952 The Magnificent Ambersons
- domino harvey
- Dot Com Dom
- Joined: Wed Jan 11, 2006 2:42 pm
Re: The Magnificent Ambersons (Welles, 1942)
If we're talking films critical of the direction America is going, pencil in any of the countless social problem pictures of the 30s to start with, then as Drucker mentions move on to the Noirs of the forties. There's no shortage of Depression-era movies that showed a dark side of the country. I think the question as posed is pretty odd, though
- movielocke
- Joined: Fri Jan 18, 2008 12:44 am
Re: The Magnificent Ambersons (Welles, 1942)
Going through the 5.5 hours of non commentary extras lately, it is a must to go through the two key interviews back to back because Simon Callow gives one, fairly traditional take on Welles partying in Brazil, and Joseph McBride gives an alternate (meticulously documented and naming of names of the villains), heavily researched (he found the receipts, so to speak) take on Welles and Brazil.
The Herrmann extra was fine, but I found it somewhat uninteresting compared to the other two interviews. The Dick Cavett show might be the best Dick Cavett bit I've ever seen on TCM or as an extra on a disc, Welles is in fine form, and it's a completely fabulous and fun and insightful interview.
The Herrmann extra was fine, but I found it somewhat uninteresting compared to the other two interviews. The Dick Cavett show might be the best Dick Cavett bit I've ever seen on TCM or as an extra on a disc, Welles is in fine form, and it's a completely fabulous and fun and insightful interview.
Last edited by movielocke on Tue Jan 22, 2019 5:28 pm, edited 1 time in total.
- FrauBlucher
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- Location: Greenwich Village
Re: The Magnificent Ambersons (Welles, 1942)
Awesome thought. I can’t think of anything. It would be like someone making a film today that wishes for life before the internet/social media.Drucker wrote:Any other film that calls out American "progress" as perhaps a negative?
I did think of the opposite though. The Fountainhead (1949), Gary Cooper plays an architect that wants to build modern structures against the wishes of people that hired him to build buildings that mirror the older more staid reality of the time.
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Re: The Magnificent Ambersons (Welles, 1942)
It's perhaps stating the obvious, but the theme can be found outside of American cinema in Kozaburo Yoshimura's The Ball at the Anjo House and Satyajit Ray's The Music Room.
- knives
- Joined: Sat Sep 06, 2008 6:49 pm
Re: The Magnificent Ambersons (Welles, 1942)
Isn't that the plot to about 90% of westerns?FrauBlucher wrote: ↑Tue Jan 22, 2019 5:27 pmAwesome thought. I can’t think of anything. It would be like someone making a film today that wishes for life before the internet/social media.Drucker wrote:Any other film that calls out American "progress" as perhaps a negative?
- FrauBlucher
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Re: The Magnificent Ambersons (Welles, 1942)
True. But wasn 't Ambersons made closer to it's time of reference, as opposed to westerns being further in the past.
- Drucker
- Your Future our Drucker
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Re: The Magnificent Ambersons (Welles, 1942)
In several of the extras, the strength of Welles' critique of American progress came off as central to the original vision of the film. I found that critique more direct and striking than anything I could think of, though of course that broader critique runs through many other films. I wanted to ask if anything else was comparable. The only thing I can really think of is like I said, Heaven's Gate, or perhaps the "this is going to be a fine country, some day" line in The Searchers.
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Re: The Magnificent Ambersons (Welles, 1942)
But isn't also critical of the way America was before it progressed in the 20th century? George essentially sabotages his mother's life and happiness because he can't let go of some silly social principle.
- knives
- Joined: Sat Sep 06, 2008 6:49 pm
Re: The Magnificent Ambersons (Welles, 1942)
Not originally.FrauBlucher wrote: ↑Tue Jan 22, 2019 9:36 pmTrue. But wasn 't Ambersons made closer to it's time of reference, as opposed to westerns being further in the past.
- FrauBlucher
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Re: The Magnificent Ambersons (Welles, 1942)
I don’t get the feeling that Ford was longing for or wanting life to be as in Stagecoach as Welles was for The Ambersons.
- Big Ben
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Re: The Magnificent Ambersons (Welles, 1942)
The thing about "The West" is that that time period only really encompass a very short time period. The most fertile period was about thirty years, from 1865 to 1895 although it extended to a much less degree into the twentieth century. The Wild Bunch for instance is at the very end of this taking place in 1913. Booth Tarkington's original novel was published in 1918. knives is absolutely correct in his statement.
- FrauBlucher
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Re: The Magnificent Ambersons (Welles, 1942)
I still think there is a difference about Welles’ contemporary longing and something that was based on the legend of the west.
