Archive for the ‘The Trial’ Category

‘Filming The Trial’ surfaces online

Wednesday, March 6th, 2013

Filming The TrialYouTube user Citizen Welles has added another rarity to his impressive online collection.

Ninety minutes of audience interview footage for the never completed "Filming The Trial" is online at youtube.com

Shot by Gary Graver at the University of Southern California after a screening of "The Trial" in 1981, "Filming The Trial" finds Welles fielding questions about his 1962 film adaptation of the Franz Kafka novel from the crowd. The footage was given to the Munich Film Museum by Oja Kodar.

Citizen Welles has posted episodes of "Orson Welles Sketchbook," "Filming Othello" and other hard-to-find Welles films on YouTube. (more...)

Jeanne Moreau on Orson Welles’s THE TRIAL

Wednesday, March 31st, 2010

Jeanne Moreau appeared in four films that Orson Welles directed:

The Trial
Chimes At Midnight
The Immortal Story
The Deep

Which is why I wonder why there has been no documentary about Miss Moreau, focused on her work with Welles.

They also both appeared as actors in Tony Richardson's The Sailor From Gibraltar, during a break in the filming of The Deep.

I would think some enterprising French Cineastes would have done multiple projects on this rich vein by now, but as far as I know there has been no film about Welles work in France, or with Miss Moreau, who is still with us, and could easily provide us with a wonderful documentary on Welles, just talking about her experiences in working with him on the five films they made together. In addition, she narrated the French version of It's All True.

Moreau was also usually happy to appear in a Welles film whenever he called on her, although after some "tension" on the set of The Deep between Oja Kodar and Moreau, she apparently turned down Welles request that she appear in The Other Side of the Wind.

Here are some of Miss Moreau's own comments about working with Orson Welles. Their first film together was The Trial, and from Miss Moreau's account, it appears they were both slightly drunk when they discovered one of the key settings that was used in The Trial

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Q: When did you know you wanted to direct movies?

JEANNE MOREAU: The desire grew inside of me gradually. I always loved filmmaking, not just my part but also all the other parts. The first person I spoke with about it was Orson Welles. And I must say that to allow myself to speak up, I got a little drunk. We were in the Hotel Meurice in Paris, and the windows of his apartment overlooked the Gare d' Orsay, with its big clock. He was getting ready to film Kafka's The Trial, and he was looking for locations. We were discussing possibilities; he was drunk, too, and he said, "My, look at the full moon, so near." And there I was, drunk, and I said, "No, it's not the moon. It's the big clock of Orsay Station." So he said, "Let's go over there and see what the place looks like." And that's how he found one of his locations. And then I said, "Listen. Orson, you know what? I want to be a director. I want to write a script and I want to play in it! "He said, "Do it, girl. Do it!" And walking back to the hotel, he said, "Well, listen, I'm a little drunk, but you know, seriously, I think you ought to do it. Wait a little more, until it becomes painful. And when it's painful, you'll know that you have to go forward." And that's what happened. Voila. In fact, I've discovered that once your desire is so strong, you overcome the fear. The fear has to do with the ego. When you overcome that fear, it's easier to convince people, because you are convinced yourself.

I've been asked many, many times about being a woman director—wasn't it very, very difficult to find the money, to deal with men and a man's world? It was difficult to deal with when it was difficult for me to deal with it. Whoever you are, men or women, as long as your passion is there, you get what you want.

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Now, compare Moreau's comments to what Welles said about making The Trial. Strangely enough, he leaves Jeanne Moreau out of his recollections completely, but it is almost exactly the same story as she relates.

