Raphaël Mutt
Raphaël Mutt
  • 2
  • 88 450
Orson Welles gives a talk at a Paris film school (1982) - Part 2
The great Orson Welles shares his views on cinema and movie-making with French film school students.
Sorry for the missing bits.
Переглядів: 26 655

Відео

Orson Welles gives a talk at a Paris film school (1982) - Part 1Orson Welles gives a talk at a Paris film school (1982) - Part 1
Orson Welles gives a talk at a Paris film school (1982) - Part 1
Переглядів 62 тис.13 років тому
The great Orson Welles shares his views on cinema and movie-making with French film school students.

КОМЕНТАРІ

  • @yuntakukai1002
    @yuntakukai1002 27 днів тому

    almost all Whites then now Paris is a sewer

  • @VasiliosBakagias
    @VasiliosBakagias 3 місяці тому

    Immortal!!! ♥️❤️🌏🌎🌍

  • @DSL-33166
    @DSL-33166 4 місяці тому

    I like Orson. But my ADHD is kickin in, and this french stuff...

  • @dekobokohajime
    @dekobokohajime 5 місяців тому

    He's drunk, very drunk.

  • @johngraves6878
    @johngraves6878 7 місяців тому

    Such a delight.

  • @emmanuelgilliot6128
    @emmanuelgilliot6128 8 місяців тому

    Le Géant Welles voulait simplement de l'aide pour financer son Roi Lear ! Il perdit son temps précieux à convaincre les français. Jack Lang le roula dans la farine. Honte à Lang !!!! et aux socialistes de merde !!!

  • @madahad9
    @madahad9 8 місяців тому

    I've read many books about Welles. If there is one individual who rightly deserved to be called a genius of his medical m it is Welles. Sadly, he just couldn't help sabotaging his own career. But when one reads these books you get the sense that he was never going to fit into the Hollywood mold and be compromised by those forces that have tamed and broken many others. I highly recommend reading Young Orson. It spans the period of time from youth to the release of Citizen Kane. In such a short time he accomplished a dizzying amount, from stage to radio to screen. It is amazing.

  • @srinivassridhar5151
    @srinivassridhar5151 10 місяців тому

    Man, Orson Wells was unpretentious and too ahead of his time!! simply the best!!

  • @Mrsilenciobackgammon
    @Mrsilenciobackgammon Рік тому

    13:19

  • @trickydick6152
    @trickydick6152 Рік тому

    Conductors "...that quasi useless profession".

  • @richardburt9812
    @richardburt9812 Рік тому

    the French translator is really great. He's making up his own brilliant version of what Welles. When the translator says "perdu" Welles corrects him and says "confused." And the translator repeats "perdu," meaning lost. "We have the academie française working," Welles quips." lol

  • @penguinegg01
    @penguinegg01 Рік тому

    I wish we had the whole thing. It's so frustrating that we don't.

  • @kittymarch4203
    @kittymarch4203 Рік тому

    he has such a strong voice

  • @xi7837
    @xi7837 2 роки тому

    Orson Welles watched stagecoach (1939) forty times before making citizen kane he never really watched films before making citizen kane. He made and listened to radio shows, watched plays and made plays. It’s best to be exposed to many different art forms what makes citizen kane great is Orson’s vast knowledge on many subjects.

  • @aliensoup2420
    @aliensoup2420 2 роки тому

    I guessed both directors he was thinking of that attract an audience with their name only. Most people don't pay attention to a movie's director, but both these names are house-hold terms that everybody recognizes. DeMille is synonymous with grand spectacle, and Hitchcock is synonymous with suspense thriller.

  • @ilshyf
    @ilshyf 2 роки тому

    This is filmed in Cinémathèque française, Paris, February 22 1982.

  • @mikepoteet1443
    @mikepoteet1443 2 роки тому

    Then he cuts a massive fart on says, "suck on that you French bastards!"

  • @DavidMatias79
    @DavidMatias79 2 роки тому

    If we ever figure out time travel send someone back to preserve this video tape.

  • @Bogart4ever
    @Bogart4ever 2 роки тому

    0:55 you've heard that tarantino !

  • @MarcosElMalo2
    @MarcosElMalo2 2 роки тому

    You have to watch this while reading the transcript.

  • @juanitolopez9731
    @juanitolopez9731 2 роки тому

    When I was a film student in London, in 2003-2007, I used to imagine what if Orson Welles was still alive. He would be about 90. Just imagine him coming to London to give a speech to film students, invited by the British Film Instute. Seeing him in this video, makes me dream that day that never was.

  • @crazyRyoga
    @crazyRyoga 2 роки тому

    1:04 *Tarantino exits the room*

  • @orangebetsy
    @orangebetsy 2 роки тому

    5:25 I can attest to that, as a violinist heeheehee. FLAP THEM ARMS!

