Posts Tagged ‘Orson Welles’

Orson Welles, 1937
In 1937, a mad genius stood poised, ready to unleash his vision on the world. The Crazy Genius was Orson Welles — and his production of Shakespeare’s ‘Julius Caesar’ at his newly created Mercury Theatre in New York City would bring him infamy and opportunity. Filmmaker Richard Linklater brings the period — and the genius to life in his new film ‘‘Me and Orson Welles.’
Based on the coming -of -age novel by Robert Kaplow, Linklater shows us all the fun, craziness, treachery and heartbreak that came under the rubric: A Life in the Theatre — especially if it involved the Boy Wonder who was Orson Welles in 1937.
We get the backstage intrigue, the romances and Welles as a kind of sometimes benign, sometimes cruel dictator/director. He wanted results and adoration — didn’t hesitate to cut anyone who didn’t give him enough of either. British actor Christian McCay, who stars as Welles, nails the director’s brilliance — as well as his ability to manipulate and seduce.
Zac Efron is touchingly vulnerable as Richard Samuels, the high school kid who stumbles on a rehearsal at the Mercury and gets a small part in the production. At the end, after Samuels has tasted some success, some betrayal, and some joy, he tells his friend, Gretta, who has dreams of being a writer: “It feels like we have everything before us…..” The camera pulls back in a gesture of joy and acknowledgement. That everything would eventually come to mean World War II — and for Welles — more masterpieces, fame, financial ruin — and a haunting memory of a sled called Rosebud. But in that moment, for those characters — the world was alive — with possibility and with hope.