ORSON WELLES: We shot for two weeks in Paris with the plan of going immediately to Yugoslavia where our sets would be ready. On Saturday evening at 6 o'clock, the news came that the sets not only weren't ready, but the construction on them hadn't even begun! Now, there were no sets, nor were there any studios available to build sets in Paris. It was Saturday and on Monday we we're to be shooting in Zagreb! We had to cancel everything, and apparently to close down the picture. I was living at the Hotel Meurice on the Tuilleries, pacing up and down in my bedroom, looking out of the window. Now I'm not such a fool as to not take the moon very seriously, and I saw the moon from my window, very large, what we call in America a harvest moon. Then, miraculously there were two of them. Two moons, like a sign from heaven! On each of the moons there were numbers and I realized that they were the clock faces of the Gare d'Orsay. I remembered that the Gare d'Orsay was empty, so at 5 in the morning I went downstairs, got in a cab, crossed the city and entered this empty railway station where I discovered the world of Kafka. The offices of the advocate, the law court offices, the corridors-- a kind of Jules Verne modernism that seems to me quite in the taste of Kafka. There it all was, and by 8 in the morning I was able to announce that we could shoot for seven weeks there. If you look at many of the scenes in the movie that were shot there, you will notice that not only is it a very beautiful location, but it is full of sorrow, the kind of sorrow that only accumulates in a railway station where people wait. I know this sounds terribly mystical, but really a railway station is a haunted place. And the story is all about people waiting, waiting, waiting for their papers to be filled. It is full of the hopelessness of the struggle against bureaucracy. Waiting for a paper to be filled is like waiting for a train, and it's also a place of refugees. People were sent to Nazi prisons from there, Algerians were gathered there, so it's a place of great sorrow. Of course, my film has a lot of sorrow too, so the location infused a lot of realism into the film.

Katina Paxinou’s scene that was cut from Orson Welles’s THE TRIAL

Thursday, March 12th, 2009

While Orson Welles's considered The Trial to be one of his greatest films, many critics didn't agree with him. I must also say after I first saw the film, in 1978 (at Theater 80 St. Marks in the East Village), I didn't much care for it, either. In fact, truth to be told, I fell asleep!

It was only after the third or fourth viewing of the film that I began to understand it more completely, and therefore to enjoy it.

Which just goes to show that we can't really expect to unlock the workings of a master in a single brief viewing, whether it's from Welles, Picasso, Kafka, Shakespeare or Einstein. For example, just imagine if you had a chance to talk with Einstein about scientific theory. I daresay most of us would be totally baffled by his conversation. Which is why, I think Welles has never had a popular audience. The general public is simply "overwhelmed" when confronted with such complex films.

In any case, Store Hadji has just posted a link to this very interesting sequence that was cut from THE TRIAL here.

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ORSON WELLES: There was a long scene that lasted eight minutes, which I cut on the eve of the Paris premiere. Joseph K has his fortune told by a computer — that's what the scene amounted to. It was my invention. I only saw the film as a whole once. We were still in the process of doing the mixing, and then the premiere fell on us. At the last moment I abridged the scene. It should have been the best scene in the film and it wasn't. Something went wrong, and it didn't succeed. The subject of that scene was free will. It explains my attitude at the time about computers. My attitude has changed slightly since then, but only slightly. I believe that what that scene did, was to show Man’s slavish relationship to something which is really only his tool. It was a splendid thing to say in the picture, but it turned out to be rather a drag, so I took it out. The scene was tinged with black humor; that was my main weapon. I always direct the humor against the machine and in favor of freedom.

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The following scene between a Scientist (played by Katina Paxinou) and Joseph K (Anthony Perkins), was cut by Welles in the editing. It originally came after the scene where Joseph K is talking with his cousin Ermie, before he enters his office building.

Scene grabs and text for the scene can also be found at the Wellesnet film page here

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INT. JOSEPH K'S OFFICE - NIGHT.

We see K walking through his office. It is late at night and he is alone. In a luminous island surrounded by a vast sea of empty desks he works, or tries to, or imagines that he is working. Finally he cannot wait any longer. He gets up and walks across the empty office to the far corridor which contains the electronic brain, sleeping in the darkness. A pool of light from a single bulb shows the scientist in charge: A woman. She is wearing the same clothes as the men but that is all she has in common with her colleagues. The day shift workers all have expressionless faces. They are stereotyped technicians of no particular age. The woman in charge of the night shift is as old as the world. Immutable, vaguely disquieting, this venerable lady of science is the archetype of the priestess serving a powerful, millenary mystery.

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