- knives
- Joined: Sat Sep 06, 2008 6:49 pm
Re: The Magnificent Ambersons (Welles, 1942)
It wasn't a legend in the 20s and 30s. It was recent history. Just look at Hell's Hinges for example. I am not even sure that one is a period piece.
- Big Ben
- Joined: Mon Feb 08, 2016 12:54 pm
- Location: Great Falls, Montana
Re: The Magnificent Ambersons (Welles, 1942)
I can only speak for myself here but I think there's a difference between longing for something long gone and the myth of the Old West. The West that most people have is one manufactured by the movies as the Wild West for the most part was pretty mundane. Conflict most certainly occurred but it was nowhere near as frequent as the movies made it look. For instance the average town had about a murder per year. Boasting about your kill count back then was a bit like bragging about how many people you've slept with while you were still in College. Even the most "badass" cowpunks like Billy the Kid only managed to kill four people in their entire lives.
Another thing that movies have overlooked was how important women were to those towns. The most powerful person in West could quite often be brothel madams. They not only knew secrets but quite often instrumental in getting education and healthcare infrastructure implemented into towns. The west was significantly less violent than most people think it was. But it was WAY sexier.
Welles' longing strikes me more as nostalgia driven rather than about a notion about constructed myth. It FELT easier and because of that "it was." It certainly doesn't mean Welles can't have his head in the clouds but that doesn't mean his fears about growth are unwarranted. The decay of somethings that come alongside progress and growth is not something I feel is something that's myth driven (Although you could most certainly argue about whether something that has been lost is good or bad.) and I think it's a far cry from the rootin' tootin' image of the West that was being created in cinemas at the time Welles was making Ambersons.
Another thing that movies have overlooked was how important women were to those towns. The most powerful person in West could quite often be brothel madams. They not only knew secrets but quite often instrumental in getting education and healthcare infrastructure implemented into towns. The west was significantly less violent than most people think it was. But it was WAY sexier.
Welles' longing strikes me more as nostalgia driven rather than about a notion about constructed myth. It FELT easier and because of that "it was." It certainly doesn't mean Welles can't have his head in the clouds but that doesn't mean his fears about growth are unwarranted. The decay of somethings that come alongside progress and growth is not something I feel is something that's myth driven (Although you could most certainly argue about whether something that has been lost is good or bad.) and I think it's a far cry from the rootin' tootin' image of the West that was being created in cinemas at the time Welles was making Ambersons.
- domino harvey
- Dot Com Dom
- Joined: Wed Jan 11, 2006 2:42 pm
Re: The Magnificent Ambersons (Welles, 1942)
Mankiewicz's the Late George Apley would fit the bill as an anti-nostalgia progress pic too, though it still seems to me like we're all talking about something slightly different from each other!
- knives
- Joined: Sat Sep 06, 2008 6:49 pm
Re: The Magnificent Ambersons (Welles, 1942)
I have been assuming this was about anti-progress movies that happen to also not be nostalgic rather than, as you seem to be saying films about progress that don't treat the past with nostalgia.
- domino harvey
- Dot Com Dom
- Joined: Wed Jan 11, 2006 2:42 pm
Re: The Magnificent Ambersons (Welles, 1942)
But a film that says the past was better than the present/future is inherently nostalgic by definition (and also, I might add, completely at odds with film noir as a genre, as having no future and/or being haunted by the past is not what's being described, so not sure why that's used as an example in the initial post). This is why I remain confused here, I guess
EDIT: And Heaven's Gate does a good job of making life in the old west look miserable, so I'm not sure how that is an example of a film saying progress is bad since it goes out of its way to highlight how it would have sucked to live back then?
EDIT: And Heaven's Gate does a good job of making life in the old west look miserable, so I'm not sure how that is an example of a film saying progress is bad since it goes out of its way to highlight how it would have sucked to live back then?
- knives
- Joined: Sat Sep 06, 2008 6:49 pm
Re: The Magnificent Ambersons (Welles, 1942)
I don't think anyone was talking about films which argue that the past is better, but rather that progress doesn't mean that the future is improved over the past. That's especially what I took the film noir comment to mean as the future is a dead end, but the past is also rancid. Heaven's Gate then also becomes a sensible example as that is a film about how the coming industrial revolution did nothing to stem flaws in American society and may even have come to exacerbate some.
