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IMDbPro

Orson Welles & moi

Titre original : Me and Orson Welles
  • 2008
  • Tous publics
  • 1h 54min
NOTE IMDb
6,7/10
12 k
MA NOTE
Orson Welles & moi (2008)
NYC, 1937: A week in the life of aspiring actor Richard Samuels (Efron), where he finds himself cast in Orson Welles' staging of Shakespeare's "Julius Caesar" and falling for an older woman (Danes).
Lire trailer1:50
5 Videos
96 photos
ComédieDrameDrames historiques

Ajouter une intrigue dans votre langueIn 1937, a teenager is cast in the Mercury Theatre production of "Julius Caesar", directed by a young Orson Welles.In 1937, a teenager is cast in the Mercury Theatre production of "Julius Caesar", directed by a young Orson Welles.In 1937, a teenager is cast in the Mercury Theatre production of "Julius Caesar", directed by a young Orson Welles.

  • Réalisation
    • Richard Linklater
  • Scénario
    • Robert Kaplow
    • Holly Gent
    • Vincent Palmo Jr.
  • Casting principal
    • Zac Efron
    • Claire Danes
    • Christian McKay
  • Voir les informations de production sur IMDbPro
  • NOTE IMDb
    6,7/10
    12 k
    MA NOTE
    • Réalisation
      • Richard Linklater
    • Scénario
      • Robert Kaplow
      • Holly Gent
      • Vincent Palmo Jr.
    • Casting principal
      • Zac Efron
      • Claire Danes
      • Christian McKay
    • 80avis d'utilisateurs
    • 99avis des critiques
    • 73Métascore
  • Voir les informations de production sur IMDbPro
    • Nomination aux 1 BAFTA Award
      • 5 victoires et 27 nominations au total

    Vidéos5

    Me and Orson Welles: International Trailer
    Trailer 1:50
    Me and Orson Welles: International Trailer
    Me And Orson Welles: I Am Orson Welles
    Clip 1:20
    Me And Orson Welles: I Am Orson Welles
    Me And Orson Welles: I Am Orson Welles
    Clip 1:20
    Me And Orson Welles: I Am Orson Welles
    Me And Orson Welles: Can You Play The Yukalaylee
    Clip 1:10
    Me And Orson Welles: Can You Play The Yukalaylee
    Me And Orson Welles: That's What's So Exciting
    Clip 1:08
    Me And Orson Welles: That's What's So Exciting
    Me And Orson Welles: More Time
    Clip 0:45
    Me And Orson Welles: More Time

    Photos96

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    Rôles principaux58

    Modifier
    Zac Efron
    Zac Efron
    • Richard Samuels
    Claire Danes
    Claire Danes
    • Sonja Jones
    Christian McKay
    Christian McKay
    • Orson Welles
    Zoe Kazan
    Zoe Kazan
    • Gretta Adler
    Megan Maczko
    Megan Maczko
    • Evelyn Allen
    Simon Lee Phillips
    • Walter Ash
    Patrick Kennedy
    Patrick Kennedy
    • Grover Burgess
    Shane James Bordas
    • Conspirator
    Alessandro Giuggioli
    Alessandro Giuggioli
    • Conspirator
    Harry Macqueen
    Harry Macqueen
    • Conspirator
    Rhodri Orders
    • Conspirator
    James Tupper
    James Tupper
    • Joseph Cotten
    Thomas Arnold
    Thomas Arnold
    • George Duthie
    Aidan McArdle
    Aidan McArdle
    • Martin Gabel
    Simon Nehan
    • Joe Holland
    Daniel Tuite
    Daniel Tuite
    • William Mowry
    Iain McKee
    Iain McKee
    • Vakhtangov
    Michael J. McEvoy
    Michael J. McEvoy
    • Epstein
    • Réalisation
      • Richard Linklater
    • Scénario
      • Robert Kaplow
      • Holly Gent
      • Vincent Palmo Jr.
    • Toute la distribution et toute l’équipe technique
    • Production, box office et plus encore chez IMDbPro

    Avis des utilisateurs80

    6,712.1K
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    Avis à la une

    8agmoldham

    A beautifully crafted film

    I have seen a couple of good reviews of Me and Orson Welles, so decided to go and see whether they were merited. I'm pleased to report that the film certainly impressed me.

    The film focuses on the rehearsals and opening of the play Caesar starring Orson Welles in 1937. Nominally Zac Efron plays the lead as Richard Samuels who is almost 18 and yearning to become an actor. A chance encounter with Orson Welles outside the Mercury theatre leads to Richard being cast as Lucius. Welles was one of those larger than life characters who had so much talent that they could get away with having a rather inflated ego.