  • @Deepurplerain
    @Deepurplerain 2 роки тому

    Be yourself instead of doing homage tribute, someone said Welles himself wasn't virgin eye and used a Sacha Guitry for CK storytelling and watched many Ford films before directing, but he's talking to the youngsters of early 80, there were so much more movies and became a larger cult with many many world movie fans,larger than 30's, so keep on being yourself when you'll direct instead of identy yourself in other's works is i think the paraphrase,not a reason to badmouth De Palma&Tarantino by the way. Many thanks for those videos Raphael Mutt.

  • @Deepurplerain
    @Deepurplerain 2 роки тому

    Et oui, la création dans le cinéma se fait en collaboration ,désolé Mr Capra, qui clamait haut et fort son celèbre motto,"Un film, un homme,un réalisateur". Puis totalement vrai que l'intellectuel est "l'ennemi" de l'art créatif,il sera mieux en spectateur, critique,producteur même, mais les maitres ne fut jamais artiste en tant qu'intellectuel, peut-etre à la maison! mais pas dans leurs films, ils furent des conteurs,des humanistes des observateurs sans futiles obstacles,des peintres,écrivains visuels comme Bunuel,Ford Kurosawa Renoir, ils captaient cernaient la beauté la tragédie l'ironie, toujours présente dans notre monde,naturelle ou amené par l'homme.

  • @viggosimonsen
    @viggosimonsen 2 роки тому

    Strange he should detest Hitchcock. I would have expected quite the opposite. How can you dislike Hitchcock as Film Maker? Ok, listening a bit further to his lecture, I understand his dislike. Hitchcock was certainly not the ideal of a director, as per Orson Welles' definition: The servant of the actor

  • @dylanbuchanan6511
    @dylanbuchanan6511 2 роки тому

    If Orson Welles were alive today I don’t think he could survive how bad and homogenous movies are today. Welles would probably fall over dead.

    • @mysonisanembarrassment
      @mysonisanembarrassment 2 роки тому

      "if he was alive today, he would die" GREAT point dumdum

    • @juanitolopez9731
      @juanitolopez9731 2 роки тому

      He surely would hate all these new trends of cinema-making. The Oscars ceremony has become a circus, and the traditional film festivals of Cannes, San Sebastian, or Venice look more like a fashion parade of Ascot, with their stupid hats, than anything else. Cinema has become a tasteless vulgarity.

    • @mysonisanembarrassment
      @mysonisanembarrassment 2 роки тому

      @@juanitolopez9731 there ya go, a little more thought into your statement. Makes it seem like you have an actual opinion.

    • @juanitolopez9731
      @juanitolopez9731 2 роки тому

      @Drake Mallard Yes, it is my personal opinion.

    • @mysonisanembarrassment
      @mysonisanembarrassment 2 роки тому

      @@juanitolopez9731 great job big guy

  • @MalleusSemperVictor
    @MalleusSemperVictor 2 роки тому

    Orson Welles may have been the best perpetually drunk person on the face of the planet to have ever lived.

  • @Matt_19-89
    @Matt_19-89 2 роки тому

    I shit you not, even the Subtitles make fun of the french language

  • @ireneschmidt9207
    @ireneschmidt9207 2 роки тому

    ❤️❤️❤️❤️Beautiful forever irene ❤️❤️❤️

  • @ardalire651
    @ardalire651 2 роки тому

    You can tell he doesn't really need the translator... I wish we talked more about his skill with other languages. And also his skill as a visual artist/sketch artist. Genius on so many levels we often forget.

    • @MokkaMatti
      @MokkaMatti Рік тому

      @@diegocordero2000 You can see a few (all-too-brief) examples in the series he made for the BBC in the mid-1950s, appropriately titled "Orson Welles' Sketchbook" ua-cam.com/play/PLxEfOhTrjfv3_-imU-gapxapDRibaZTD4.html&si=-kL9tdX8T4D6bbBf

  • @elizabethanderson2968
    @elizabethanderson2968 2 роки тому

    The omniscient bard of aesthetics and natural law x

  • @jhb1493
    @jhb1493 2 роки тому

    “To me, Orson is so much like a destitute king. A destitute king, not because he was thrown away from the kingdom, but on this earth - the way the world is - there is no kingdom that is good enough for Orson Welles. That’s the way I feel.” - Jeanne Moreau

  • @bcook7591
    @bcook7591 3 роки тому

    so honored to have footage of God

  • @adikravets3632
    @adikravets3632 3 роки тому

    0:30 great point!

  • @kulturindustrie5361
    @kulturindustrie5361 3 роки тому

    Comment to the film (german); ua-cam.com/video/K9CD4auZfYs/v-deo.html

  • @edgarlebig2994
    @edgarlebig2994 3 роки тому

    A ses débuts, Orson n'avait pas l'oeil si vierge que ça, car dans les années 30, il a vu un nombre incalculable de films et il a dit que la structure narrative de Citizen Cane lui a été inspiré par le film de Guitry "Le Roman d'un tricheur" (avec l'emploi notamment de la voie off). Ce n'est qu'une fois qu'il est devenu réalisateur qu'il a cessé de visionner les autres films.

