Los Angeles Times

‘The Other Side of the Wind’

An unfinished Orson Welles film is pieced together, an electric look of his final days.

- JUSTIN CHANG FILM CRITIC justin.chang@latimes.com

It probably says something about the present moment that there have been two new movies in two consecutiv­e weeks in which a woman waves a blade perilously close to a man’s nether-regions. Then again, maybe it doesn’t: The two movies, both set in the 1970s and steeped in unease, could otherwise hardly be more dissimilar.

The threat of a little snipsnip in the horror remake “Suspiria,” a story of feminist witchcraft, feels deliberate­ly timed for the cultural reckonings of 2018. By contrast, the late emergence of Orson Welles’ “The Other Side of the Wind” — 48 years after it began production and 33 years after the great filmmaker’s death — could hardly have been planned, and feels all the eerier for it. And while you could easily find a castration metaphor or two amid the glorious, astonishin­g wreckage of this long-awaited swan song, its sexual politics belong, as they must, to an earlier era.

The woman brandishin­g the scissors is the Croatianbo­rn actress Oja Kodar, Welles’ co-writer and late-in-life romantic partner. Before she topples a giant phallic sculpture in one especially see-it-to-believe-it scene, she spends a lot of time wandering, tall and dark and uninhibite­dly nude, under the desert sun. The camera’s openly admiring gaze tells you that feminism isn’t really on the agenda — and neither, for that matter, is witchcraft, unless the completion of “The Other Side of the Wind” itself is proof of some strange sorcery at work.

Welles shot the picture between 1970 and 1976, then spent his remaining years desperatel­y trying to finish it. But after the director’s death in 1985, the film remained mired for decades in various circles of legal, financial and geopolitic­al hell — until, finally, a successful rescue mission spearheade­d by producers Frank Marshall (who worked on the original film) and Filip Jan Rymsza. The effort was bankrolled by Netflix, which is releasing the film alongside Morgan Neville’s “They’ll Love Me When I’m Dead,” an invaluable decoder ring of a documentar­y about the movie’s torturous production history.

To dispense with the obvious: It’s odd to see a new motion picture from the director of “Citizen Kane” beamed into your living room via streaming queue. (While most will see the film via Netf lix, it is also receiving a brief theatrical run.) Then again, it may also be a fitting outcome — an expression of faith that the titans of cinema might just survive, and in fact depend on, the medium’s future players. That might have pleased Welles, a pioneering Hollywood classicist who conceived of this final opus as a rejoinder to, and an example of, the aesthetica­lly cutting-edge visions of New Hollywood.

And a vision — a cracked, corrosive, savagely compromise­d vision — it unmistakab­ly is. A mock documentar­y avant la lettre, “The Other Side of the Wind” has a jagged syntax that would have felt startling in the ’70s and, decades later, has lost little of its restless foundfoota­ge vitality. The late cinematogr­apher Gary Graver employs a jittery mix of color and black-and-white, 16-millimeter and 35-millimeter film stocks, and the veteran editor Bob Murawski has cut the results into a rapid-fire approximat­ion of Welles’ late-career style.

The effect of all this rupturous technique is to heighten the already chaotic, disorienti­ng mood at the house party where most of the action takes place. It’s the 70th birthday of a cynical, reclusive, Hemingwaye­sque film director named Jake Hannaford (played by another titan, John Huston), who is deep into production on a picture that has recently stalled.

Hemingway, Hannaford, Huston: If the meta-parallels weren’t clear enough, the cash-strapped filmwithin-a-film is also titled “The Other Side of the Wind,” though this one appears to be a ludicrous parody of self-indulgent art cinema — specifical­ly Michelange­lo Antonioni’s “Zabriskie Point” — as it follows Kodar and a blankly handsome leading man, John Dale (Robert Random), across a vast, rugged and increasing­ly clothingop­tional landscape.

We see long, fascinatin­g stretches of that footage early on alongside Hannaford’s right-hand man, Billy Boyle (actor, director and Welles associate Norman Foster), and a skeptical producer (Geoffrey Land), clearly modeled on then-Paramount Pictures chief Robert Evans. Other sections of the movie are screened, and sidelined by a power outage or two, at Hannaford’s party, where he chomps a cigar and showers unending vitriol on various friends, associates and hangers-on.

But the key supporting player is Hannaford’s closest confidant, an ascendant Hollywood director named Brooks Otterlake (played by Welles’ closest confidant, a then-ascendant Hollywood director named Peter Bogdanovic­h). Their bond, oiled by knowing banter and clouded by Oedipal and Shakespear­ean overtones, is the picture’s most fascinatin­gly complicate­d. A close runner-up might be Hannaford’s mysterious relationsh­ip with the wayward Dale, which leads someone to theorize about the director’s latent desires for his leading men, a fixation that he concealed, revealed and exorcised through the movie screen.

Whatever else it may be — a wrecked, towering monument to its own incompleti­on, a howl of rage at the industry that Welles helped build and forever define — “The Other Side of the Wind” increasing­ly comes to resemble a shattered cinematic hall of mirrors. It’s the labyrinth from “The Lady From Shanghai” writ large, its broken surfaces reflecting and signifying the fraught circumstan­ces of its making. What would Welles have made of this posthumous assemblage? Would he have minded its undeniable lapses into tedium? How much of it are we meant to read as thinly veiled autocritiq­ue versus a wickedly funny jape?

 ?? Netf lix ?? “THE OTHER Side of the Wind” with Peter Bogdanovic­h, left, and led by John Huston as a Welles-like auteur.
Netf lix “THE OTHER Side of the Wind” with Peter Bogdanovic­h, left, and led by John Huston as a Welles-like auteur.

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