Best Orson Welles film (as director)

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i.e. not including The Third Man, unfinished/unseen things like Don Quixote and The Other Side Of The Wind, Findus voiceovers or films in which he may or may not have "assisted" with the direction.

Poll Results

OptionVotes
Citizen Kane 15
The Magnificent Ambersons 9
Chimes at Midnight 5
F for Fake4
The Trial 3
Touch of Evil 3
The Lady from Shanghai 2
Mr. Arkadin 1
Othello 1
The Fountain of Youth 0
Macbeth 0
The Stranger 0
The Immortal Story 0
Hearts of Age 0


Dingbod Kesterson, Thursday, 31 July 2008 10:18 (seventeen years ago)

I'm also controversially putting It's All True in the "unfinished" category.

Dingbod Kesterson, Thursday, 31 July 2008 10:19 (seventeen years ago)

I've never seen Mr. Arkadin, The Fountain of Youth or The Immortal Story

Tom D., Thursday, 31 July 2008 10:20 (seventeen years ago)

I saw Arkadin and The Immortal Story on BBC2 back in the seventies. Liked the latter (well, you know, Jeanne Moreau...) and thought the former was a bit flip.

Dingbod Kesterson, Thursday, 31 July 2008 10:21 (seventeen years ago)

Don't think I've ever seen The Fountain Of Youth but apparently it was a short that he did in 1958, straight after Touch Of Evil.

Dingbod Kesterson, Thursday, 31 July 2008 10:22 (seventeen years ago)

Oh and Hearts of Age, don't know that that is.

I like all of these films!

Tom D., Thursday, 31 July 2008 10:23 (seventeen years ago)

lady from shanghai just to choose

conrad, Thursday, 31 July 2008 10:30 (seventeen years ago)

Hearts Of Age was from 1934, and pretty much a home movie; I think he and his first wife play everybody in it.

Dingbod Kesterson, Thursday, 31 July 2008 10:30 (seventeen years ago)

well, i havent seen all of them, but 'lady from shanghai' is such a monster i may as well go for it.

Frogman Henry, Thursday, 31 July 2008 11:03 (seventeen years ago)

Never seen any of them!

nate woolls, Thursday, 31 July 2008 11:04 (seventeen years ago)

f for fake, for sure. it's a masterpiece, like a calvino novel in cinema, welles back in the editing room with a vengeance.

schlump, Thursday, 31 July 2008 11:35 (seventeen years ago)

Citizen Kane. No apologies.

Tom D., Thursday, 31 July 2008 11:37 (seventeen years ago)

This is pretty hard, though I'd actually be pretty floored if Touch of Evil doesn't win in the end.

Eric H., Thursday, 31 July 2008 11:57 (seventeen years ago)

My vote's either going to be Ambersons or Chimes.

Eric H., Thursday, 31 July 2008 11:57 (seventeen years ago)

It's either Citizen Kane or Touch of Evil. But I think Xanadu clinches it.

Mordy, Thursday, 31 July 2008 12:02 (seventeen years ago)

the trial is pimp

cankles, Thursday, 31 July 2008 12:18 (seventeen years ago)

I watch Touch of Evil most often these days, but what survives of Ambersons shames every period piece filmed in the 1940's (David Thomson: while most filmmakers turn Henry James into Booth Tarkington, Welles makes Tarkington look like James).

Alfred, Lord Sotosyn, Thursday, 31 July 2008 13:12 (seventeen years ago)

Ambersons almost got my vote, too late now tho

Tom D., Thursday, 31 July 2008 13:16 (seventeen years ago)

I've only seen a few of these, but I think I have to agree with Schlump.

Oilyrags, Thursday, 31 July 2008 13:21 (seventeen years ago)

The most sheerly entertaining of the bunch is still Citizen Kane, though.

Alfred, Lord Sotosyn, Thursday, 31 July 2008 13:33 (seventeen years ago)

Oh, I think I'd give that title to Touch of Evil.

Oilyrags, Thursday, 31 July 2008 13:37 (seventeen years ago)

Yeah I haven't seen enough to vote but I love love love F for Fake.

call all destroyer, Thursday, 31 July 2008 13:57 (seventeen years ago)

"Touch of Evil" for sure.

