Times Colonist

Finally: Orson Welles last film

Wind, delayed for decades by financial and legal obstacles, to appear on Netflix today

- BILL KEVENEY

You don’t have to be an Orson Welles enthusiast to be fascinated by the decades-delayed release of his unfinished 1970s film, The Other Side of the Wind (on Netflix as of today).

Wind, directed and co-written by Welles, brings to mind the final scene of his Citizen Kane. It doesn’t provide a one-stop, Rosebud-style decryption of the enigmatic, legendary filmmaker but instead offers a warehouse worth of intriguing observatio­ns about the man and his art.

Welles, who died in 1985 at age 70, shot and edited Wind on and off from 1970 to 1976. More than 1,000 reels of footage sat for decades in a Paris vault as financial and legal obstacles prevented the film’s completion during his lifetime.

A team led by producer Frank Marshall (the Bourne and Indiana Jones franchises), a production manager on the original movie, edited and prepped Wind for release. Netflix also is streaming an accompanyi­ng Morgan Neville documentar­y, They’ll Love Me When I’m Dead, which chronicles the history of Wind and the final 15 years of Welles’ life.

The plot revolves around director J.J. Hannaford, an aging lion of the cinema who struggles to stay relevant (and solvent) while mired in an alcohol-fuelled stew of self-aggrandize­ment and self-pity. Wind centres on a 70th birthday party for the domineerin­g director, who’s hoping for a comeback by screening his new film for a gathering of friends, lackeys and journalist­s. A sea of documentar­y cameras records every person’s words and facial expression­s, presaging today’s 24/7 video culture.

Hannaford, played by another renowned director, John Huston, is ostensibly based on writer Ernest Hemingway, However, the character — who, like Welles, returns to a rapidly changing Hollywood after self-imposed exile in Europe — hews closely to the iconic director, who released his masterpiec­e Kane at age 26 but later struggled to attain traditiona­l Hollywood success.

Here’s what we learn about the iconic director from watching his “new” film: Welles knew his strengths and his weaknesses

In depicting alter ego Hannaford’s hypermascu­linity, overbearin­g nature and rage over everything from Hollywood to aging, Welles reveals his selfawaren­ess. As he chronicles Hannaford’s self-indulgence, Welles underlines his own with scenes in the comeback film segment that run too long and slow the overall enterprise. Long after his crowning achievemen­t, Welles remained a visionary.

Wind is frenetic, a jagged mix of black-and-white and colour and varying film stocks, full of weaponized dialogue volleyed back and forth between characters shot in close-up who might as well be in different places. Maybe they are, emotionall­y. It reflects the rule-breaking tendencies of Welles and of that New Hollywood era.

Hannaford’s movie, which satirized art films, contrasts sharply with the party’s noise and frenzy. It follows two silent characters, a woman with a man in pursuit, through brilliantl­y lit landscapes and a latticewor­k of shadows in the kind of scenes that would lead many viewers to scratch their heads. The filmmaker, via his film alter ego, didn’t seem to hold actors in high regard.

Hannaford, seeing himself as a godlike entity, is famous for plucking actors from obscurity, moulding them into leading men and disposing of them just as quickly. The star of his new filmwithin-a-film, John Dale, is literally pulled from the ocean as he drowns, then dropped onto a movie set.

Hannaford’s disdain for actresses is further seasoned by misogyny (he strikes a female journalist at the party). His female star (played by Welles’s real-life partner and Wind cowriter, Oja Kodar) spends much of the art film naked and is identified in the credits simply as The Actress. His genius retains a hold on fellow directors.

The Wind cast is chock-a-block with respected filmmakers. Besides Huston (The African Queen), others getting time in front of the camera include Peter Bogdanovic­h (The Last Picture Show), a Welles protege who plays a Hannaford acolyte, along with Paul Mazursky, Claude Chabrol and Dennis Hopper.

Welles’s influence persists, as a film postscript thanks such contempora­ry directors as J.J. Abrams, Sofia Coppola, Edgar Wright and Noah Baumbach for financial support.

Overall, Wind magnificen­tly displays Welles’s filmmaking brilliance while baring the aging auteur’s frailties and frustratio­ns.

The abrupt pacing and fractured dialogue can be jarring — it’s wise to just absorb and not try to figure out every detail on a first viewing — but any fan of Welles, film history or provocativ­e moviemakin­g will find Wind a treat.

If you’re looking for a movie that makes you think about movies, this fills the bill.

 ??  ?? Peter Bogdanovic­h, left, and John Huston star in The Other Side of the Wind by Orson Welles, which drops today on Netflix.
Peter Bogdanovic­h, left, and John Huston star in The Other Side of the Wind by Orson Welles, which drops today on Netflix.

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