by Jeff Wilson » Tue May 09, 2006 10:28 am
Roger, it is a little disappointing to see him essentially posit things in a black and white context (fans love Welles, can't do no wrong) vs academics (can't write English, they write drivel). As if Welles is the only director subjected to such treatment; as someone who checks peridocially to see what has been written about Welles in the academic journals, it isn't a whole lot, all things considered. And regarding the discussion here, I don't see too many individuals sticking to a "Welles was infallible" line. His attack, if you want to call it that, on Benamou was fairly tame all things considered, with his wickedest shot stating that the article in question had yet to be translated into English, which was pretty amusing, coming after a quote that reads as almost complete nonsense. I assume his point in the preface was to set himself outside whatever current "sides" there are in current understanding of Welles; he mentions also that he does not agree with the argument that Welles downfall was due to self-destructiveness anymore than it was studio heads sabotaging him. The book has a glowing blurb from James Naremore on the back, for what it's worth.