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Me and Orson Welles (2008) More at IMDbPro »

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Me and Orson Welles (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).
Me and Orson Welles (2008) -- Trailer for this period comedy from Richard Linklater
Me and Orson Welles (2008) -- kino-zeit.de - Trailer (Flash)

Overview

User Rating:
7.1/10   384 votes
MOVIEmeter: ?
Up 716% in popularity this week. See why on IMDbPro.
Director:
Writers:
Holly Gent Palmo (screenplay)
Robert Kaplow (novel)
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Contact:
View company contact information for Me and Orson Welles on IMDbPro.
Release Date:
3 December 2009 (Greece) more
Genre:
Tagline:
All's fair in love and theater
Plot:
A teenager is cast in the Mercury Theatre production of "Julius Caesar" directed by a young Orson Welles in 1937. | full synopsis
Plot Keywords:
Awards:
1 nomination more
NewsDesk:
(153 articles)
Efron: 'I don't want to be predictable'
 (From digitalspy. 25 November 2009, 2:40 AM, PST)

Movie Review: Me and Orson Welles (2009)
 (From Rope Of Silicon. 25 November 2009, 12:56 AM, PST)

User Comments:
Welles lives more (7 total)
US Showtimes:
The Landmark 12:10pm | 2:35 | 5:00 | 7:25 | 9:50 (personalize) more

Cast

  (Credited cast)

Ben Chaplin ... George Coulouris

Claire Danes ... Sonja Jones

Zac Efron ... Richard Samuels
Zoe Kazan ... Gretta Adler

Eddie Marsan ... John Houseman
Christian McKay ... Orson Welles

Kelly Reilly ... Muriel Brassler

James Tupper ... Joseph Cotten
rest of cast listed alphabetically:
Thomas Arnold ... George Duthie
Leo Bill ... Norman Lloyd
Shane James Bordas ... Elliott Reid

Michael Brandon ... Les Tremayne

Aaron Brown ... Longchamps Kid
Janie Dee ... Mrs. Samuels
Alessandro Giuggioli ... Hiram Sherman

Garrick Hagon ... Dr. Mewling

Patrick Kennedy ... Grover Burgess

Lexie Lambert ... Lizzy
Harry Macqueen ... John A Willard
Megan Maczko ... Evelyn Allen

Aidan McArdle
Michael J. McEvoy ... Epstein
Jo McInnes ... Jeannie Rosenthal
Iain McKee ... Vakhtangov
Simon Nehan ... Joe Holland

Travis Oliver ... John Hoyt
Rhodri Neil Orders ... Stefan Schnabel
Nathan Osgood ... Radio Announcer
Simon Lee Phillips ... Walter Ash
Imogen Poots ... Lorelei Lathrop

Saskia Reeves ... Barbara Luddy
Marlene Sidaway ... Grandmother Samuels
Daniel Tuite ... William Mowry
Al Weaver ... Sam Leve
Robert Wilfort ... Radio Director
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Additional Details

MPAA:
Rated PG-13 for sexual references and smoking.
Runtime:
114 min | Canada:107 min (Toronto International Film Festival)
Country:
Language:
Color:
Aspect Ratio:
2.35 : 1 more
Sound Mix:
Certification:
Ireland:12A | USA:PG-13 (certificate #44819)
Company:

FAQ

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10 out of 11 people found the following comment useful.
Welles lives, 1 October 2009
8/10
Author: motta80-2 from London, England

Orson Welles is alive and well and residing in the body of British actor Christian McKay! McKay is simply stunning here as Welles - the look, the eye-brow, the mannerisms, the bounce, the voice - never have i seen Welles, as a character, better done. Many have tried few have succeeded (although i have a soft spot for Vincent D'Onofrio's Welles-cameo in Ed Wood.

The same can be said in general for Richard Linklater's film in terms of featuring Welles and using the whole "putting on a show" theatrical device. I didn't like Oliver Parker's Fade To Black with Danny Huston hamming Welles. RKO 281 was solid and Tim Robbins' Cradle Will Rock was a noble, if unsatisfyingly drear effort. Aided by McKay's towering achievement, a (mostly) superb supporting cast and a deft lightness Linklater has delivered his best film in years.

