The life and career of Orson Welles has proved to be a popular subject for feature films. Tim Robbins made The Cradle will Rock in 1997 about Welles' efforts to produce Marc Blitzstein's musical of the same name, a Brecht-influenced piece of Depression-era agit-prop; that film is set in 1937 when Welles was working with the Leftist Federal Theater, an enterprise that he derides in the first ten minutes of Richard Linklater's excellent Me and Orson Welles (2009). David Fincher's Mank made for Netflix in 2020 chronicles Welles' work with screenwriter Herman Mankiewicz in preparation for Citizen Kane. (Mank is a beautifully filmed and acted picture that has the misfortune of being curiously tedious, uninvolving and forgettable -- it's about a squabble over attribution, a topic interesting to some cinephiles but ultimately not really compelling for most audiences.) There's a thriller called Fade to Black in which Welles is called upon to solve a murder. In 1975, the made-for-TV movie The Night that Panicked America provides an account of the hysteria that allegedly arose from Welles' radio production of War of the Worlds -- no one seems to think that movie was any good; I watched it but have no recollection of anything in the picture. The best of this specialized genre is Linklater's wonderfully scripted and elegantly shot Me and Orson Welles, a movie that successfully marries biopic elements (rigorously researched) with romantic comedy in the context of a teenager's "coming of age." Me and Orson Welles is charming and continuously compelling. Linklater is possibly America's most consistently excellent and innovative director; he has an acute feel for the material that he shoots, seems neither too adoring nor too cynical about his characters, and possessed an unassuming camera and editing style that can deliver surprisingly profound and beautiful moments. In a Linklater picture, there's no straining for effect, an aspect of this director's work that is directly contrary to the baroque Sturm und Drang in most of Welles' films -- Linklater's tasteful restraint accordingly serves as an anodyne corrective to Welles' flamboyance.
Richard Samuels is a 17 year old kid who lives somewhere in New York City. He's interested in all of the arts, a sort of wise-ass dilettante. At the outset, we see him daydreaming in a High School literature class where the teacher is droning on about Shakespeare. Next, Richard meets a girl who is playing piano in a record and music shop -- they talk about Broadway show tunes and art and she confesses to the protagonist that she has completed a short story that she is hoping to sell to The New Yorker -- there is an obvious attraction between Richard and the girl, Gretta Adler but the initial encounter goes nowhere. In the third scene in Me and Orson Welles, the young man encounters a crowd of people standing at the entrance to a somewhat ruinous theater, the place that Welles will convert to a playhouse for his Mercury Theater Company. People are bickering about when the show, a production of Julius Caesar, will premiere -- there have been a number of delays and the backers are restive and the actors (most of whom are not paid) are also concerned that the show will tank before it opens. Welles is trying to cast a small part in the play, Lucius, a servant to Brutus (the part that Welles plays). Lucius needs to be able to sing and play a ukulele (standing in for a lute); the kid also can play the drums and, after demonstrating an impressive,drumroll is hired on the spot by the flamboyant Welles, a charming, manipulative bully. For next hour or so, the film dramatizes rehearsals of Julius Caesar that Welles has (with characteristic arrogance) renamed just Caesar. Welles is having an affair with his leading lady although his wife is very much pregnant. The director is also involved sexually with an assistant, a sort of publicist and stage manager, named Sonja (with a "j", she says, although pronounced as a "y") Welles is continuously threatening people, firing and rehiring them, and alternative cajoling and bullying his cast and crew. There's no doubt, however, that an aura of genius surrounds him. A British actor named Christian McKay acts the part of Orson Welles and he's extraordinarily persuasive in the role -- he perfectly imitates Welles silky smooth radio-star voice, his hammy persona, and he looks like the man as well. (He's a bit jowly, stocky, and suggests the Falstaffian character that Welles would later assume in his middle-age.) It becomes apparent that Welles will do anything to implement his vision of Shakespeare's history play and he isn't above Machiavellian manipulation of his players. Everyone knows this and, yet, everyone is completely willing to submit to the tyrant's antics -- no one questions Welles genius; nor does the film. Richard attends a recording session for a radio program in which Welles wildly improvises using material from Booth Tarkington's The Magnificent Ambersons, a book that Welles claim was inspired by his own family in Kenosha, Wisconsin. There are some minor mishaps on the set at the Mercury Theater, but Welles who is superstitious says that something very bad must happen before the premiere or calamity will befall the first night. Richard inadvertently sets off a sprinkler system in the Mercury Theater causing a flood. Welles knows that Richard's negligence caused the catastrophe but Richard, who is a conniving hustler as well, excuses himself by implying that he induced the calamity to avoid the opening night curse. Sonja, who is scheming to seduce David O. Selznick (Welles' associate apparently, wants to work on Gone with the Wind.) She likes Richard's ambition and naive innocence and they go to an apartment in Greenwich Village that Welles uses for sexual trysts. There she has