Never seen what remains of "Magnificent Ambersons", I was always put off by the story behind it getting cut to pieces, really depressing.

Pashmina, Thursday, 31 July 2008 13:57 (seventeen years ago)

Lovely film. I cried. Always.

Tom D., Thursday, 31 July 2008 14:01 (seventeen years ago)

The chat between Joseph Cotten and Anne Baxter about Indians is as deeply weird as the Janet Leigh-Frank Sinatra train exchange in The Manchurian Candidate.

Alfred, Lord Sotosyn, Thursday, 31 July 2008 14:05 (seventeen years ago)

The latter being perhaps the greatest het exchange in Hollywood history.

Kevin John Bozelka, Thursday, 31 July 2008 14:11 (seventeen years ago)

What, no "garden fragment" from The Dreamers??? J/K

You can watch The Fountain of Youth here:

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=wKYw6aImTmA

And k*r*g*rg* has The Other Side Of The Wind.

I'm going with Ambersons today. I prefer my films broken anyway.

Kevin John Bozelka, Thursday, 31 July 2008 14:16 (seventeen years ago)

Actually, all these films are broken save for the first two.

Kevin John Bozelka, Thursday, 31 July 2008 14:18 (seventeen years ago)

ambersons!

ryan, Thursday, 31 July 2008 14:25 (seventeen years ago)

I want to say 'The Trial', but 'Touch of Evil' just can't be beat.

Soukesian, Thursday, 31 July 2008 14:59 (seventeen years ago)

Othello

Dr Morbius, Thursday, 31 July 2008 19:46 (seventeen years ago)

easiest POO ever -- chimes at midnight, my fav film ever.

anyone who pleads ignorance can see it here:

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=oOhq0AyRNjY&feature=related

J.D., Friday, 1 August 2008 02:05 (seventeen years ago)

'filming othello' is a real film and shd be on the list.

Actually, all these films are broken save for the first two.

not true -- 'othello,' 'trial,' 'chimes,' and 'immortal story' all came out exactly the way welles wanted them.

J.D., Friday, 1 August 2008 02:06 (seventeen years ago)

ambersons by a wide margin
cool site: http://www.ambersons.com/

velko, Friday, 1 August 2008 02:43 (seventeen years ago)

Chimes. At. Midnight. = because it's all Welles, untampered-with, at his peak.

Then Ambersons a close second.

Capitaine Jay Vee, Friday, 1 August 2008 02:54 (seventeen years ago)

there was an article in 'vanity fair' a while back about the search for the missing 'ambersons' footage, and there was an interview with a guy welles hired to look through the complete RKO archives about a year before his death -- no luck. heartbreaking.

J.D., Friday, 1 August 2008 03:18 (seventeen years ago)

Actually, all these films are broken save for the first two.

not true -- 'othello,' 'trial,' 'chimes,' and 'immortal story' all came out exactly the way welles wanted them.

By "broken," I didn't necessarily mean "not as Welles wanted them." I'm using it more to denote a kind of "inorganic" quality, e.g. the crummy soundtrack of Chimes which suits the film thematically and makes it all the greater.

But I don't see how you can say that Othello "came out exactly the way welles wanted (it)." For one thing, Welles clearly "wanted" it several different ways as he edited at least two different versions of it in the 1950s. For another, the various 1990s "restorations" created different artifacts, ones that most likely do not conform to how Welles would have wanted it.

All of which only augments the vertiginous pleasures of Welles fandom.

Kevin John Bozelka, Friday, 1 August 2008 08:56 (seventeen years ago)

Automatic thread bump. This poll is closing tomorrow.

ILX System, Tuesday, 5 August 2008 23:01 (seventeen years ago)

you know, in retrospect, Kane is the best, and you're all being contrarians.

Dr Morbius, Wednesday, 6 August 2008 13:22 (seventeen years ago)

contrarian, zing thyself

David R., Wednesday, 6 August 2008 13:25 (seventeen years ago)

You voted for Othello, Morbs! It isn't even his best Shakespeare film.

Alfred, Lord Sotosyn, Wednesday, 6 August 2008 13:32 (seventeen years ago)

Well I voted for Kane, so I win

Tom D., Wednesday, 6 August 2008 13:33 (seventeen years ago)

Alfred likes Macbeth, easily his worst Shakes film!

