Fake has been my favorite Welles film for some time, which is surprising since my first words to Ray Kelly after my initial viewing 100 years ago were "what the hell kind of movie is this, anyway?" It's a delight and I love it, though my attention does waver during the Chartres sequence everyone else seems to adore.
The earliest color footage I've ever seen or heard of by Welles was from the Carnival and Jangadeiros sequences in It's All True, clips of which appear in the excellent associated documentary. And didn't Welles answer "guilty as charged" to PB's query that he had directed his own scenes in David e Goliath? Those were in color. And I don't know which came first of these three, The Immortal Story, The Deep, or Orson's Bag, but those were all color as well.
And regarding completed projects, I include The Orson Welles Show and Filming Othello in that oeuvre, both of which postdate Fake.
Sigh, and what was this "Conversations with Roger Hill" thing that was shown at Locarno? I'd not heard of it until reading What Ever Happened to Orson Welles this evening.
Will our boys in Munich ever release their frankly superb reconstructions commercially, or is that derailed on the B & O Railroad as well?
Terry

