Movie |
Death | 1970s
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6.7/10
IMDbBest Film Editing | 2019 | Orson
Best Film Editing | 2018 | Orson
2018 | Bob
Best Screenplay International Competition | 2019 | Orson
Outstanding Editing Theatrical Feature | 2019 | Bob
2018 | Orson
Best Film Editing | 2018 | Bob
Best Editing | 2018 | Orson
Best Supporting Actor | 2018 | Peter
Budget 12,000,000 USD
The movie was filmed between 1970 and 1976, with editing continuing into the 1980s. Welles left behind nearly 100 hours of footage and a workprint consisting of assemblies and a few edited scenes.
In May of 2015, directors Wes Anderson and Noah Baumbach announced that they were running a campaign to raise $2 million to complete the post production and release the film.
John Huston's son, Danny Huston, looped over some of his father's dialogue in the 2018 post-production for the film's final release by Netflix.
Three small portions of the film have been released over the years and can most prominently be seen in the Orson Welles documentary "Orson Welles: The One-Man Band (1995)."
In the "Video Pirates" segment of the film "Amazon Women on the Moon (1987)," when the MCA ship gets overrun and the pirates raid the ship below deck, they find a treasure chest full of rare videos that are in gold video boxes. When the character 'Pirate Captain' opens the box, one of them is for Welles' "The Other Side of the Wind."
"[last lines] Jake Hannaford: Who knows, maybe you can stare too hard at something, huh? Drain out the virtue, suck out the living juice. You shoot the great places and the pretty people... All those girls and boys. Shoot 'em dead."
"Male Guest 5: If the audience can't get it then what's the point of even going to the movie?"