Friday, 27 September 2019

ORSON WELLES: 10 ESSENTIAL MOVIES


Orson Welles's 10 Essential Movies

1. Citizen Kane (1941)

2. The Magnificent Ambersons (1942)

3. The Stranger (1946)

4. The Lady from Shanghai (1947)

5. Confidential Report (1955)

6. Touch of Evil (1958)

7. The Trial (1962)

8. Chimes at Midnight (1965)

9. F for Fake (1973)

10. The Other Side of the Wind (2018)

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"If we have dwelt at some length on Orson Welles it is because the date of his appearance in the filmic firmament (1941) marks more or less the beginning of a new period and also because his case is the most spectacular and, by virtue of his very excesses, the most significant. Yet Citizen Kane is part of a general movement, of a vast stirring of the geological bed of cinema, confirming that everywhere up to a point there had been a revolution in the language of the screen."
― André Bazin (What is Cinema? Volume 1, 1967)

"Like von Stroheim and von Sternberg, although otherwise hardly in similar mould, Wisconsin-born Welles was one of Hollywood's enfants terribles, beginning with brilliance but soon falling out with the studio, having his work hacked down and setting off on wanderings round the world, forever in search of another masterpiece and the money to make one."
― David Quinlan (Quinlan's Film Directors, 1999)

"It is almost tragically ironic that George Orson Welles, without doubt one of the greatest filmmakers ever, was forced to work for most of his career under the most adverse of conditions. Such were his genius and ambition that his films, years ahead of their time, still astonish by their inventiveness, stylistic virtuosity and freshness; while the widely held view that he never fulfilled his early promise fails to take account of the thematic and moral consistency of his work, not to say its restless experimentalism."
― Geoff Andrew (The Film Handbook, 1989)

"Welles’s outsider status in connection with the American film industry is an interesting part of cinema history in itself, but his importance as a director is due to the innovations he introduced through his films and the influence they have had on filmmaking and film theory. Considering the turbulent relationship Welles experienced with Hollywood and the circumstances under which his films were made in Europe, it is surprising there is any thematic and stylistic consistency in his work at all."
― Susan Doll (International Dictionary of Films and Filmmakers, 2000)

"One of the most important filmmakers to emerge since the advent of the talkie. Welles was one of the first in Hollywood to realize the potential of elliptical narratives and deep focus in the construction of camera angles. His oeuvre consists of complex tales with themes of truth and illusion (Citizen Kane, 41; The Magnificent Ambersons, 42; Touch of Evil, 58; Chimes at Midnight, 66). Welles is also one of the few commercial filmmakers to experiment with the soundtrack of a film."
― William R. Meyer (The Film Buff's Catalog, 1978)

“I started at the top,” Orson Welles said, “and worked down.” For his first film, he was swept into Hollywood on a wave of success that had been rising since his childhood. Studio doors and coffers stood open to him. But for his last film, unfinished when he died, he had to beg, borrow, and sell himself.”
―Dian G. Smith (Great American Film Directors, 1987)


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Orson Welles's 10 Favourite Movies

1. The Baker's Wife (1938) by Marcel Pagnol

2. Battleship Potemkin (1925) by Sergei Eisenstein

3. The Best Years of Our Lives (1946) by William Wyler

4. Bicycle Thieves (1948) by Vittorio De Sica

5. City Lights (1931) by Charles Chaplin

6. La Grande illusion (1937) by Jean Renoir

7. Greed (1924) by Erich von Stroheim

8. Intolerance (1916) by D.W. Griffith

9. Shoeshine (1946) by Vittorio De Sica

10. Stagecoach (1939) by John Ford



*Source: Cinematheque Belgique (1952)