    This is the first time I have seen Zac Efron on screen and I have got to say he played the role of the star struck teenager very nicely. The character is full of dreams and it certainly resonates long after the film has finished.

    If Christian McKay does not get a supporting actor Oscar nomination for his Orson Welles portrayal it will be a travesty. He is quite simply superb. I've always found Claire Danes very engaging and she is also very good in this as are a number of the supporting cast including Ben Chaplin and Zoe Kazan.

    If you are after traditional blockbuster fare from your movies then you are probably well advised to skip Me and Orson, but if you like an intelligent film that is well scripted, well directed (by Richard Linklater) and well acted then it's a must see.
    death-hilarious

    Great portrayal of Welles in a charming film

    Considering the fanatic cult following that Richard Linklater has developed with films like Waking Life, Before Sunrise/Sunset, and A Scanner Darkly, let me preface this review by saying that I'm not a Linklater devotee. If Linklater is endowed with a species of genius, I must confess complete ignorance to it. Indeed, my favorite Linklater film was School of Rock, and he has always impressed me more by the breadth of his work and his willingness to challenge the conventions of film than by any individual film. It's perhaps this maverick spirit that drew him to do a film about Orson Welles.

    Me and Orson Welles, based on a novel by Robert Kaplow, tells the story of a teenager, Richard Samuels (Zac Efron), who is swept from learning about Shakespeare in the classroom to the fast paced world of the Mercury Theater on Broadway when he lands a role in Orson Welles famous 1937 production of Caesar. As Orson Welles struggles to get the production ready for the premier, Richard falls for the theater's resident hottie, a charming and ambitious aspiring actress played by Claire Daines, and finds himself growing up quickly to the realities of show business and the real world.

    The movie is entirely carried by it's acting, and the actor generating the most buzz is the British born Christian McKay who plays Welles. I'm very uneasy about praising portrayals of real life figures, because it seems any time an actor plays any historical figure (from Gandhi to Capote and Idi Amin) they receive excessive attention. I think it has less to do with the "acting" involved than it has to do with the fact that most audiences feel much more comfortable passing judgment (and bestowing praise) on mimicry than actual acting. That said, McKay does a masterful job in capturing that mythical image of a young Orson Welles that all of us film geeks have in our head, from the striking resemblance in appearance to the pitch perfect intonations in his voice. Welles is charming and maddening, endearing and brutal, and always larger than life... and McKay captures it all perfectly. It's clearly a role that McKay has been mastering for a long time, as he was doing a one-man-show about Welles on Broadway before being snatched for the role in Me and Orson Welles. From the Q&A session (at the Toronto international film festival), McKay seemed intelligent and passionate about his work, and I truly hope he doesn't get pigeon-holed into spoofing Welles for his entire career.

    Unfortunately the other acting foot that the movie stands on, isn't nearly as good. Zac Efron is just so pretty (and I say this as a heterosexual male) that it becomes distracting. Watching Efron act, it feels like he's trying to make women orgasm in every scene he's in, which works well in enough in the many scenes he's trying to court Claire Daines's character, but doesn't work in any other scene. Efron's acting makes it hard for the audience to emotionally connect and prevents the movie from achieving the emotional punch it might otherwise. The audience is never drawn in and they remain spectators, which, fortunately, isn't such a bad thing since the movie is so fun and nostalgically charming. Perhaps even the flighty and ethereal feeling the film gets because of it's lack of punch can be forgiven, since it's a movie about youth and growing up and so much of that involves tempestuous passions that end up being quite meaningless in retrospect.

    8/10
    8pyrocitor

    Breezy, nostalgic celebration of film and theater and one of the most dynamic figures to impact them

    The career of Richard Linklater has proved one of the most delightfully eclectic in the film industry, veering between works as diverse as teenage subculture films (Dazed and Confused) to philosophical romances (Before Sunrise) to drug-addled paranoid thrillers (A Scanner Darkly) to mainstream comedies (School of Rock). But even with such a varied body of work, it is difficult to deny Linklater's latest still seeming somewhat of an anomaly: a lighthearted period piece examining the timeless figure of Orson Welles, making his name through a 1930s theater production of Julius Ceasar still seems an odd about face even for such a versatile director. And yet it is somewhat fitting that such a whimsically talented modern director should examine one of cinema's most legendary mavericks as Linklater's latest, Me and Orson Welles is a charming addition to his body of work, a breezy, self- reflexive yet nostalgic celebration of the mediums of performance as experienced alongside one of the most dynamic and influential figures ever to impact them.

