Alright, maybe you need some more convincing. Maybe you’re
not utterly compelled by his work directing, writing, and starring in the likes
of Citizen Kane, The Magnificent Ambersons, or even the recently
released, long-gestated The Other Side of the Wind. Maybe you need
something headier, more philosophical, more experimental. If that’s the case,
then I’ve got the perfect film for you: 1973’s essential meditation on art,
hubris, and mortality, F For Fake.
You probably have some questions about F For Fake.
Namely, what kind of movie is it? That’s a great question! I don’t know the
answer. Here at Twist & Shout, we categorize it as a documentary. But it’s
also a narrative film, with entire sections fabricated by Welles, and it also
functions as an autobiography, an insight into our aging, tired, embittered
auteur. (This was, after all, the last film Welles completed before he died,
making it hard not to consider it a manifesto.) Most of all though, this is a
metatext, a film about filmmaking. Art about art. Cinema about trickery.
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Amid these philosophical questions, Welles gives details of
his own experience as an artist; there’s a soft, lyrical sequence in the film
that finds our guide reflecting on his youth as an actor in Europe, a position
Welles himself conned his way into: “I started at the top, myself,” he tells
us, before adding the poignant, soft-spoken joke, “I’ve been working myself
down ever since.” Welles - who I called a genius mere minutes ago -
contextualizes himself as a fake, too!
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In case you couldn’t tell, it’s hard to talk about the fine
details in F For Fake. This is a film that deals in the very
abstractions that Picasso’s - or is it Elmyr’s? - work tackles. In case you
also couldn’t tell, F For Fake is one of my favorite movies ever made.
I’m astounded, consistently, by this film and all of its intricacies and depths
and nuances; stunningly shot, Welles’s careful camera placements and focuses
simultaneously reinforce and undermine thematic concerns of authorship and
authenticity. These broad themes somehow still feel personal and introspective;
sitting from the editing bay, Welles muses directly to us, making the showy
editing feel like Welles’s own stream-of-consciousness. Watching F For Fake
feels like you’re falling down the rabbit hole; at the end, you’re in Welles’s
own wonderland.
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Harry Todd
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