would fail. But strangely the studio doesn't seem to care. In fact, as this film tells it, every obstacle to its release is put up.

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.
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9/10
I appreciate Eye of the Beholder so much more now!
peyton4fm30 August 2001
After viewing this documentary I like Eye of the Beholder so much better. Although I am not a film student or film critic I thought the process that went into making EYE was interesting. I thought it's director had an interesting approach and a clever wit to how he handled his problems. Even when he is a bit pessimistic about his film's future he still plugs on with grace and charm. I bet if more hollywood types were like him then better films would be made.
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10/10
Hollywood Exposed from Down Under
AZINDN5 June 2001
Australian director Stephen Elliott's film "Eye of the Beholder" failed at the boxoffice and was trounced by critics. Why the film was so problematic is revealed in Lizzy Gardner's documentary, Killing Priscilla. While Elliot tries to secure funding and actors for his film, Hollywood suits advise and undermine his self-confidence and artistic vision. Shot as filming took place, Gardner's camera crew follows Elliott as he must juggle a shooting schedule, non-existent budget, and wanning interest in his film from Canada to San Francisco, Arizona, D.C. and London. A must for any film maker who dreams of Hollywood as the golden opportunity to make a career. Great snips between star Ewan McGregor and Elliot in rehersal for the film.
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truly fascinating
hotnoodletuna5 March 2002
What makes this documentary so intriguing is having seen both "Eye of the Beholder" and "Priscilla". One cannot dspute the fact that Priscilla was a terrific film. It was hilarious and touching in equal measure. This is important because it justifies the absolute dedication to the preservation of one's artistic principles that is so clearly on display here. It is equally important to note, however, that "Beholder" is an almost unwatchably bad film. Inasmuch as you might find the idea of watching a documentary about a mediocre director making a poor film to be boring, you would be entirely mistaken. "Killing Priscilla" gives us wonderful insights into the workings of Hollywood (from distributors who have never seen the film, to financial backers who want to make a soft-core porn out of the film) and its utterly fickle ability to ignore the passion of artists in favor of the big cash-in.

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.
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10/10
Murder Most Foul
AZINDN6 July 2002
Killing Priscilla, the behind the scenes docu by Lizzie Gardnier is a study in Hollywood's money machine attitude toward film making that has killed creativity for all the a handful of top directors. Stephen Elliott, the director of the much lauded Priscilla, Queen of the Desert is followed as he attempts to bring to fruition a project that must succeed to restore his faltering Hollywood career. As Elliott mounts production for Eye of the Beholder with actors Ewan McGregor and Ashley Judd, Gardnier's camera provides access to the method and madness of casting, finance, and pre-production decision making film makers must comply to make their film.

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.
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6/10
mildly interesting
cherold19 March 2005
Very straightforward documentary unfolds the making of a bomb. I haven't seen Eye of the Beholder, it seems some people just loved it but even they find it difficult. So whether it is an uncompromising artistic vision or self-indulgent drivel is something I look forward to discovering on my own.

A number of comments here suggest the movie was destroyed by the suits, but it doesn't really look that way to me. Yes, the suits wanted changes and additions and made the director re-shoot some stuff, but it did not look like (from what is seen in the documentary) that they wanted huge changes; they just wanted it sexier to be more commercial. So when the test audience loathed the film, it was probably loathing more-or-less Stephan's vision.

I think it is also important to note that Stephan made it perfectly clear in the documentary that he had basically conned his backers. He told them he was making a commercial thriller when he was planning to do nothing of the kind. If you promise something specific to someone in exchange for money and then deliver something else, you have to expect them to want you to change it to what they were expecting. So it was a calculated risk; get the money, make the movie he wanted and hope it succeeded. One of the most interesting parts of the movie is seeing how nervous Stephan is as the time comes near when he's going to show the film to his backers with every expectation that they are in for a shock.

The movie is mildly interesting throughout but only really interesting in the last part as things increasingly fall apart. I doubt anyone not interested in the film industry would find it especially interesting.
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