    The agile script ably captures the conflicting clashes of the behemoth of a personality that was Orson Welles, from the explosive temper tantrums to the slyly manipulative charm to the casual womanizing, painting a vivid (but likely not larger than life) portrait of the man without either romanticizing or demonising him. It is ultimately the presence of the titular character which rescues the film from becoming yet another "cast rehearsing a play" film, as the dynamo of Welles tearing through the film at all the least expected moments creates a sporadic force of havok keeping the film continually off kilter, preventing it from descending into cliché and keeping it consistently interesting as consequence. While the story's lightness of touch does make some of the plot points either overly obvious or unbelievable, a film so unassumingly enjoyable fails to evoke much complaint - whether dabbling in the dramatic or the comedic, Me and Orson Welles remains refreshingly cheerful and earnest, and all the better for it. Completing the package, Linklater's rare tackling of a period piece demonstrates his typically astute ability to capture the feel and flavour of the times, with the earnest ambition of the 1930s well complimented by subtly stylish sets and costumes while simultaneously avoiding beating the audience over the head with more overt details of the time (instead of the potential hackneyed Nazi allusions, Linklater includes merely a brief radio snippet which is quickly cut off, a classy and subtle inclusion).

    Undergoing a difficult transition from teenage heartthrob to dramatic lead, Zac Efron gives a surprisingly solid performance as the idealistic young actor swept into the wild world of Welles, convincingly contributing charm, comedy and genuine sympathy to the emotional centerpoint of the film. However, given the title, it isn't difficult to imagine the inevitable highlight of the show, and true enough, as the infamous Welles, British stage actor Christian McKay doesn't so much steal scenes as seize and throttle them, exploding on screen with the same engrossing bluster that only the real Welles himself could conjure up. Blending the conflicting elements of an indisputably difficult character as easily as he nails the trademark voice and appearance, McKay's Welles alternates between devilish charmer and explosive force to be feared, shaking up the film with similar vigour and nuanced genius - one of the most impressive cinematic debuts in recent memory. Claire Danes is also on top form as a good hearted but endlessly ambitious member of Welles' company, and Ben Chaplin and James Tupper are endearing presences as eccentric members of Welles' calamitous company.

    As unconventional a project as it may be, Me and Orson Welles remains one of the most unashamedly lighthearted and enjoyable forays into nostalgia in many a year, breezily blending the serious with the silly while never skimping on historical fact. The addition of McKay's brilliantly combustive Welles make the theatrical rehearsal sequences a joy to behold instead of drearily formulaic, making Linklater's latest film a charm to behold for even the most cynical of audiences.

    -8/10
    7Quinoa1984

    a revelation in Christian McKay's performance in Linklater's latest

    Orson Welles was, if nothing else, 'something. Even his detractors, like Ingmar Bergman, said that he had an 'immense personality', and this is what is a great appeal for an actor who can embody the full emotions of the man, and look like him second. Richard Linklater, the director, has an ace up his sleeve with the casting of Christian McKay- an actor who is a relative newcomer in film- that is just about right. It's actually a case where the actor, perhaps due to the personality/character of the man he's portraying, upstages others around him.

    This is good (as is McKay, being in his 30's, making 22-at-the-time Orson appear or act older/wiser), since Welles is a man who could take over a room, and in fact was looked upon to do so with his Mercury theater players, who couldn't even do much rehearing or anything until he showed up. McKay goes into every little gesture or facial expression with gusto and, equally, some sublty when called for like when talking about his pet project of the Magnificent Ambersons.

    It's almost so good a performance as Welles that you should see the movie just for him: fans of the director/actor/legend will want to see him brought to life and made in respectful homage, and non-fans will be marveled by a thespian bringing another thespian to life. There is a downside, however, in Linklater's casting (not so much with the supporting roles as they vary between being very good like the guy playing Joseph Cotten aka 'Joe the lady's man' to decent like Ben Chaplain as Coulouris) with Zak Efron. It's admirable that he's trying to get past his days of High School Musical and build up an actual career, but he doesn't breathe enough life into his coming-of-age character Richard to make him more than just passable. He's a cute kid, yet he's not really able to meet up to the dimensions of the character (which, to be fair, are kind of thin).

