Le Chiffre wrote:I find myself wondering if this could have had something to do with the snub:
https://vimeo.com/71971609
I don't know if the Academy is that thin-skinned.
Le Chiffre wrote:I find myself wondering if this could have had something to do with the snub:
https://vimeo.com/71971609
nickleschichoney wrote:I don't know if the Academy is that thin-skinned.
In spite of its sometimes morose and serious nature, The Other Side of the Wind is fundamentally a playful movie, one that teases us frequently by inviting us to feel as if we can identify vestiges of Welles, other figures, and real-life relationships in the performances. But over the course of the movie, our ability to say with confidence that there is a direct correspondence between what we see on-screen and what we suspect is true off-screen is on shaky ground.
jbrooks wrote:(1) at times muddy soundtrack,
(2) editing/blocking errors and violations of the 180 degree rule, [...] I think perhaps it can be defended as a style choice (though I don't think Welles intended to break the 180 degree rule when he did -- I think those were mistakes made in tough filming conditions).
(3) the way characters suddenly appear in scenes even though they were not present in preceding shots,
(4) the pieced-together ending that suggests that Jake is still at the drive-in after sunrise after implying that he left in the dark,
(5) the odd non-dramatic presentation of the main storyline about Jake learning Dale's true backstory, which fails to include any final confrontation with Dale.
nickleschichoney wrote:(2) editing/blocking errors and violations of the 180 degree rule, [...] I think perhaps it can be defended as a style choice (though I don't think Welles intended to break the 180 degree rule when he did -- I think those were mistakes made in tough filming conditions).
Some of this could be worked around through editing, but that doesn't invalidate Murawski's work nor does it make it a mess. Violations of the 180 degree rule make the audience construct the space in their heads, thus making them pay more attention to the action. So, such violations work with the film's choppy and somewhat-disorienting, attention-demanding style. The rule is not some inviolate principle that filmmakers must adhere to. It depends on the goals of the project as a whole.
jbrooks wrote:But it's always a mistake to have a character look or turn to his or her left when another shot has established that he or she should look or turn to his or her right. That's not really a camera thing -- it's a failure by the script supervisor. And there are a number of examples of this in "Wind." As for the rest, I have not time to respond now ...
nickleschichoney wrote:I will concede that characters sometimes abruptly shift position; e.g. Matt seems to be between Hannaford and Denny, but then we see shots of Hannaford and Denny standing next to each other. A similar issue occurs with the projector Jake stands next to, contradicting the setup of the 1975-shot scenes in the projection room. But those are mistakes that are easily corrected (you can crop the 1974 shots to make them match the blocking of scenes shot in 1975, for example), and it's not a grave fault of either Murawski or the film that they weren't. These kinds of mistakes are inevitable when completing a dense work like this after the creator's death.
jbrooks wrote:in my view, the film can be something of a mess and still be "close enough to rock and roll."
jbrooks wrote:I certainly don't think that it's messy qualities are a reason to ignore the film or that any of those things necessarily detract from its great qualities.
nickleschichoney wrote:So, when you say it's a mess, I and others on this board have no choice but to think you're dismissing it.
jbrooks wrote:As just one example, OC Weekly's review begins "That an enigmatic Orson Welles movie that began filming in 1970, continued production through 1976 due to financial issues, had a 40-year editing gap and is only now, finally being released is a mess should surprise no one. Oh, but what a glorious, oddly compelling mess The Other Side of the Wind is." Does that sound like a dismissal?
jbrooks wrote:The score is very beautiful. I mostly loved it. But I also thought that it was perhaps too sad and mournful. The film’s introduction in particular – with sorrowful music and Bogdanovich reading his narration with a deeply mournful tone – seemed much more of a downer than I think Welles intended. I think Welles would have done that intro more matter-of-fact – like the introduction to Mr. Arkadin. And for the film as a whole, I think Welles would have used the more upbeat parts of the score more often – and buried the mournfulness more in the subtext.
The film’s great weakness is the screenplay. Welles seems to have needed a co-writer or great novel to follow. His original screenplays (Wind, Big Brass Ring, and Cradle Will Rock) are all dramatically flawed, in my view. “Wind’ is poorly structured, and dramatically muddled. The dialogue is sometimes witty – but often not. There is almost no story to speak of. Themes and ideas gradually emerge – but they’re not entirely clear and the drama doesn’t pay off in a particularly satisfying way.
The edit is also a problem. The film is too long. This film should be 90 minutes. At two hours, it becomes a chore to sit through. There are only so many random party-dialogue scenes one can take. And I also think the film-within-a-film sections are too long. The beautiful meandering pointlessness of the film-within-a-film is well established in the studio screening scene at the beginning of the film. But after that, every return to the film within the film is too much. (I did find the bathroom scene amusing – particularly the absurdity of the bit with the ice cube. But then it flows into the car sex scene and the whole thing takes forever).
On a scene by scene level, I admired much of the editing work. Individual scenes are put together well, and there’s no clear distinction between what Welles edited and what was finished by Murawski. But none of the sequences that weren’t in the workprint are as exciting editing-wise as Welles’ edit of Jake’s arrival at the party, for example.
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