Dr Morbius, Wednesday, 6 August 2008 13:36 (seventeen years ago)

I haven't seen either his Othello or his Macbeth, but they'd have to be serious best-of-all-time material to be any better than Chimes.

Eric H., Wednesday, 6 August 2008 16:27 (seventeen years ago)

Macbeth is definitely not better than CAM.

Alfred, Lord Sotosyn, Wednesday, 6 August 2008 16:44 (seventeen years ago)

the greatest het exchange in Hollywood history

which begs the question ...

Eric H., Wednesday, 6 August 2008 16:52 (seventeen years ago)

You're up at bat, Eric.

Alfred, Lord Sotosyn, Wednesday, 6 August 2008 16:53 (seventeen years ago)

ambersons is sooo close, but I have to go with f for fake.

t0dd swiss, Wednesday, 6 August 2008 21:09 (seventeen years ago)

Automatic thread bump. This poll's results are now in.

ILX System, Wednesday, 6 August 2008 23:01 (seventeen years ago)

dude wtf with the low Touch of Evil showing! guess I should've voted but I refrained cuz I haven't seen a bunch of these

Shakey Mo Collier, Wednesday, 6 August 2008 23:02 (seventeen years ago)

btw I still own this on VHS recorded from the local PBS station twenty years ago

the little prince of inane false binary hype (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Wednesday, 23 January 2013 02:31 (thirteen years ago)

The most beautiful (and most nostalgic) shot in the film has to be the iris at the end of the snow ride:

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=mJxgrxl5BRM

clemenza, Wednesday, 23 January 2013 02:32 (thirteen years ago)

The George-Mom relationship really isn't that compelling for an Oedipal drama tho.

one of the most fucked-up things about what RKO did to 'ambersons' is that they didn't just cut stuff, they actually RESHOT a couple of scenes to make tim holt more 'sympathetic' and less of a dick. so it was probably more intense in the original cut.

sabotage and all, this feels like welles's...deepest and most resonant movie, somehow. so many little bits of it just stick with me.

(The Other) J.D. (J.D.), Wednesday, 23 January 2013 02:36 (thirteen years ago)

Then he fades in on the wake of George's father. xp

Is there a list somewhere of the post-Welles changes that are in the film?

saltwater incursion (Dr Morbius), Wednesday, 23 January 2013 02:37 (thirteen years ago)

The Callow bio reviews them.

the little prince of inane false binary hype (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Wednesday, 23 January 2013 02:38 (thirteen years ago)

i probably woulda voted for amberson or chimes, but as pure entertainment, c.k. has never stopped being a hoot.

let's go do some crimes (strongo hulkington's ghost dad), Wednesday, 23 January 2013 02:42 (thirteen years ago)

Yes--I couldn't remember exactly what it was, but I knew the iris shot got some of its power from the contrast with whatever directly followed.

clemenza, Wednesday, 23 January 2013 02:51 (thirteen years ago)

one year passes...

Essentially saw The Lady from Shanghai for the first time the other night (part of the Godard series). I did see it once years ago, but it was one of those nights I was really tired and shouldn't have gone to a movie. I knew the finale very well--it used to be part of the opening montage for TVO's Saturday Night at the Movies, and I've also shown it in class.

Anyway, fantastic. I'd have to watch them back-to-back, but I think I'd take it over Touch of Evil. Probably just as strange, too, primarily thanks to Glenn Anders. His first appearance has to rank up there with Welles in The Third Man and Hopper in Blue Velvet for spectacular entrances. (Possibly a thread there.) At first I didn't think Hayworth was as beautiful as in Gilda, but once she started wearing those sailor suits, wow. And the big finale is show-offy genius. Can't disagree with my friend: you can imagine Welles working on the script, sitting there with the last scene written and trying to figure out a movie to attach to it. Loved Everett Sloane, too. Hayworth gets a little too talkative and philosophical in her death scene, but that'd be my only minor quibble.

clemenza, Saturday, 22 February 2014 16:57 (twelve years ago)

Apparently it was cut by at least an hour too. At least as much of a pity as Ambersons' mutilation imho.

