home *** CD-ROM | disk | FTP | other *** search
- <text id=92TT0871>
- <title>
- Apr. 20, 1992: Reviews:Cinema
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1992
- Apr. 20, 1992 Why Voters Don't Trust Clinton
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- REVIEW, Page 91
- CINEMA
- Superbly in Synch with Shakespeare
- </hdr><body>
- <p>By Richard Corliss
- </p>
- <qt>
- <l>TITLE: Othello</l>
- <l>DIRECTOR AND ADAPTER: Orson Welles</l>
- </qt>
- <p> THE BOTTOM LINE: Eccentric and wonderful, like its
- creator, this 1952 work ought to trigger further restorations
- of neglected Welles films
- </p>
- <p> The first image of the tragedy of Othello, the Moor of
- Venice--the beautiful and delirious Orson Welles movie now
- spiffed up for its first U.S. engagement in 36 years--shows
- Welles in blackface, upside down and dead. Even when he was a
- young man, a 25-year-old making something called Citizen Kane,
- the legendary actor-auteur enjoyed imagining himself as a
- corpse onscreen. It was his impudent prophecy: that he would
- soon be cast on Hollywood's funeral pyre like a discarded sled.
- </p>
- <p> How right he was. More than any other great director,
- Welles suffered a career of fits and starts: he would start a
- film, and then his niggly investors would give him fits. (The
- ill feeling was mutual.) In Hollywood, Welles was effectively
- banished by his early 30s. RKO Radio Pictures chopped The
- Magnificent Ambersons, Welles' brilliant follow-up to Kane, by
- a third (from 131 min. to 88), ordered a new ending shot by a
- different director and even sent Ambersons out as the bottom
- half of a double feature, in support of Mexican Spitfire Sees
- a Ghost. Republic Pictures cut 20 min., which has since been
- restored, from his Macbeth in 1948. And so, that year, Welles
- set off on a European tour that would last nearly four decades.
- His first stop was Italy, where he would begin Othello.
- </p>
- <p> Alas, Welles' first independent production gave him, for
- his pains, a world of sighs. Backers kept promising funds, then
- withdrawing them. Suzanne Cloutier, who played Desdemona, would
- act as seductress to Welles' potential patrons. "He would dress
- me in full costume," she recalls, "and we'd visit the King of
- the Berbers. I'd lie on a couch, and we'd try to convince this
- king to give us his army for extras."
- </p>
- <p> For three years and more, the star-director and his ragtag
- band of actors hopscotched the Mediterranean, shooting a
- sequence whenever a few Euro dollars turned up. Notes Welles
- biographer Frank Brady: "A Tuscan stairway and a Moorish
- battlement are in the film, both appearing as parts of a single
- room. Roderigo kicks Cassio in Massaga and gets punched back in
- Orgete, a thousand miles away."
- </p>
- <p> Othello shared the top prize at the 1952 Cannes Film
- Festival, but another three years elapsed before it opened in
- the U.S. Welles had a lingering fondness for the movie; in 1978
- he directed a documentary about its making, Filming Othello. It
- was his last picture. "He always talked about Othello with great
- love," says his daughter Beatrice Welles-Smith. "Yet he was
- under the impression that it was not a good movie. `If only I'd
- had the money and not had to work under those conditions,' he
- said, `I'd have made a much better movie.'"
- </p>
- <p> As it was, Welles made a wonderful movie--an eccentric
- adaptation that is in spirit as true to Shakespeare's text as,
- say, Verdi's Otello. The director's brilliant conceit was to
- film this tale of the ebony Moor and his blond bride in images
- of stark chiaroscuro, the blackest black and the whitest white.
- No moral or visual gray tones here. Dark cloaked figures rush
- toward the Grand Canal, and pigeons scatter up into an angry
- sky. The spider-webbery of shadows casts doom across an innocent
- face. It is a canvas, of baroque silhouettes and diagonals
- rampant, that marries text to texture in vintage film-noir
- style. Othello: the postwar man who feels betrayed by his wife.
- Desdemona: the innocent woman brutalized by her suspicious
- spouse.
- </p>
- <p> The film was brutalized too; in the U.S., at least, it was
- rarely shown. Then in 1989 Intermission Productions, at the
- request of Welles-Smith, launched a search for the film's
- original elements. They turned up in a New Jersey warehouse, and
- a restoration team set about polishing the visuals, re-creating
- the score and synchronizing, to the extent possible, words with
- lip movements. Restoration supervisor Phillip Schopper sees the
- new Othello as a revival supplemented by modern technology: "We
- did things that Welles wished he'd been able to do, but
- couldn't."
- </p>
- <p> Othello should be just the beginning of a true
- restoration. Welles made only 18 films, and at least five
- might-be masterpieces remain to be seen. It's All True, a
- three-part Technicolor film Welles shot in Brazil in 1942, ran
- afoul of censors and studio executives, and the film was
- aborted. In the late '60s Welles shot part of The Deep (Dead
- Calm), with Lau rence Harvey and Jeanne Moreau. Around the same
- time he completed a 40-min., stripped-down (no Portia) version
- of The Merchant of Venice, but somebody stole the sound track.
- The Other Side of the Wind, a made-in-Hollywood story starring
- John Huston, reached the stage of a 2 1/2-hr. work print. But
- in 1979 the film, partly financed by an Iranian company, was
- seized by the Ayatullah Khomeini's Islamic revolution. Don
- Quixote, which Welles shot in spare moments over three decades,
- has been edited by director Jesus Franco and will be shown next
- week at Seville's Expo '92.
- </p>
-
- </body></article>
- </text>
-
-