Thanks Peter -
That's quite a fascinating forum. One can only imagine what would have happened if Welles were on that panel with Ms. Kael. He would have probably ended up throwing a whole table full of flaming sternos in her direction! I bet even John Houseman would have been defending Orson against Pauline's attacks.
Kael certainly likes to provoke and be critical, so she goes after the biggest name in the room, Fred Zinemann, who she claims is being a little disingenuous... here's what Zinemann SHOULD have replied to her:
KAEL: Is this not just a little disingenuous? I happen to think that you [Zinnemann] are the greatest director in Hollywood, but I have very little interest in seeing your next picture (BEHOLD A PALE HORSE).
ZINNEMAN: Miss Kael, when you say something like that, who is really being disingenuous? I am telling you exactly how I feel.
*******
Then Kael berates Cassavetes and Kubrick. Presumably Cassavetes for making A CHILD IS WAITING and Kubrick for making SPARTACUS, and predicts Kubrick is all through - he'll probably never make anything unusual or interesting again!:
LAMBERT: It is not a question of closed doors - it is that they ask people to work on terms that they don't like, which is a very different thing.
ZINNEMAN: John Cassavetes is another example fairly recently.
KAEL: Yes, but he's an example in the great tradition of being swallowed up very fast, isn't he like Kubrick and so many others. The distance between The Killing and Spartacus is enormous. It means that you've made it, but it also means that you're through.
*******
Hilariously, Kael misreports what she thought she read from a Saturday Review symposium, and calls it being "blind." Fred Zinnemann points out that Kael is actually the blind one, as she has misrepresented what actually occurred:
KAEL: I was struck by the symposium published recently by the Saturday Review, in which it was said that the public's interest in the foreign film is largely snobbish. This is being blind. People are interested in these films because they are fresh and new and different and they object to the same old stale American movies. Of course it is snobbish on certain occasions, but there is a genuine interest.
ZINNEMAN: Miss Kael, I was there at that symposium and only two people in the group thought that foreign-film interest was snobbish. Three out of the six felt that foreign films on the whole were very, very good, and said so.