Digital restoration of Othello showing soon.

images of war violence and historical smoking (Dr Morbius), Saturday, 22 February 2014 16:59 (twelve years ago)

Glenn Anders' film career was almost non-existent--he doesn't even get a little thumbnail photo on IMDB. Seems he was much more of a theatre guy.

You always want to have access to the director's original film, especially Welles, but it's hard for me to imagine where he would have gone with the extra hour--it really did seem close to perfect as is.

http://1.bp.blogspot.com/-4aduA-eWwAg/UKWOli6MGXI/AAAAAAAAvAM/RibsFQ9JpfA/s400/a+Orson+Welles+The+Lady+from+Shanghai+Rita+Hayworth+DVD+Review+PDVD_014.jpg

clemenza, Saturday, 22 February 2014 17:10 (twelve years ago)

well, sure it's hard for US to imagine...

http://www.filmcomment.com/article/a-face-in-the-crowd-glenn-anders

images of war violence and historical smoking (Dr Morbius), Saturday, 22 February 2014 17:14 (twelve years ago)

I've tried LFS several times, each time bored. I dunno if it's Welles' performance or the movie itself that's attenuated.

Bryan Fairy (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Saturday, 22 February 2014 17:34 (twelve years ago)

it's very funny!

images of war violence and historical smoking (Dr Morbius), Saturday, 22 February 2014 17:45 (twelve years ago)

Someone take Alfred out for a little tarrrrr-get practice.

(Kidding. I'm often on here expressing ambivalence about famous films. I must have been in exactly the right frame of mind this time.)

clemenza, Saturday, 22 February 2014 18:18 (twelve years ago)

one month passes...

Essentially saw The Lady from Shanghai for the first time the other night

Me too! If, over the past several decades, you had asked me if I had seen it, I was certain I had. But I really only knew the hall of mirrors finale; everything else was new to me. What a crazy movie.

A Perfect Ratio of Choogle to Jam (Dan Peterson), Monday, 31 March 2014 20:34 (twelve years ago)

The Lady from Shanghai would be vastly improved if he didn't have that shit Irish accent, but still it is brilliant. The opening sequence of The Stranger is awesome, I quite love it but it is a failure of sorts. Both CK and the Ambersons are movies I will continually re-watch until I die.

xelab, Thursday, 3 April 2014 23:21 (twelve years ago)

three months pass...

Just noticed that The Lady From Shanghai soundtrack has a quote from "Amado Mio," one of Rita's big numbers from Gilda.

Sorry Somehow Forgot To Take Out The Trash (James Redd and the Blecchs), Saturday, 26 July 2014 17:22 (eleven years ago)

This tune: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=2czNzWnkOcI

Sorry Somehow Forgot To Take Out The Trash (James Redd and the Blecchs), Saturday, 26 July 2014 19:09 (eleven years ago)

four years pass...

trying to go through all the ones I haven't seen yet and if there's a worst one I think Alfred is right, it's the Stranger

love everything else to varying degrees. still need to see Othello, the Immortal Story and the Fountain of Youth

Οὖτις, Friday, 19 October 2018 15:53 (seven years ago)

The Stranger is the most nakedly commercial, and i always found it totally fine. Mr Arkadin and The Trial, while more ambitious and... stranger, take some getting used to.

a Mets fan who gave up on everything in the mid '80s (Dr Morbius), Friday, 19 October 2018 15:57 (seven years ago)

it's not that The Stranger is bad, it's just that everything else is better! Or at least has more interesting things going on. Welles' performance isn't remotely convincing, and the rest seems fairly standard.

Mr. Arkadin is bonkers and a lot of the cast is appropriately scenery-chewing (my favorite being Welles drunkenly staggering around on the swaying boat) so although it is a mess in terms of narrative and pacing I give it points for being fitfully engaging instead of just boring.

Visually the Trial is fantastic. The constant jabbery overdubbed Welles' dialogue gets soporific though.