  • @jcjrfilms
    @jcjrfilms 3 роки тому

    Who needed to hear this today? Every word?

    • @ZwaneMakki
      @ZwaneMakki Місяць тому

      I did as I make my 3rd AI sci fi feature film in 4K. Love AI. Glad Garden of Allah Hotel Hollywood is #DEAD

  • @iria2663
    @iria2663 3 роки тому

    The greatest person of the 20th century

  • @AnnaLVajda
    @AnnaLVajda 3 роки тому

    The more virgin our eyes are the more have to say.

  • @飯田ケイ子
    @飯田ケイ子 4 роки тому

    オーソン・ウェルズは、とうがでよくでるが、りたとのあいだにできた、れべっか・みたい、おとなのかをやすみんはみたけど

  • @adikravets3632
    @adikravets3632 4 роки тому

    8:29

  • @adikravets3632
    @adikravets3632 4 роки тому

    4:46 he did a lot for his films

  • @adikravets3632
    @adikravets3632 4 роки тому

    1:08

  • @adikravets3632
    @adikravets3632 4 роки тому

    13:08 Orson got him

    • @Jack-2day
      @Jack-2day 3 роки тому

      Orson deftly played it off though, in his inimitable jocular way

  • @LoyalOpposition
    @LoyalOpposition 4 роки тому

    Movies (and music) have gone downhill SO badly since....

  • @hschenck3394
    @hschenck3394 4 роки тому

    Such a badass

  • @webmarch06
    @webmarch06 6 років тому

    英語もフランス語も解らないのが悔しい。もっと長生きしてもっと沢山の映画を撮って欲しかった。 偉大な芸術家でした。

    • @gopherstate777
      @gopherstate777 2 роки тому

      English is easy just find a good friend who speaks it. Soon you will dream in English and that is when you got it, my friend.

    • @webmarch06
      @webmarch06 2 роки тому

      Thank you my friend who dreams the same.

    • @elkmeatenjoyer3409
      @elkmeatenjoyer3409 Рік тому

      Never too late to learn, compared to japanese, English is an easy language. This is coming from a latino that learned it by playing videogames and listening to doommetal and reading the lyrics.

    • @webmarch06
      @webmarch06 Рік тому

      thank you. Today, thanks to computers and the internet, we can translate texts, but it's a pity that we can't translate spoken words in real time. It may come true sooner or later.

  • @Frisenette
    @Frisenette 6 років тому

    Anyone know where the original of this broadcast is to be found? There are shadows and other artifacts that give this off as a television. I wish there wasn’t so many dropouts. We missed a lot of good stuff. Especially the bit about using black and white. Also this was digitized from a Danish machine (OSD language is Danish). Is that a hint to it’s provenance?

    • @bcook7591
      @bcook7591 3 роки тому

      these are important questions

    • @penguinegg01
      @penguinegg01 Рік тому

      I've never understood Welles' preference for black and white and like you, I would love to have heard his answer.

    • @Zach-yg1ht
      @Zach-yg1ht 10 місяців тому

      @@penguinegg01Black and White suspends reality and enters a realm that’s uncanny to humans but certainly picturesque.

    • @M.H.I.A.F.T.
      @M.H.I.A.F.T. 24 дні тому

      @@penguinegg01 I've read that he preferred black and white because it makes the viewer focus on an actor's expression and feelings, rather than distracting them with the colour of their hair, clothing etc.

  • @alainjames9556
    @alainjames9556 6 років тому

    Holy smoke. Welles dissed Hitchcock @2:54 . Said he detested him. I don't get it. I wish he had elaborated.

    • @patricias5122
      @patricias5122 3 роки тому

      I understand why that would cause a huh? reaction. Hitchcock was a genius and a bully who abused female actresses, and everyone knew it, including Welles. But nobody would talk about it.

    • @alainjames9556
      @alainjames9556 3 роки тому

      @@patricias5122 Ingrid Bergman spoke so emotionally about him - so warmly... So his "abuse" was apparently not universal. Frankly, my interest in Hitchcock is his work. His approach to cinema. The way each frame looks. The fact that, in my opinion, the actors in his films are giving some of their greatest performances - across the board.

    • @AnnaLVajda
      @AnnaLVajda 3 роки тому

      @@alainjames9556 who knows lots of actresses praised Weinstein too and he's in jail now. Hitchcock seemed pretty creepy to me actually. If Orson detests him so will I I trust Orsons judgement.

    • @alainjames9556
      @alainjames9556 3 роки тому

      @@AnnaLVajda I think you should look at the context of Welles' comment above. I just did. He was not referring to any abuse by Welles or DeMille. I think you might like to watch this tribute by Ingrid Bergman, calling Hitchcock an "adorable genius". ua-cam.com/video/WKpuunhqWk4/v-deo.html

    • @DSL-33166
      @DSL-33166 4 місяці тому

      Not enough room for two Fatman in the Holy wood