- Big Ben
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Re: The Magnificent Ambersons (Welles, 1942)
Progress isn't necessarily the issue per se but the idea that it can't come with unwanted harm isn't a disingenuous statement in my opinion. For instance one might also view technological progress as a double edged sword. In may indeed help people in all manner of ways but it's also enabled terrible harassment, doxxing, death threats, etc. With the encroachment of civilization comes all manner of benefits but it also brings sorrow and other social ills such as destruction of resources. I wonder how Welles would have looked at what the film industry nowadays due to it's more exposed nature but also the ever increasing demand studios have to make all of the money. A lamentation over the loss of something in this regard isn't inherently anti-progress in my mind but a reflection. In Monte Walsh (The original) a character remarks that the building of fences on Western land is bringing the end to an era. It's not really an angry statement but a reminder that the good times come to an end and that things are always going to be lost. "Nobody gets to be a cowboy forever." was the line that stuck with me as it was reflective (If a bit simple.) but it wasn't exactly angry.
- filmyfan
- Joined: Fri Feb 02, 2007 9:50 am
Re: 952 The Magnificent Ambersons
Fantastic site..just a glance at it so far...so much to dip into..hearthesilence wrote: ↑Sun Jan 20, 2019 6:12 pmJesus, this is a pretty Herculean effort. Just skimming it now, but it looks like he even fabricated stills from lost shots using existing materials via Photoshop. (Looking at the lost ending - Moorehead's face looks like it was duplicated from the same still for several re-created shots meant to portray different angles.)Drucker wrote: ↑Sun Jan 20, 2019 1:31 pmJoseph Egan has created an incredible online resource for the film.
Answered a few of my questions re: locations already!
- FrauBlucher
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Re: 952 The Magnificent Ambersons
I watched this again with the Carringer commentary. He mentioned that Moorhead and Cotten were against re-shooting the end. Did Moorhead and Cotten talk about the ending years down the road that have been documented? Also, was the reason Cortez didn't work on some of the re-shoots was because of scheduling?
- Roger Ryan
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Re: 952 The Magnificent Ambersons
Although he didn't specifically reference the ending,in a BFI Q & A done for The Third Man circa early 1980s (available on the Studio Canal Blu-ray of that film), Cotten was asked about the initial edit of Ambersons and he stated emphatically that "Orson's version was better". Keep in mind, he had already suffered a debilitating stroke prior to this Q & A, so he was having trouble speaking, but the great effort he exerted to give this response seems to indicate it was important to him to make this preference clear (having remained friends with Welles, it's likely he felt this was the only honorable response to give forty years later). I'm not certain how much he and Moorehead protested shooting the new ending in 1942; there were certainly attempts to shorten the film but retain the original ending through subsequent previews after the initial two "disastrous" previews. I suspect the actors' own sense of loyalty to Welles gave them pause about re-shooting the end, but I don't believe they fought against it in the same way that Charlton Heston did when he initially refused to do re-shoots on Touch of Evil.FrauBlucher wrote: ↑Sat Jun 27, 2020 1:46 pmI watched this again with the Carringer commentary. He mentioned that Moorhead and Cotten were against re-shooting the end. Did Moorhead and Cotten talk about the ending years down the road that have been documented? Also, was the reason Cortez didn't work on some of the re-shoots was because of scheduling?
As to Cortez, he had already been largely replaced on the film by other cinematographers (primarily Harry Wild and Russell Metty) for the final third of principal photography, so I don't think there was any attempt to bring him back for re-shoots*. All of the re-shoots were directed by the film's assistant director Freddie Fleck, using Nicholas Musuraca as cinematographer, over six days in mid-April 1942, with the exception of the first half of the Fanny/George water heater scene (re-shot May 19th) which credits Welles' production manager Jack Moss as director (I believe Fleck was busy working on his next assistant director assignment by that time).
*Given that he was the chief cinematographer during only the first two-thirds of principal photography, and over forty-five minutes of Welles' footage was ultimately removed, Cortez is actually responsible for a little less than half of the material that remains in the 88 minute release version.
- TheKieslowskiHaze
- Joined: Fri Apr 03, 2020 10:37 am
Re: 952 The Magnificent Ambersons
Orson Welles' lost cut of 'The Magnificent Ambersons' may still be in Brazil. TCM seems to be betting on it. Or, at the very least, they're betting that the documentary resulting from the search will be profitable.
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Re: 952 The Magnificent Ambersons
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- J Wilson
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Re: 952 The Magnificent Ambersons
The documentary will probably consist of the standard history of the film's troubled post-production, intercut with footage of this guy touring whatever film vaults he can get into, and an interview or two with people who heard from a friend of a friend of a friend that they saw the mythic lost print screened at someone's house in 1965 or whatever. It'll end with the failure to find said print of course, but hope lives on...