David Punter's study of Gothic fiction, THE LITERATURE OF TERROR, contains a marvelous and informative section on Isak Dinesen, one of Welles' favorite writers. I have not yet read Dinesen, and so have never been able to understand, based on what others have written, and what Welles has said in interviews, what the attraction was, until I read this: "Dinesen's claims to inclusion here stem from the unique way in which her work continued in the twentieth century to foreground the connexions between Gothic and the problems of the aristocracy. There is an irony in the very use of the term 'Gothic' for her, because she is concerned not with terror but with the gentle and debilitating nostalgia which has replaced it as the aristocrat - and the artist - has become increasingly rootless and homeless, no longer sustained by a relevant system of social relations and unable to form others without sacrificing those residual notions of honour and privilege which are all that remain of the feudal idyll. For many of her characters, displaced in class, in nationality or in even more fundamental ways, the emotion of fear is, like the other emotions, only now a distant memory from a time when feeling was possible in the world. Although the stories are various in time and place, their locale is rigorously consistent in one way: in its early eighteenth-century rejection and exclusion of the world of trade and commerce."
Sounds very Wellesian to me!
Renoir once said this about Welles: "Actually, most directors---even the greatest ones---are bourgeois directors. Orson Welles is one of a handful of aristocrats. And his films are aristocratic works. It is probably for that reason that they often are not financially successful."
In his life, and his art, Welles was a man out of time, as he himself has stated repeatedly. And his entire body of work is distinctly Gothic in look and in tone, which is why more than a few of us would love to have seen a full-blooded Welles Gothic horror picture. For any interested scholars out there, a monograph attempting to situate Welles within the Gothic tradition might be an enlightening project.
I have just checked out SEVEN GOTHIC TALES from the library and will read it this week to see if Punter is on the money or out of his gourd. If anyone reading this has read Dinesen, I would love to read your comments.

