By the ’70s, faded auteur
Orson Welles seemed to embrace the vagabond quality of his career, throwing
together haphazard film projects while making his primary income through
demeaning acting jobs, cartoon voiceovers, and commercials. For instance, while
appearing onscreen as the host/narrator of his documentary F for Fake, Welles explains that some of the footage comprising the
brief movie was originally intended for other, never-completed projects. This
revelation warns viewers that coherence should not be expected, and, indeed, F for Fake is completely scattershot.
The movie is ostensibly an examination of pranksters that focuses on Welles’
European acquaintance Elmyr de Hory, an art forger, and Elmyr’s American-born
biographer, Clifford Irving—who, in the course of this documentary’s protracted
production, earned notoriety by publishing a biography of reclusive billionaire
Howard Hughes that turned out to be bogus. For the first hour of F for Fake, Welles and his editors jump
around restlessly between interviews with Elmyr and Irving; footage of Elmyr
painting; vignettes of Welles talking about Elmyr and Irving while Welles holds
court at cocktail parties; scenes of Welles reviewing footage in an editing
room; and other random bits, like cameos from Welles’ Hollywood pals Joseph
Cotten and Laurence Harvey. Oh, and there’s also room in the movie’s undisciplined
first hour for remarks about Welles’ notorious 1939 radio broadcast War of the Worlds, itself a famous
example of fakery.
After the Elmyr-Irving bit runs its course, Welles
transitions to a lengthy dramatization of an encounter between European beauty
Oja Kodar and legendary Spanish painter Pablo Picasso. (Welles’ filmmaking is
particularly ingenious during this sequence, because he simulates Picasso’s
presence through the use of still photographs and clever editing.) F for Fake is filled with fascinating
ideas and inventive execution, but it’s maddeningly unfocused. The film
never lands on solid narrative ground, and Welles often resorts to gimmicky motifs like recurring
cutaways to spilled wine.
As a result, it’s difficult to grasp just what Welles
is trying to say here. Although he announces at the beginning of the film that F for Fake will be an examination of
prevarication, it actually ends up being a celebration of elaborate lies by a
man who relishes his own ability to twist the truth. F for Fake is highly watchable, but it also provides a sad reminder
of the great work Welles could have been doing at this time of his life,
instead of assembling unsatisfying pastiches like this one.
F for Fake:
FUNKY
Very good review. I'm amazed at the encomia that various reviewers throw at the film. I think the film, while not very good to begin with, becomes a downright embarrassment when i turns into a showcase for Oja Kodar, who was Welles' mistress. BTW, it's Joseph CottEn.
ReplyDeleteOnce again,you wound me,gentleman. I am a shameless Welles fanatic but find F for Fake a most entertaining film essay. I love embracing the many later Welles projects that upset so many viewers and critics. It tickles me no end.
ReplyDeleteI agree. The joke is on us!
ReplyDelete