Orson Welles movies still unavailable on Blu-ray
As the home video market moves from Blu-ray to 4K UHD, it’s worth noting that for U.S. fans there are still several Welles-directed titles unavailable on Blu-ray.
As the home video market moves from Blu-ray to 4K UHD, it’s worth noting that for U.S. fans there are still several Welles-directed titles unavailable on Blu-ray.
“What Ever Happened to Orson Welles?: A Portrait of an Independent Career” is a critical look at the projects undertaken by the late director in his final years. The new edition includes the discovery of “Too Much Johnson” and completion of “The Other Side of the Wind.”
Orson Welles’ long-believed lost footage shot for the 1938 stage comedy “Too Much Johnson” was preserved by the George Eastman Museum’s Moving Image Department and first shown in 2013.
The Stony Creek Theatre in Branford, Connecticut, where Orson Welles and the Mercury Theatre staged the ill-fated Too Much Johnson in 1938, has been reborn as the Legacy Theatre.
The long-awaited renovation of the Stony Creek Theatre, where Orson Welles and the Mercury Theatre staged the ill-fated Too Much Johnson in 1938, will get underway Thursday, June 6, in Branford, Connecticut. Once a chapel-turned-movie house near the Thimble Islands, the Stony Creek Theatre became a home for community theater and summer stock productions during […]
Italian public television’s RAI 3 will pay tribute to Orson Welles in the days leading up to the 75th annual Venice Film Festival and world premiere of his recently completed movie The Other Side of the Wind. The broadcast programming, except a showing of The Magnificent Ambersons, focuses chiefly on Welles’ connection to Italy and his many […]
By RAY KELLY Compared to other Orson Welles projects, relatively little has been written about Too Much Johnson, the Mercury Theatre’s ill-fated 1938 stage comedy, which would have included his first use of film in a commercial project. A two-week tryout of Too Much Johnson commenced at the Stony Creek Theatre in Branford, Connecticut in […]
Films are scheduled from Jan. 3 through Feb. 14.
Orson Welles intended the footage to be used in a 1938 stage show.
The screening is set for November 4 in Milan.
What other lost films are waiting to be unearthed.
The discs will be released June 29 in England.