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The classic study on the director of Citizen Kane and Touch of Evil , in an updated, revised edition
CoverTitleCopyrightContentsAcknowledgmentsIntroduction: Orson Welles at 1001. The Prodigy2. The Magician3. Citizen Kane4. The Magnificent Ambersons5. The Radicalization of Style6. Touch of Evil7. The Gypsy8. The Trial9. Chimes at Midnight10. Art About Art (and Sex)11. Between Works and TextsBibliographic NotesFilmographyIndex
James Naremore is Chancellors' Professor Emeritus at Indiana University. His books include On Kubrick, The Films of Vincente Minnelli, More than Night: Film Noir in Its Contexts, Acting in the Cinema, Sweet Smell of Success, and An Invention without a Future: Essays on Cinema
"The most perceptive study of Welles's art.--Andrew Sarris
"Naremore's book, with its wealth of background and close
commentary, is certainly the best study of Welles."--Tag Gallagher,
Film Comment
"Naremore is not simply pandering to the movie buff's passion for
unconsidered and inconsiderable trifles, but revealing that it's
possible to go on where most Wellesian researchers have
stopped."--Sight and Sound
"It may, along with a small handful of other books, help to change
the standards of scholarship and critical sophistication we apply
to writing on film. It is patient, intelligent, scrupulously
researched, and yet it is never solemn. Absolutely compelling on
the more technical aspects of Welles's films."--Michael Wood,
Washington Post
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