Οὖτις, Friday, 19 October 2018 16:03 (seven years ago)

eight months pass...

just saw lady from shanghai (part of a double feature — touch of evil is next). as I’m sure everyone agrees, the ending is fantastic. welles’ accent didn’t bother me nearly as much as the sound editing (unless it was just the theater?). I thought the courtroom scenes were probably the weakest part of the movie, and while she is very easy to look at, all the closeups of hayworth were a little distracting, but overall a really good film. agree with clemenza about grisby’s entrance

k3vin k., Sunday, 23 June 2019 20:26 (six years ago)

imo, F for Fake is hugely overrated. The idea was clever, but not enough to carry a full length film, and certainly not a full length film as poorly executed as that one was.

A is for (Aimless), Sunday, 23 June 2019 21:11 (six years ago)

alright touch of evil fucking ruled

k3vin k., Sunday, 23 June 2019 22:30 (six years ago)

the opening long shot, wow, I need to find that and watch it again

some incredible performances in this — welles especially, heston, andthat fortune-teller lady

a really unnervingly charming blend of camp and menace

k3vin k., Sunday, 23 June 2019 22:43 (six years ago)

andthat fortune-teller lady

Dietrich?

If I were a POLL I’d be Zinging (James Redd and the Blecchs), Sunday, 23 June 2019 22:46 (six years ago)

touch of evil gets better every time i see it, there isn't really another movie that's anything like it

(The Other) J.D. (J.D.), Monday, 24 June 2019 01:21 (six years ago)

otm

godfellaz (darraghmac), Monday, 24 June 2019 02:17 (six years ago)

the opening long shot, wow, I need to find that and watch it again

some incredible performances in this — welles especially, heston, andthat fortune-teller lady

a really unnervingly charming blend of camp and menace

― k3vin k., Sunday, June 23, 2019

I had the pleasure of showing it in my film class last Thursday, and I was delighted that half the class rode the groove even when it unnerved them. The idea of Heston playing a Mexican amused them; the quasi-rape scene did not.

recriminations from the nitpicking woke (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Monday, 24 June 2019 03:36 (six years ago)

two years pass...

I was a little more nagged-at by The Lady from Shanghai's filler when I watched it last night: the courtroom stuff (although Everett Sloane's soliloquy about Welles's fate is memorable), and, if I'm honest, just a lot of the film when they're not in the aquarium and not in the funhouse. The story is convoluted and absurd (hardly an anomaly in the world of noir). But those two scenes and Glenn Anders as Grisby make up for everything (Rita Hayworth in a sailor suit, too). Grisby is like Timothy Carey in The Killing, or Joseph Wiseman in Detective Story (or Dennis Weaver in Touch of Evil)--it's hard to say if Anders is even trying to remain in sync with the film you're watching, or if he's simply off doing some other movie known only to him, and if the two happen to intersect, all the better. Visually, the aquarium scene is somewhat of a practice run for the funhouse later on, and the funhouse sequence was the clip I showed my last few primary classes in trying to demonstrate what a film director did. The original trailer for the film is on YouTube--there is conspicuously nothing from the funhouse sequence, suggesting that Welles wanted to extract every last iota of astonishment from anyone who went to see the film. (There's a fan trailer that uses the funhouse liberally.)

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=R3lW5UKsbP4

clemenza, Thursday, 23 December 2021 16:36 (four years ago)

k*r*g*rg* has The Other Side Of The Wind

Strange way to spell "Netflix".

Halfway there but for you, Friday, 24 December 2021 17:51 (four years ago)

Tbf that post was made 10 years before it was on Netflix.

Precious, Grace, Hill & Beard LTD. (C. Grisso/McCain), Friday, 24 December 2021 19:56 (four years ago)

three years pass...

Saw the Orson Welles arena doc on YouTube. He is so often funny and insightful, with a good dose of bullshit thrown in, but fine, that's part of him (you realize how baked in this is in his acting).

Bogdanovic was a real weakness as a talking head.

xyzzzz__, Thursday, 29 May 2025 06:53 (one year ago)

Loved the bits on Toland, politics (and why he didn't run for office), on his commercials/acting work (imagine him in The Godfather lol), on not watching other people's films as a way to keep an innocence, his disdain for long takes/tracking shots, and how he loved making films.

xyzzzz__, Thursday, 29 May 2025 06:59 (one year ago)

at what age and film would you introduce your kid to welles? i was thinking about "chimes of midnight" but it's been several years.

