F for Fake
(Vérités et mensonges)
Recently Restored
With Orson Welles, Oja Kodar, Elmyr de Hory.
France/Iran/West Germany, 1973, 35mm, color, 85 min.
Print source: Munich Filmmuseum
This playful homage to forgery and illusionism is the last film Orson Welles released before his death. Both a self-portrait and a wry refutation of the auteur principle, its labyrinthine play of paradoxes and ironies creates the cinematic equivalent of an Escher drawing. Described as "a vertigo of lies," the film itself becomes a kind of fake, for although it bears the signature of its author it was in fact the product of many hands. Starting with some found footage of art forger Elmyr de Hory shot by French documentarist François Reichenbach, Welles transforms the material into an interrogation of the nature of truth and illusion, with stops to revisit his own Citizen Kane and "The War of the Worlds" radio broadcast, detours with Howard Hughes and his hoax biographer Clifford Irving, and a profile of Picasso deceived by love. Long unavailable in North America, F for Fake is presented here in a newly restored print, courtesy of the Munich Filmmuseum.