Re-finished work from ‘Citizen Kane’ director hits the web

By Nick Cardillo, Staff Writer To a modern viewer, the making of “The Other Side of the Wind” may be more interesting than the film itself. Directed by Orson...

By Nick Cardillo, Staff Writer

To a modern viewer, the making of “The Other Side of the Wind” may be more interesting than the film itself.

Directed by Orson Welles, star of the silver screen and director of such undisputed classics as “Citizen Kane” (routinely called the greatest film ever made) and “Touch of Evil,” “The Other Side of the Wind” was Welles’ final motion picture. As was his prerogative during the latter part of his life, Welles produced the film independently and shot it over the span of five years; filming as much as he could at a time with his assembled cast and crew and then breaking for an even longer period of time in order to finance its completion.

Welles successfully produced a handful of movies in this unorthodox but ultimately effective manner. “The Other Side of the Wind” was not one of them.

Running into financial and legal challenges before the film could be edited and distributed, Welles lost the rights to his own movie and was forced to abandon the project. The film that was to be his final masterpiece went unseen for generations. That is, until now.

Reassembled after more than 40 years, film buffs the world over can finally view Orson Welles’ mythic final project on Netflix.

“The Other Side of the Wind” tells the story of Jake Hannaford (John Huston), an aging, boundary-pushing film director (obviously modeled on Welles himself) who is in the midst of completing his experimental opus. Screening what footage he has shot for friends and industry professionals at his 70th birthday party, Hannaford quickly begins to make more enemies than allies and it appears as if he will never finish the film.

The biggest question which goes annoyingly unanswered in the film is: what is this movie about? It appears that in his lifetime, even Welles was uncertain. Some have suggested that Welles’ vision metamorphosed time and time again in the five years that he was working on the project. And this is certainly reflected in the film. “The Other Side of the Wind” comes off as scatterbrained and incoherent in places with plot threads being picked up and dropped at random.

Yet, through all of this, “The Other Side of the Wind” manages to hold a hypnotic quality over its audience. Even if one does not fully comprehend what the meaning is behind the images playing out on screen, the pictures which Welles and his longtime cinematographer, Gary Graver, have painted with the camera are fascinating and haunting nevertheless.

In many respects, “The Other Side of the Wind” can be regarded as a primary document, providing a unique perspective into the changing cultural landscape of 1970s Hollywood. The days of the big studios and even bigger movie stars had faded quickly and Welles – who had returned to America from selfimposed exile in Europe to complete the movie – must have felt lost. That changing tide is reflected beautifully in the film, and Welles satirizes the key players of this cultural revolution within the film.

Just as Huston’s Hannaford is a stand-in for Welles, Peter Bogdanovich – who in 1975 was a young, up-and-coming director and close friend of Welles’ – plays Brooks Otterlake, a young, up-and-coming director and close friend of Hannaford’s.

What else is the film about? Welles manages to comment on toxic masculinity, points out the futility of the muse in an artist’s life, critiques newwave experimentalism and still finds time for a shoot-out and brawl which makes “The Other Side of the Wind” a densely-packed two hours.

Orson Welles was always on the cutting edge of movie-making and his last film reinforces that sentiment, showcasing techniques which would not become standard for several more decades. “The Other Side of the Wind” is no “Citizen Kane,” but it is a strange, haunting film which even after 40 years, is not ready to give up all its secrets.

Additionally, Morgan Neville’s documentary, “They’ll Love Me When I’m Dead,” released concurrently with “The Other Side of the Wind” on Netflix, is an excellent companion piece which goes into greater detail about the problems which plagued the film’s production and provides greater context for the world in which the movie was made.

“The Other Side of the Wind” is most certainly not be for everyone, but if you love the art of film, then it is a must-watch. I give the film 3.5 out of 5 stars.

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