Western® with Bacon Flavor, Thursday, 29 May 2025 07:25 (one year ago)

He is an adult filmmaker but...it has to be Kane. I was introduced while watching all the Simpsons parodies of it so maybe via that.

xyzzzz__, Thursday, 29 May 2025 07:50 (one year ago)

Back when TV used to show old films I probably saw it on a Saturday afternoon on BBC2 while the other two channels were showing the racing.

Blake the Messenger (Tom D.), Thursday, 29 May 2025 08:44 (one year ago)

Has your kid been exposed to much classic Hollywood? My dad raised me on Bogart flicks and screwball comedies, Welles seems a bit Advanced Studies in comparison.

a ZX spectrum is haunting Europe (Daniel_Rf), Thursday, 29 May 2025 13:18 (one year ago)

Chimes definitely feels like jumping into the deep end, I feel like it would have mostly gone over my head as a kid (but then again I'm dumb so idk.)

Macbeth is pretty fun & accessible imo, especially if the kid has covered it in school. When we read Macbeth in 10th grade my teacher showed us the Polanski version and I found it a slog, I feel like I would have loved the Welles version if I'd seen it then.

waste of compute (One Eye Open), Thursday, 29 May 2025 14:21 (one year ago)

As always - but with Welles more than most - I think you need to have a decent print on a big screen to really convert the young ppl. And Kane is obviously a pretty 'teachable' film, even now - as good an introduction as any to ideas about deep focus photography, Freudian symbolism, metanarrativity etc.

Ward Fowler, Thursday, 29 May 2025 14:25 (one year ago)

at what age and film would you introduce your kid to welles?

I can't remember the context, but I saw an inteview once with Graham Yost (the screenwriter of Speed), and he recalled his dad--Elwy Yost, who hosted a longtime program on public television in Toronto, Saturday Night at the Movies--writing a absentee note to one of Graham's high school teachers, explaining that his father had given him permission to stay up late the previous night so he could watch Citizen Kane. Yost broke down as he recounted the story--very moving.

clemenza, Thursday, 29 May 2025 14:33 (one year ago)

My experience with Citizen Kane: saw it as a #teen, was very indifferent to it. Came back to it after seeing dozens of films from that era and had my mind opened to what it was doing formally, how audacious it was, loved it on those terms. Subsequent viewings have permitted the emotional connection to surface alongside the technical admiration.

a ZX spectrum is haunting Europe (Daniel_Rf), Thursday, 29 May 2025 14:36 (one year ago)

We show Shakespeare film adaptations to ours, that’s why I was thinking his going big Falstaff performance wouldn’t be too far out of their wheelhouse.

Western® with Bacon Flavor, Thursday, 29 May 2025 15:42 (one year ago)

Don’t forget Othello! (You may have to talk to your kids about how blackface was once considered acceptable)

That Pedo Band (Boring, Maryland), Thursday, 29 May 2025 16:19 (one year ago)

I think if you approach CK as a fun melodrama with twists and turns and acerbic lines you'll get a better response with students (as I have) than if you're like OMIGOD BEST FILM EVER WHOA NELLY.

I can't imagine starting anywhere else with Welles other than TOE.

hungover beet poo (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Thursday, 29 May 2025 21:06 (one year ago)

I was gonna say, the other Welles film I saw as a teen was Touch of Evil and unlike Kane it clicked with me right away, I loved it, just good old fashioned fun.

waste of compute (One Eye Open), Thursday, 29 May 2025 21:25 (one year ago)

Yeah, thirded.

But frankly if the kid is already Shakespearepilled, sure, Chimes should go down well.

a ZX spectrum is haunting Europe (Daniel_Rf), Thursday, 29 May 2025 21:30 (one year ago)

Ambersons?

completely suited to the horny decadence (Capitaine Jay Vee), Thursday, 29 May 2025 23:18 (one year ago)

I was going to suggest The Magnificent Ambersons if your kid is over 60--beautiful film.

clemenza, Friday, 30 May 2025 00:04 (one year ago)

Touch of Evil unless he’s already seen a lot of old Hollywood films in which case go for Kane.

birdistheword, Friday, 30 May 2025 00:22 (one year ago)


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