sex with Richard who, of course, thinks (mistakenly) that Sonja is his girlfriend (As far as she's concerned, it's just a fling.). Richard has recently seen Gretta in a museum and she says she has sent her story to Harold Ross at The New Yorker. Sonja has contacts at the magazine and she promises to use her influence to promote the story as a favor to Richard and "his girlfriend". A few days later, Sonja repairs to Welles' love nest and spends the night with the director. This enrages Richard who gets into a physical altercation with Welles (the director grabs him by the throat). Welles fires Richard but immediately repents -- he knows the kid is necessary for his theatrical effects in Caesar and so he meets the young man, praises him as a "god-created actor" and "magnificent" and implores him to return to the company. All sorts of chaos ensues in the last hours before the premiere and a preview matinee goes disastrously wrong. This is alleged to be how Welles always works, creating a sense of chaos and emergency before opening night. When the play is performed -- and we see about ten minutes of the show -- the audience is astonished and rises for a standing ovation. After the triumph, Welles sends Joseph Cotten to fire Richard -- he forgave him for challenging his authority only temporarily to protect the integrity of the show. Another young man has been hired (also without pay) to take his place. Richard meets in Gretta in the museum where he has previously seen her idealistically reciting Keats to an actrual"Grecian Urn". She has successfully sold her story to The New Yorker. Back in his High School class, Richard, ousted from the theater, impresses everyone by reciting by heart a long speech from Caesar.
The plot is ingenious and exciting -- it's a well-worn, if appealing,story: a group of scrappy young people collaborating to put on a show and overcome the odds -- but Linklater's direction is crisp and eloquent and the acting is superb. There are many small details that advance the story and give it depth. When Richard goes to Welles apartment with Sonja, the camera lingers on the protagonist's face, registering fright and, even, dismay, when it becomes apparent that the young woman intends to have sex with him; he's not seducing her but vice-versa and the intimacy, it seems, is on her terms. (It's evident that Richard is a virgin notwithstanding his locker room banter with Joseph Cotten and the actor playing Cinna the poet -- Linklater makes the point almost subliminally, with great taste and restraint.) Welles has no compunction about "improving" Shakespeare and he cuts out big chunks of the play. From time to time, eliminates the gruesome subplot in which Cinna the poet is mistaken for Cinna the co-conspirator (and assassin of Caesar), but, then, capriciously restores the scene to the play -- as actually performed, the scene has a horrifying intensity and we see audience members gasping as the mob tears Cinna to pieces. There's a disturbing scene in which the actor playing Antony (George Coularis in the actual Mercury Theater production) suffers from extreme stage-fright and has to be coaxed on stage by Welles whom Richard observes telling the crying thespian that he is a "magnificent god-created actor." In the final sequence, a bird has flown into the museum and hovers above the Greek antiquities, a gallery in which Richard and Gretta are talking about her short story that will be printed in The New Yorker. In the last couple shots, the bird is freed from the museum and soars above the elaborate portico of the place. The camera is aimed down from atop that portico and we see people striding along the steps and front of the museum casting long, spidery shadows -- it's a remarkably beautiful and theatrical effect. The scenes portraying Welles Caesar are convincingly mounted -- the images look like stills from the stage production that I have seen, a dour, monochrome production set in what looks like a Fascist state in central Europe (all jackboots, leather jackets, and marching thugs.) Claire Danes is excellent as Sonja with a "j" -- she seems very lively, attractive, and sincere until we grasp that she is ambitious and willing to sleep with anyone to advance her career. We last see her striding purposefully toward Selznick's car, framed by the walls of a rather squalid-looking alley. In this scene, and others, the film poses the question of what sort of emotionally manipulative tactics are ethically and morally authorized in the pursuit of high art. Welles is a genius but he's also a bastard. In contemporary culture, there has been much dispute about whether movies by Roman Polanski or Woody Allen (and others) should be shunned on the basis of alleged misconduct and abuse committed by the filmmakers. This is not a trivial question and worthy of serious consideration -- Me and Orson Welles raises these issues in an entertaining and thought-provoking manner while, at the same time, respecting the exuberant high spirits implicit in show-business. I recommend this movie.
(Strangely enough, the movie was made on the Isle of Man (with subsidies from that place); many of the shots are distinctly theatrical and stylized, reflecting the paucity of resources to imitate New York City on the island. Apparently, street scenes were shot on a single block on the island where there was a decaying theater, the Gaiety -- the rest of New York City was created by illusion and CGI, a big green screen set up at the end of the block. In fact, the effects are very convincing and those that are stylized effectively contribute to the themes of make-believe and theatricality underlying the action. Several scenes, simulating the Metropolitan Museum of Art, seem to have been shot at the British Museum, including the images of the facade of that building.)