In an article that appears on AWN.com
To quote the review: In 2016 Spanish director Salvador Simó attempted an equally ambitious project: creating an animated feature documenting Buñuel’s chaotic but ultimately successful feat of filmmaking. Simó’s 2018 film Buñuel in the Labyrinth of the Turtles deftly combines animated scenes of the filmmaker and his crew shooting the film with live-action footage from the actual movie, intercutting the two in near-perfect continuity. Rather than glossing over conflicts between Buñuel, his friends and associates, Simó makes them a fundamental part of the story, as with his troubled relationship with his father and the nightmares that may have haunted him as he attempted to bring his vision to life. (The title of Simó’s film comes from one character’s observation that that clustered roofs of Las Hurdes’ primitive homes resemble turtle shells.)
This review actually brought to my attention of a work I have never heard about before and might check out later.
Meanwhile the Rob Paulsen autobiography Voice Lessons: His memoir “Voice Lessons” (due out in October from Viva Editions) recounts his rise to the top of the animation heap, with no shortage of behind-the-scenes anecdotes of what life is like inside and outside the recording booth.
and of his struggle with Throat Cancer…excellent work.