Frem Here To Awesome Festival
Advertisement

F for Fake
  • 0
  • 1
  • 2
  • 3
  • 4
  • 5
  • Rate this movie.

Buy it now on DVD
Starting at $29.86

Rent it, watch it, find it

Advertisement

Directed by Orson Welles.
The final directorial project the legendary Orson Welles completed during his lifetime, F for Fake is less a documentary than an example of cinematic free association on the topic of trickery. Much of the film is in fact drawn from other sources, most notably an unfinished documentary by Francois Reichenbach on the notorious Elmyr de Hory, whose extremely skillful forgeries of famous paintings caused scandals amongst art collectors and experts. In an additional bit of irony, de Hory's interviewer is author Clifford Irving, who became infamous due to a forgery of his own: a falsified autobiography of Howard Hughes. Welles openly re-edits and manipulates this footage, using it as a spine for his own commentary, arguing that there is an extremely close relationship between art and lying, and citing instances from his own career to prove the point. Through a combination of documentary and staged footage, Welles attempts to illustrate the artifice behind all filmmaking, even that of a supposedly non-fiction variety. ~ Judd Blaise, All Movie Guide
[more]

Reviews and discussions

Write a review

unclefesteringunclefestering Pick a Pair
by unclefestering in Movie Games
loved it.
"If you wanted to pair two movies (not sequels) together what movies would you watch together and why? I'd pair The Bear with Grizzly Man. The Bear is a story of how an older grizzly takes care of a young bear who las lost his mother and how they just want to get along and wouldn't bother people at all if it wasn't for the mean hunters who are after them. Werner Herzog takes documentary footage from a man who was a self taught expert on bears, before he was eaten by them, and turned it into Grizzly Man. The other pairing I have would be F for Fake and The Hoax. In F for Fake, Orson Welles interviews Clifford Irving, a journalist who spent a fair amount of time interviewing a famous art forger, who could never be convicted. The Hoax tells the story of Irving a few years later when he created forged Howard Hughes diaries and sold them for fun and profit. What pairs do you have? " [More]
unclefesteringunclefestering The ultimate trick
by unclefestering in unclefestering Blog
loved it.
Was this review helpful? [Be the first to tell us!]
"When is a documentary not a documentary? When it is put in the hands of a master like Orson Welles. F for Fake is often gets dismissed because it can't be put into a box. But it is as subtle as a snake charmer and asks questions that it makes clear have no good answers. It questions the nature of art and inspiration by looking at a famous art forger. What inspired Picasso and Matisse? Can you tell if you have a real one? Are you sure? If the fake is as inspiring as a work by the real master, is it still art? In a great twist, the main interviewer for much of the movie turns out to be the man who became famous for forging Howard Hughes' autobiography and making millions on it. That inspired the Richard Gere movie, The Hoax (2007). (I want to see that movie, mainly from seeing the real Clifford Irving in this film.) This movie isn't a documentary, it is a film poem on the nature of reality. If that sounds like a joke, it is one of the many subtle ones Welles plays on the audience thr ... " [More]
paulpaul FilmCouch #21
by paul in paul on spout.com
loved it.
Was this review helpful? [Be the first to tell us!]
"Appropriation: Originality is overrated. Filmmakers taking footage from another film and adapting it into a new movie–Orson Welles (F for Fake), Werner Herzog (The Wild Blue Yonder) and Roger Corman (Voyage to the Planet of Prehistoric Women)–are they inspired or just desperate? (Chat about it in the FilmCouch group) In the spirit of appropriation, email a sentence into filmcouch@spout.com. Kevin and Paul will incorporate it ever so naturally into next week’s show. The first person to identify the appropriated sentence wins a Spout track jacket from American Apparel (valued at $50). Download FilmCouch #21 or subscribe in the iTunes store (search for “filmcouch” or click here to launch iTunes) and a new free episode will download every Friday. Originally posted on:SpoutBlog » Paul " [More]
SpoutBlogSpoutBlog FilmCouch #21
by SpoutBlog in SpoutBlog on spout.com
hasn't rated it.
Was this review helpful? [Be the first to tell us!]
