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F
for Fake
Dir. Orson Welles, France/ Iran/ West Germany, 1974
Criterion Collection, $39.95 Between
the completion of his Chimes at Midnight
in 1965 and his death 20 years later, Orson Welles
remained an unquenchable artist, slumming with
Muppets and appearing in whiskey ads to finance
his dozens of juggled, absurdly ambitious projects.
But despite this productivity, F for Fake
and the more casual Filming “Othello” are
the only finished films from that stretch of time.
Criterion’s expectedly slick presentation F
for Fake—which includes a revelatory 1995
documentary by Vassili Silovic about Welles’s
uncompleted late-era work—helps to bring this
aging Welles, scrapping for his art and catering
only to his particular vision, into new, satisfying
perspective.
F for Fake is a diabolical, perfume-scented
booby-trap of a “movie” that has defied categorization
since its release. It’s not a documentary, and
Peter Bogdanovich’s preferred term (“essay film”)
seems unsuited to the movie’s avant-garde tendencies
and stretches of pure fiction. Like David Holzman’s
Diary, it’s hard to say exactly what it is—which
is irrelevant, since it’s so fun to bob and weave
with its free association of BBC documentary footage,
winkingly pompous Welles asides, history lessons,
and dreamlike meditations on art and truth. The
film’s several flights of fancy are grounded on
an examination of the life and work of Elmyr de
Hory, the world’s most notorious art forger. Arrogant,
Hungarian, and in all kinds of denial, de Hory
makes the perfect vessel for Welles’s exposure
of the fallibility of concepts like expertise
and authenticity. As does Clifford Irving, de
Hory’s biographer, who soon trumped his mentor’s
con with his notorious fake autobiography of Howard
Hughes; lingered on thoroughly here, that scandal
occurred as F for Fake was being made,
which speaks to the film’s off-the-cuff open energy.
Through footage culled from diverse sources and
shot in various formats (then edited with jarring-but-cunning
precision), we meet swindlers like these and then
Orson himself, who guides us through the lies
that got him on stage in Dublin (he told them
he was a famous Hollywood actor) and earned his
early stateside notoriety (the War of the Worlds
broadcast). At the start Welles announces that
everything we’ll see in the next hour will be
fact, but the film’s final 28 minutes make up
a fictional account of Oja Kodar (Welles’s beautiful
later-in-life partner) seducing Picasso and her
father stealing the painter’s identity. Not as
merrily mind-fucking as the film’s first movement,
this final segment provides the relaxing noncommitment
that only make-believe can.
Orson Welles: One-Man Band, the aforementioned
documentary about unfinished projects, is the
real prize of this collection’s many minutes of
extras, thanks to rare footage of everything from
Welles’s Moby-Dick (which consists of him
reading selections in front of a blue backdrop)
to The Other Side of the Wind to London,
a surreal comedy with Welles pulling an Eddie
Murphy, filling the roles of several comic types
(Asian shop owner, filthy postcard-selling homeless
woman, etc..) A PBS-style documentary about de
Hory and a 60 Minutes interview with Irving
are standard fare but amusing, while a somewhat
tacked-on Hughes press conference debunking the
autobiography (and many of the rumors about his
fingernail length and sanity) is pretty riveting.
Only the commentary disappoints; while cinematographer
Gary Graver sheds light on the movie’s self-invention
and de Hory’s sad suicide, Kodar offers little
more than repetitive “What if lies are the
truth?” quasi-insights, the same ones that
the film itself dances around so coyly.
Singular as they are, a small sigh of obligation
still comes with sitting down to stark Welles
output like Othello or The Trial.
Not so with F for Fake, a viewing experience
as exhilaratingly unreal as Lady from Shanghai’s
Hall of Mirrors. This thorough Criterion package
does more than resurrect a great film. It reminds
people that Orson was not hawking snow peas in
vain during all of those happily corpulent “beard
years”—he was learning new tricks and staying,
as since the late 1930s, so many magic steps ahead
of the expected.
—JUSTIN STEWART |