    Linklater's film is inherently interesting dramatization just on the main subject matter: Welles and the Mercury theater putting on the daring production of Julius Caesar that would propel him and his troupe into the first real spotlight. However the film is most interesting and gets its main dramatic fire when it focuses on the rehearsals and some of the backstage antics (i.e. an accidental setting-off of the sprinklers by Richard fooling with matches), not so much the quasi-love story between Clare Danes' character with Efron. It's not got anything we haven't seen before, even in the sort of whimsical fable that Linklater lays out. The conclusion of their relationship is wise- as is how Welles 'deals' with Richard late in the film- but ultimately one kind of sighs and sits through a lot of so-so acting/pouting by Efron in order to get to the juicier scenes with Welles. But, as I mentioned before, it's worth a full-price pretty much on the basis of Welles and McKay. As Welles himself could be: exceptional and/or decent at once. 7.5/10
    9napierslogs

    Perfect blend of coming-of-age and theatre

    The "me" in "Me and Orson Welles" is Richard (Zac Efron) a high school student who gets himself a part in Orson Welles' production of Julius Caesar at the Mercury Theatre. He's the kind of kid that loves everything creative in the world, is romantic, and is confident and sure of himself. Well, that is until he's alongside Orson Welles. Christian McKay plays Welles as the cocky and out-spoken man that I'm sure he was.

    Directed by Richard Linklater, he has managed to turn this coming-of-age film into a Shakespearean theatrical production. My living room was transported into a theatre house, and I was watching a play. The lighting and score mirrored the production and its time; the actors were all right on cue; and backstage became the forefront.

    This film is not a biopic, it's just the story of a young man discovering the acting world and the real world -- all alongside one of the most dramatic artists of the time. Romance was added to the storyline, along with a touch of self-discovery and world wonderment -- but that was done beautifully and softly. "Me and Orson Welles" is the perfect blend of coming-of-age and theatre.

    Histoire

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    Le saviez-vous

    Modifier
    • Anecdotes
      The real Norman Lloyd denounced the film, and pointed out that contrary to his portrayal as a lecher, he was a recently married man at the time. This was a happy marriage which lasted many decades until his wife's death. He also took exception to the depiction of Orson Welles as a bullying director and said that he had never seen Welles, with whom he worked often, behave in such a manner, adding that, also, "we wouldn't have stood for it!" He did however concede that Christian McKay's performance as Welles was excellent.
    • Gaffes
      Richard accompanies Orson to 485 Madison Ave (CBS) for a "recording session" for a radio show ("The First Nighter" program). At this time (1937) and until the late 40s network programs were broadcast live, never recorded. Most programs were produced live twice, once for the East Coast and three hours later from the West Cost.
    • Citations

      Orson Welles: You really are a god created actor Richard. Those weren't just words you see. I recognize 'The Look'.

      Richard Samuels: The Look?

      Orson Welles: The bone deep understanding that your life is so utterly without meaning that simply to survive you have to reinvent yourself. Because if people can't find you, they can't dislike you. You see if I can be Brutus for 90 minutes tonight; I mean really be him, from the inside out; then for 90 minutes I get this miraculous reprieve from being myself. That's what you see in every great actor's eyes.

    • Crédits fous
      Gilson Lavis is listed as "Drumer" instead of "Drummer".
    • Connexions
      Featured in Live from Studio Five: Épisode #1.48 (2009)
    • Bandes originales
      This Year's Kisses
      Written by Irving Berlin

      (C) Irving Berlin Music Corp (ASCAP)

      All Rights Administered by Warner/Chappell Music Ltd.

      All Rights Reserved

      Performed by Helen Ward & Benny Goodman & His Orchestra

      Courtesy of Bluebird/Novus/RCA Victor

      By arrangement with Sony BMG Entertainment

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    FAQ

    • How long is Me and Orson Welles?Alimenté par Alexa

    Détails

    Modifier
    • Date de sortie
      • 4 décembre 2009 (Royaume-Uni)
    • Pays d’origine
      • Royaume-Uni
      • Île de Man
      • États-Unis
    • Langue
      • Anglais
    • Aussi connu sous le nom de
      • Me and Orson Welles
    • Lieux de tournage
      • Crystal Palace Park, Penge, Londres, Angleterre, Royaume-Uni
    • Sociétés de production
      • CinemaNX
      • Isle of Man Film
      • Framestore
    • Voir plus de crédits d'entreprise sur IMDbPro

    Box-office

    Modifier
    • Budget
      • 25 000 000 $US (estimé)
    • Montant brut aux États-Unis et au Canada
      • 1 190 003 $US
    • Week-end de sortie aux États-Unis et au Canada
      • 63 638 $US
      • 29 nov. 2009
    • Montant brut mondial
      • 2 336 172 $US
    Voir les infos détaillées du box-office sur IMDbPro

    Spécifications techniques

    Modifier
    • Durée
      1 heure 54 minutes
    • Couleur
      • Color
    • Mixage
      • Dolby Digital
    • Rapport de forme
      • 2.35 : 1

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