Current:Home > InvestAn Orson Welles film was horribly edited — will cinematic justice finally be done? -Insightful Finance Hub
An Orson Welles film was horribly edited — will cinematic justice finally be done?
View
Date:2025-04-16 03:13:45
One of the greatest American directors of the 20th century is known for only a few films.
After Orson Welles made his masterpiece Citizen Kane in 1941, he fought bitterly with the studios that released his subsequent films — often after they bowdlerized Welles' work. Films such as The Lady from Shanghai and The Magnificent Ambersons were drastically changed and cut, altering the auteur's vision.
Now, a Welles superfan named Brian Rose — himself an accomplished filmmaker — has used animation and countless hours of painstaking research to recreate missing footage from The Magnificent Ambersons.
Welles started filming what was intended to be his second masterpiece in 1941, hot from the success of Citizen Kane. The movie is based on a Pulitzer Prize-winning novel by Booth Tarkington.
Welles, who had already adapted the novel for radio, wanted to tell a timeless story about Americans buffeted by unsettling new technology and economic decline through the fortunes of a small town's richest family. He was given a princely budget and built an entire mansion with moveable walls for filming. But costs kept mounting and RKO studio executives disliked the film's dark take on American aristocracy, especially in the jingoistic era before World War II.
"The studio took his 131-minute version of The Magnificent Ambersons. They cut it down to 88 minutes," says Ray Kelly, who runs the Orson Welles fansite Wellesnet. "Not only that, they took out the ending, which was rather bleak, and replaced it with a very Hollywood happy ending that doesn't seem to fit the mood of the film in total."
All in all, Kelly says, only 13 scenes out of 73 were left untouched. And despite all the studio's re-editing and the unconvincing happy ending, The Magnificent Ambersons was still a massive flop. RKO burned its silver nitrate negatives to salvage the silver and make space to store other movies.
"So Welles' version has been lost to history," Kelly says.
Not so fast, says filmmaker Brian Rose. "Fortunately, the film is remarkably well-documented for a film that was so badly altered," he says. "There is quite a lot that can be inferred from the surviving materials."
So that's what he's doing, using animation and voice actors to fill the gaps.
Rose is not the first to attempt to reconstruct The Magnificent Ambersons. Several other Welles enthusiasts have attempted to correct what Kelly calls "the challenge of undoing a cinematic injustice" through various means. But none have used animation.
"A lot of it was based on photographs and on diagrams of camera placements and descriptions of scenes," Rose explains. Plus, new technology.
"Basically, in a 3D environment, I rebuilt all the sets from diagrams and photographs," he continues. "The challenge was populating them with characters. I took for inspiration the original storyboards, which were hand-drawn pencil and charcoal, very ethereal looking, kind of like the world of the Ambersons. They feel like there's a haze over them. So even when I do take the artistic license of creating these scenes in animation, they still are referencing they still draw a reference to Welles' original artistic vision."
There is also a bit of a haze over this project regarding intellectual property rights and how legal it is to be animating this fan version of The Magnificent Ambersons. "The thought was to beg forgiveness later," Rose admits.
The filmmaker is not going to get rich with this passion project. Indeed, he's sunk a considerable amount of his own resources into what he hopes is a respectful and scholarly transformational work.
Rose hopes to eventually share his version of The Magnificent Ambersons with other Orson Welles fanatics. A screening is planned as part of a series at the Free Library of Philadelphia. And he'd love for it to be packaged as part of a Criterion Collection edition. In the era of TikTok, it's an homage to a wounded film.
Edited by Ciera Crawford
Produced by Isabella Gomez Sarmiento
veryGood! (22)
Related
- The Louvre will be renovated and the 'Mona Lisa' will have her own room
- Biden calls Alabama IVF ruling outrageous and unacceptable
- Alabama's largest hospital pauses IVF treatments after state Supreme Court embryo ruling
- Meet the cast of Netflix's 'Avatar The Last Airbender' live action series
- Woman dies after Singapore family of 3 gets into accident in Taiwan
- Virginia House and Senate pass competing state budgets, both diverge from Youngkin’s vision
- Why King Charles has been 'reduced to tears' following cancer diagnosis
- A man accused of stabbing another passenger on a Seattle to Las Vegas flight charged with assault
- Which apps offer encrypted messaging? How to switch and what to know after feds’ warning
- Dunkin' adds new caffeine energy drink Sparkd' Energy in wake of Panera Bread lawsuits
Ranking
- San Francisco names street for Associated Press photographer who captured the iconic Iwo Jima photo
- More MLB jersey controversy: Players frustrated with uniform's see-through pants
- '(Expletive) bum': Knicks' Jalen Brunson heckled by own father during NBA 3-point contest
- Biden ally meets Arab American leaders in Michigan and tries to lower tensions over Israel-Hamas war
- Are Instagram, Facebook and WhatsApp down? Meta says most issues resolved after outages
- U.K. defense chief declares confidence in Trident nuclear missiles after reports of failed test off Florida
- NBC replacing Jac Collinsworth as Notre Dame football play-by-play voice, per report
- NBA suspends Pistons' Isaiah Stewart for pregame altercation with Suns' Drew Eubanks
Recommendation
The Grammy nominee you need to hear: Esperanza Spalding
Hydeia Broadbent, HIV/AIDS activist who raised awareness on tv at young age, dies at 39
Inside the enduring movie homes of Jack Fisk, production design legend
The Excerpt podcast: The NIMBY war against green energy
'No Good Deed': Who's the killer in the Netflix comedy? And will there be a Season 2?
Prosecutors to seek retrial in former Ohio deputy’s murder case
College basketball bubble tracker: Several Big East teams hanging in limbo for men's tournament
California man arrested and accused of threatening Arizona election worker after 2022 vote