Many here will be pleased to know that an uber-critic's biography: Pauline Kael, A life in the Dark by Brian Kellow, claims that Ms. Kael "ripped off" much of her research for "Raising Kane" from Howard Suber, later Chair of the UCLA Film Archive. Frank Rich, in next Sunday's New York Times Book Review, describes the rise of Ms. Kael from a Petaluma, California, chicken farmer's daughter to the doyen of the New York film critics (the person who made film critiques best sellers), then, her long, painful descent into oblivion. According to Rich, despite her brilliant zenith, which just prompted the Library of America to "canonize" her selected writings (The Age of Movies, Sanford Schwartz, ed.), she gradually fell victim to failings she often condemned in others: ". . . corruption, self-parody, first-person megalomania."
Rich crystalizes the beginning of Pauline Kael's decline with the following description of intellectual dishonesty that she displayed in pressing anti-auteurist arguments, using the example of Orson Welles' CITIZEN KANE:
"The most serious brief against Kael’s professionalism, however, is Kellow’s discovery that she ripped off the research of a U.C.L.A. academic, Howard Suber, for “Raising Kane,” her lengthy 1971 essay about the making of “Citizen Kane.” Adding to that infraction, her piece contained many factual errors of her own, all undetected by New Yorker fact checkers and all contrived to reinforce her anti-auteurist argument that the screenwriter Herman Mankiewicz, not Orson Welles, was the movie’s principal author. “Raising Kane” was omitted from the Library of America volume for reasons of space, according to [Editor] Schwartz’s introduction, but Kellow’s account suggests it should have been eliminated in any event for its improprieties."
Brian Kellow, it would appear, has handed The Knights of Wellesnet a new battle-axe against their favorite bete noir!
Glenn Anders