"Appropriation: Originality is overrated. Filmmakers taking footage from another film and adapting it into a new movie--Orson Welles (F for Fake), Werner Herzog (The Wild Blue Yonder) and Roger Corman (Voyage to the Planet of Prehistoric Women)--are they inspired or just desperate? (Chat about it in the FilmCouch group) In the spirit of appropriation, email a sentence into filmcouch@spout.com. Kevin and Paul will incorporate it ever so naturally into next week's show. The first person to identify the appropriated sentence wins a Spout track jacket from American Apparel (valued at $50). Download FilmCouch #21 or subscribe in the iTunes store (search for "filmcouch" or click here to launch iTunes) and a new free episode will download every Friday. Originally posted on:SpoutBlog " [More]
SpoutBlogSpoutBlog FilmCouch #21
by SpoutBlog in SpoutBlog on spout.com
hasn't rated it.
Was this review helpful? [Be the first to tell us!]
"Appropriation: Originality is overrated. Filmmakers taking footage from another film and adapting it into a new movie--Orson Welles (F for Fake), Werner Herzog (The Wild Blue Yonder) and Roger Corman (Voyage to the Planet of Prehistoric Women)--are they inspired or just desperate? (Chat about it in the FilmCouch group) In the spirit of appropriation, email a sentence into filmcouch@spout.com. Kevin and Paul will incorporate it ever so naturally into next week's show. The first person to identify the appropriated sentence wins a Spout track jacket from American Apparel (valued at $50). Download FilmCouch #21 or subscribe in the iTunes store (search for "filmcouch" or click here to launch iTunes) and a new free episode will download every Friday. " [More]
paulpaul FilmCouch #21
by paul in FilmCouch
loved it.
"Appropriation: Originality is overrated. Filmmakers taking footage from another film and adapting it into a new movie--Orson Welles (F for Fake), Werner Herzog (The Wild Blue Yonder) and Roger Corman (Voyage to the Planet of Prehistoric Women)--are they inspired or just desperate? In the spirit of appropriation, email a sentence into filmcouch@spout.com. Kevin and Paul will incorporate it ever so naturally into next week's show. The first person to identify the appropriated sentence wins a Spout track jacket from American Apparel (valued at $50). Download FilmCouch #21 or subscribe in the iTunes store (search for "filmcouch" or click here to launch iTunes) and a new free episode will download every Friday. " [More]
paulpaul Re: Crossing the Line
by paul in The Documentary
loved it.
Was this review helpful? [Be the first to tell us!]
"I revisited F for Fake again the other night. It's one of the most exciting films I've ever seen. The most jaw dropping part about it is how Orson Welles takes reel after reel of documentary footage and weaves it into this magician's illusion, leaving the audience constantly stuck on the question, "What is real, anyway?"One of Welles' main themes: Those who think to know what's real, don't know. I think most documentaries fall into this category. No matter what style is employed, most documentary filmmakers are pretending to know what's real and what's false. I wonder if a genuine documentary is less about a style, or even about honesty, as much as it's judged by an approach. Approaching the making of the film with humility rather than arrogance. " [More]
paulpaul Hope is the new Angst.
by paul in paul on spout.com
loved it.
Was this review helpful? [Be the first to tell us!]
"F for Fake [Motion] Pictures are supposed to clarify people's emotions, to explain the feelings of people on an emotional plane. An art film should not preclude laughter, enjoyment and hope. Is life about horror? Or is it about those few moments we have? I would like to say that my life has some meaning. - John Cassavetes I watched Marcus Wolland in his play, The Magnificent Welles (2002, available on DVD). Wolland wrote and stars as Orson Welles in this one-man play. Set in a hotel room in Rio De Janeiro, Welles carries on a conversation with the audience in between phone calls from RKO Studios on the night his film, The Magnificent Ambersons, is taken from him. Historically, Welles believed Ambersons to be his masterwork. While Welles was shooting another film in South America, RKO Studios cut 44 minutes from Ambersons, reshot the ending, and burned the cut negatives so that Welles could never show the film the way he wanted. It's an insightful play that pulls no pun ... " [More]
 



Community ratings

mavens
Spout mavens
liked it.
most people
Most people
are neutral about it.

Other opinions

tmoney
tmoney
loved it.
paul
paul
loved it.
chesterfilms
chesterfilms
loved it.
JEllen
JEllen
lost interest.
joshuac
joshuac
is not interested.
macguffin54
macguffin54
is not interested.