C.P. Czarnecki wrote:I heard rumors from people who were present at the Director's Guild talk with Welles that he actually got to retain or re-insert his version of Aunt Fanny's breakdown. There are many conflicting reports as far as this is concerned. Does anyone know more for sure?
C.P. Czarnecki wrote:No no, I didn't mean that Welles kept that scene in his possession, I meant that he was able to retain it in the film, i.e. the re-shot scene was not used. Apparently he said that in the Director's Guild talk.
MartynH wrote:I have just found out that ten days ago it was announced that half an hour of missing scenes from Fritz Lang's Metropolis were found in a Buenos Aires vault. The extra scenes had been there since 1928. I am a fan of Metropolis but the interesting thing for Welles fans is that if Ambersons were to be found it doesn't necessarily follow that the film woud have decayed. This is one of the things I have always been concerned about. Lang's film is over a dozen years longer than Ambersons.
I still retain the hope Amberson's could still be found.
Presumably these folks are not ignorant of the amazing compromise hollywood has forced upon the majorty of its creators, not only Mr. Welles
nextren wrote:I just noticed that the newspaper which Morgan (Cotton) reads near the end, announcing George's accident, is a Kane paper! In the insert shot, a Jed Leland (Cotton) column is on the left-hand side of the screen.
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