Lady From Shanghai

Discuss Welles' classic Hollywood thrillers.
tonyw
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Postby tonyw » Tue Jun 03, 2008 2:04 pm

Thanks also Jeff. For those of us who can not get to the archives (for various reasons) your generosity in sharing information is most appreciated.

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Glenn Anders
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Postby Glenn Anders » Tue Jun 03, 2008 4:21 pm

Thanks, Jeff:

I would imagine (and hope) that some of the more crude melodramatic acts and dialogue would have been modified in revision or during the editing process. My remark, however, is not in defense of the ax which Harry Cohn took to THE LADY FROM SHANGHAI.

Glenn

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Postby Tony » Tue Jun 03, 2008 11:04 pm

I must say that sometimes I think God was watching out for Welles: this dialogue is so bad, so arch, so stilted, that it would have been laughed at in the theatre. The ending as it stands is a masterpiece...of editing, cinematography, and drama, though I could do without those screeching violins. Actually, this dialogue reminds me of The Big Brass Ring: Yikes!

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Glenn Anders
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Postby Glenn Anders » Wed Jun 04, 2008 2:32 am

Exactly, Tony.

It might be remembered though that the San Francisco "Playland-at-the-Beach" sequence was projected to last upwards of twenty minutes, most of it in a rhythmically nightmarish build-up (in Michael's mind and memory, we may surmise), crowned with the shoot-out among the mirrors. With the kind of on-set adjustments and editing room magic of which Welles was so fully capable, some of the this final scene might have come across not as outlandish but as a proper denoument; the kind of ending a Welles film always needed.

In any case, sad as I am that the scope of the conceived sequence was hacked away, I always have liked Michael's narration at the end as read by Welles. I sometimes think of it, along with that damnable but addictive song!

Glenn

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Postby Tony » Wed Jun 04, 2008 10:46 pm

Glenn:

I totaly agree: that naration is one of my favourite of Welles's narrating; and walking into the bright morning sun having survived all that...wow!

I too would love to see the whole fun house set piece, but I do think the dialogue is very bad; but then, the whole film has a nightmarish postmodern (yes: postmodern 25 years before the concept was articulated) bizarre sense of irony and surrealism: actually, it's one of my favourite Welles films, and the loss of the long version is as tragic to me as is the Ambersons loss.

Incidentally, my favourite shot is the one where Michael is standing on the deck of the ship, and a hand-held out-of-focus camera catches him, just for a second, puffing on a cigarette; it seems a collision of documentary and drama. It's almost as if someone was taking a home movie of Welles and when Welles saw it, he just stuck a few seconds of it in the film. There's nothing else like it in the film, and perhaps in all of Welles's work. For some reason, I adore it: it seems a leap into a parallel world...

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Glenn Anders
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Postby Glenn Anders » Thu Jun 05, 2008 12:00 am

Fascinating stuff in THE LADY FROM SHANGHAI, Tony. I like the whole tone of that sequence shot on Flynn's yacht doing the Panama passage. There is a sense of transition, the possibility winning out, and of sailing nevertheless toward doom.

And the scene of Michael seeing through Grisby and Bannister on the beach is as good as anything on film in its time. Then, there is the scene of Grisby and Michael on the mountain, looking down on Acapulco Bay . . . .

Can anything top it for depicting, almost surreally, as you say, the madness we are still trapped in.

There are evenings, at the Ha-Ra Club, when Baesen and I play on the juke box the Jazz at the Movies Band arrangement of the score for LAURA, followed by that for KEY LARGO. It's about as close to THE LADY FROM SHANGHAI experience, somehow, as an aural sensation can get.

Especially, if a Melinda, Kathleen, Mary Ann, or Nellie McKay wanders in from chilly Geary Street.

Glenn

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Sir Bygber Brown
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Two Shanghai questions

Postby Sir Bygber Brown » Wed Jun 25, 2008 12:24 pm

a) has Black Irish script ever been commercially available?

b) what is the likelihood an earlier cut of Shanghai exists?

Regards,

Sir.

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Jeff Wilson
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Postby Jeff Wilson » Wed Jun 25, 2008 2:06 pm

a) No

b) slim to none, with my money on none

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Re: Lady From Shanghai

Postby Wellesnet » Tue Mar 25, 2014 8:46 pm

Chris Welles Feder on "The Lady From Shanghai", for TCM's Word of Mouth:

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=4-gSNiIYnrI

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Re: Lady From Shanghai

Postby GlennandersFraser » Wed Mar 26, 2014 12:46 am

Chris Welles Feder always seems to have a succinct understanding of Welles films, and an inside understanding of what must have driven Orson Welles to make the decisions which infuriated Harry Cohn and the other mogul he had to deal with.

A truly excellent interview!

Glenn Anders

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Re: Lady From Shanghai

Postby Roger Ryan » Wed Mar 26, 2014 8:25 am

While Ms. Feder doesn't go into this in her brief interview, she actually appeared in the rough cut of the film as a "spoiled American girl" in Acapulco demanding her mother buy her an ice cream ("It's only one American dollar!"). We can only imagine this bravura sequence showing O'Hara and Grisby passing various tourists who all seem to be discussing the value of money or lack thereof since it was hacked apart and partially re-shot for the released version of the film.

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Le Chiffre
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Re: Lady From Shanghai

Postby Le Chiffre » Thu Mar 27, 2014 9:16 pm

Fortunately Chris's performance in MACBETH survives. Ironic how a major studio like Columbia didn't bother to save any outtakes or cut footage from LFS, while a two-bit studio like Republic did save the materials from Welles's original version of Macbeth, so we nowadays can at least enjoy his intended vision for that film.

Here's a 1970 interview with Rita Hayworth where - at about the 1:40 mark - she contends that she directed a scene fro THE LADY FROM SHANGHAI:

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=sF2S0-sQ-Q8

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Re: Lady From Shanghai

Postby Roger Ryan » Fri Mar 28, 2014 8:04 am

When reading your description I imagined Hayworth trying to steal a little credit for some directorial touch in the film, but her comment strikes me as being absolutely truthful...right down to telling Welles that he was over-acting (there's ample evidence of that already!).

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RayKelly
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Re: Lady From Shanghai

Postby RayKelly » Sat Mar 29, 2014 7:59 am

Mike, that is a wonderful clip. I have to confess I have watched few interviews with Rita Hayworth. I need to spend more time on YouTube.

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Re: Lady From Shanghai

Postby duke_mccloud » Sun Sep 06, 2015 1:11 am

What I am most interested in, being a HUUGE Welles fan is regarding most of this missing footage, namely the Fun House scene is having read a couple of interesting articles one in which a lady actually blames OW for being involved in the Black Dahlia murders...hmm interesting stuff, worth a read, I'm not siding with her but she seems to believe its true. Regardless it adds an extra layer of eerieness to this film.

http://www.salon.com/2000/08/16/dahlia/
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