I'd like to add that we should be careful when assessing phrases like "nearly complete", "90% finished", etc. along with presuming a "work-print" represents something in a coherent form composed only of selected takes.
There's some truth to that, Roger, but we have too much evidence, including a statement from Welles to Rosenbaum, that DQ was essentially locked, visually, by 1970-71, needing only music, sound effects, and some dubbing; and that it stayed, essentially, in that form, until at least the early 80's. Here is one quote at random, among many, from Esteve Riambau:
...the editor insists that it was a complete film lasting one hour forty minutes, built around sequences named by the director...There was no music...or sound effects, but all the main photography was complete. Only one image that would complete the final image was missing, an image in which Sancho enters a bar and stares stupefied at a television screen.
This description does not resemble what was shown at the Cinematheque.
Juan Cobos claimed that he saw 80 minutes in 1966 that
were initially stylistically simple, because he had filmed in Mexico for 5 weeks with the idea of working for TV. And this was always the skeleton of the film, as the filming that took place in Rome in 1959 was almost always intended to complete what had already been done.
According to Riambau, this "skeleton" was missing from the Costa-Gavras assembly put together under the auspices of the Cinematheque:
These images show the unmistakable Welles stamp, but hardly justify the years of work and affection that the director had invested in the film...the scenes included in the forty minutes do not belong to the three main blocks that the director had filmed in Mexico.
I must stress that the McCormack scenes were in the 1970-71 cut. Much has been made of a letter Welles sent to Tamiroff around 1961, extensively quoted by Juan Cobos, that questions the continuing relevance of the "Dulcie" framing device, and suggesting a new opening scene set in Venice at a masque ball but, contra esteemed Welles scholar Jonathan Rosenbaum, that sequence was never filmed.
Again, I must point out that, despite all the talk over the years of various re-conceptions of DQ, no major new sequences were ever filmed beyond the three main blocks: Mexico (1957), Italy (1959), and Spain (1961), although various random pick-up shots were filmed throughout the 60's, whenever Welles had the time and money. As far as I can tell, all of this footage has been accounted for.
Back to the question of the work print:
On the Wellesnet Message Board, there is discussion – and a hope – that you are in possession of an edit of Don Quixote done by your father?
No. There is (an edit of Don Quixote) and it is in Italy… (Welles' former editor Mauro Bonanni) got in touch with me and asked, ‘Do you know I have this.’ I actually met with him in Rome (in 1992) and there were so many complications legally that I couldn’t do anything unless I had a ton of money.
The interview with Bonanni recently posted here is immensely frustrating, especially given the fact of translation. However, in reviewing it, I found a few curious nuggets:
In short, seeing that Jess Franco made films much worse than I was doing, I was worried. However, I pointed out a few things at once: first, that there of was need the workprint. Second, that there was need of the black book, the script. He told me that those things were not there. I told him that because, the assembly of Don Quixote had been very long and difficult, something could happen - and it happened - which would affect the perception. So the negative that I had was indispensable - and still is - to remedy these failings of the workprint.
Could he be saying that what "happened" was that the work print, oddly missing from Franco's material, given that he was supposed to have everything available, magically showed up in Rome at this time?
There is also this:
We made a deal, which gave me a bit of money and the rights to the Italian market. And, from the economic point of view, it was fine. It was everything else that did not convince me...
Then I said, ok, I am sending you the positive print looped and edited, so he could not take possession of the negative material...So I told him: assemble the material, both yours and mine, then we’ll cut the negative in Italy and then you’ll return to Spain with it. And in this way would be made the [final release] print.
Bonanni also confirms that DQ material, including the negative, spent some time in Paris:
Among other things, for a period I could not find the film. And this happened when I tried to tell him I wanted to search for the negative of Don Quixote. I knew it was in Paris, but I could not find it. Then one day he called me from Los Angeles and I was able to say, “look what I got: the negative of Don Quixote.”
I'm not sure of the time sequence when Bonanni acquired the negative, but this information does not contradict what Jed Leland posted about Gomez - DQ material, both negative and positive, could have been in Paris in the early 70's, some of which Gomez retrieved at that time, with the remaining negative being transported at a later date to Rome by Bonanni, and the positive variants remaining with the Cinematheque. Having completed a version with Welles in 1970, Bonanni would have had no interest in earlier drafts, but only in saving the precious negative.