To my mind he can be hit (Dazed & Confused, Before Sunrise) and miss (A Scanner Darkly, Fast Food Nation), but this is firmly in the hit category.

Other non-Welles films, such as Kenneth Branagh's In The Bleak Mid-Winter, have failed in their attempts to have fun at "putting on a show" format because they are too in love with moments that have that "you just had to be there" element. Christopher Guest made a go of it in Waiting For Guffman, but then he was mocking the pretensions so many others embrace as part of the scene. Somehow McKay's (as Welles) enormous personality and Linklater's breezy "makes it look so easy" style make you feel like you are there in Me & Orson Welles and it works to great effect - tantalising the viewer with moments and flashes of the play to come without giving it to you until the right time. The 'Me' of the title really becomes the viewer. You are swept along me both filmmaker and Orson (and it really does feel like Orson. After a few moments i never doubted the Linklater had somehow resurrected Welles and saddled him with Zac Efron!) And this brings me the film's one real problem (and surely a marketing nightmare for the distributors!) Now i'm no Efron hater, i haven't seen any of the HSM movies, but he was fine in both Hairspray and 17 Again but here he has to register in a fantastic ensemble of actors and he simply doesn't. Admittedly he is hamstrung a little by the role. Since the story and Linklater's direction make the viewer feel like 'Me' observing Welles as he creates his legendary production of Julius Caesar and the Mercury theatre company it is easy to kind of forget about Efron's Richard, or at least to dismiss him as Welles so often does. He just makes no impression at all. He's not bad he's just not really significant.

This leads to the inevitable problem that as we reach the films final act, once the play is done and Welles is off screen you feel like the movie is over. You've seen everything there is to see here, it is time to move along. But no, because Efron's story is unresolved so we get another 10 minutes of him and his ending. But you simply don't care. Once McKay/Welles had gone off with his supporting cast the movie was over, it just didn't know it! Amongst the supporting cast Claire Danes continues in display as easy charm, effortlessly likable and curiously beautiful in her quirky angular way. Zoe Kazan (last seen in Revolutionary Road) is a delight as the underused other woman in Efron's life (although if she'd been used more it would have meant more Efron, less Welles so maybe that's a blessing in disguise). James Tupper is excellent as Joseph Cotten, a great match for McKay's Welles. If they ever (God forbid) remake The Third Man they have the cast! Ben Chaplin is also marvellous as George Couloris. I'm constantly impressed by Chaplin and have no idea why he isn't a bigger name. Kelly Reilly doesn't have much to do but look gorgeous, which, naturally, she does with ease. Eddie Marsan seems miscast as John Houseman. I like Marsan but he didn't fit the bill for me here.

Ultimately this is McKay's show. He gives an electrifying performance at the center of a movie that while it is about Welles efforts to put on Julius Caesar is a charming, funny and swift-paced joy; but unfortunately it also has to make space for Zac Efron and his own storyline and there-in lie the flaws.

How you market this i don't know! I can't imagine Efron fans getting excited about a film set in the 1930s about the creation of an historic theatrical production staged by a man who's been dead for 25 years! And on the flipside i nearly didn't see it because i dismissed it, on first awareness, as a Zac Efron movie and so not for me. Only on a second invitation did i notice it was directed by Linklater (always interesting, if not always successful) which charged my want to see it.

Ultimately though if you want to see it because you're an Efron fan, well go see it because your guy's in it and because you'll get to see something a bit different from what you're used it. And maybe you'll like it. If you're not an Efron fan, never fear, you can all but forget he's there and just enjoy Linklater at his breezy best and the best performance of Welles on screen since the great man departed this earth (and took possession of McKay!)

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Recent Posts (updated daily)User
The titles grammatically incorrect tentonpenguin
Anyone else think that Jack Black would make a perfect Orson Welles? rmarsden2000
One of the problems is Zac Efron ?? AsGoodAs
Just Tickling My @$# With A Feather? Lacere
TheWrap Screening Monday 11/16 INeedUnguent
This movie looks... rohit_sidhu
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