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WD_406/ 2007 - Satoshi Kinoshita
WD_406/ 2007  
( Satoshi Kinoshita )

Series: Works on paper: Drawings 5
Medium: oilstick on paper
Size (inches): 31.1 x 21.4
Size (mm): 790 x 544
Catalog #: WD_0406
Description: Signed, date and copyright in pencil on the reverse.



For truth is always strange; stranger than fiction.

Lord Byron

-www.brainyquote.com/quotes/quotes/l/
lordbyron164150.html



The Stranger (film) -

Directed by Orson Welles
Produced by Sam Spiegel
Written by Orson Welles, Anthony Veiller, John Huston (uncredited)
Starring: Orson Welles, Loretta Young, Edward G. Robinson
Distributed by International Pictures/RKO
Release date(s): 1946
Running time: 95 min
Language: English

The Stranger is a 1946 film noir/drama starring Orson Welles, Edward G. Robinson, and Loretta Young. Welles also directed the film, which was based on a screenplay written by Victor Trivas. Trivas' work was nominated for an Academy Award for Best Original Screenplay. Sam Spiegel was the film's producer, and the film's musical score is by Bronisław Kaper. It is believed that this is the first film released after World War II that showed footage of concentration camps. The Stranger was the only film made by Welles to have been a bona fide box office success on the first release (Citizen Kane had made back its budget and marketing, but not enough to make a profit).

Plot:

It is 1946 and Mr. Wilson (Edward G. Robinson) of the United Nations War Crimes Commission is hunting for Nazi fugitive Franz Kindler (Orson Welles). Kindler has effectively concealed his Nazi activities prior to his escape to the United States. He assumes a new identity, Charles Rankin, lands a job as a university professor and marries Mary Longstreet (Loretta Young), who is the daughter of Supreme Court justice Judge Adam Longstreet.

Wilson releases Kindler’s former associate Meinike (Konstantin Shayne) and follows him to Harper, Connecticut, but Meinike is strangled to death before he can identify Kindler. Wilson must convince Mrs. Rankin, the only person to have seen Kindler and Meinke together, that her husband is a war criminal.

The films of Orson Welles:

Citizen Kane (1941) • The Magnificent Ambersons (1942) • The Stranger (1946) • The Lady from Shanghai (1947) • Macbeth (1948) • Othello (1952) • Mr. Arkadin (1955) • Touch of Evil (1958) • The Trial (1962) • Chimes at Midnight (1965) • The Immortal Story (1968) • F for Fake (1974) • The Other Side of the Wind (2008)

-en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Stranger_(1946_film)



The Stranger (1946 USA 95 mins)

by J.D. Lafrance

Source: NLA/ACMI
Prod: Sam Spiegel (as S. P. Eagle)
Dir: Orson Welles
Scr: Anthony Veiller (John Huston and Orson Welles uncredited)
Phot: Russell Metty
Ed: Ernest Nims
Art Dir: Albert S. D'Agostino
Mus: Bronislaw Kaper

Cast: Orson Welles, Edward G. Robinson, Loretta Young, Philip Merivale, Richard Long, Konstantin Shayne, Byron Keith, Billy House

The Stranger is generally regarded by Orson Welles aficionados as a standard thriller done for money, undertaken to prove to studio executives that he could work within the system (it had been four years since his last directorial effort). He even said as much in interviews, and criticised the studio for cutting approximately 30 minutes from the beginning of the film that he wrote himself (1). Admittedly, The Stranger is not in the same league as, say, Touch of Evil (1958), but the film does have its merits. It is a tightly-plotted and well-acted thriller that bears Welles' unique stamp, in spite of it being a director-for-hire project.

An investigator named Wilson releases Konrad Meinike (Konstantin Shayne) – a convicted Nazi war criminal – from prison, hoping that he will lead him to an even bigger fugitive, the notorious Franz Kindler (Orson Welles) (2). Sure enough, Meinike finds Kindler posing as Charles Rankin, a history teacher in the idyllic small town of Harper, Connecticut. There is a certain delicious irony that a notorious Nazi war criminal is not only teaching world history to America's privileged elite, but that he is also marrying the daughter (Loretta Young) of a Supreme Court judge (Philip Merivale). The film plays out as an entertaining cat-and-mouse game, with Wilson applying pressure on Kindler to reveal his true identity.

Many Welles supporters complain that The Stranger lacks the overt stylistic flourishes of his more celebrated efforts, such as The Lady from Shanghai (1947) and Othello (1952). While it is true that his trademark style is more restrained in The Stranger, it is still recognisable as a Welles film. For example, the opening sequence – where Meinike is released from prison – features the use of German Expressionistic lighting (in particular, the use of silhouettes) that Welles used so effectively in Citizen Kane (1941). After Meinike and Wilson arrive in Connecticut, Welles uses a swooping high-angle establishing shot to give a God's-eye-view that anticipates a similar shot at the beginning of Touch of Evil (both films were shot by Russell Metty). Welles also utilises low-angle shots (used effectively in Kane) in a school gymnasium when Meinike gets the upper hand on Wilson.

Welles' love of long-takes is also evident in The Stranger during a four-minute scene between Meinike and Kindler in the woods. This leads into one of the best sequences of the film, in which Kindler frantically covers up a dead body in the woods, while several of his students are participating in a paper-chase nearby. The use of dramatic music and Welles' panicked, paranoid facial expressions create palpable tension in this scene as the teacher is almost caught by his pupils.

Welles is not only able to wring tension out of action sequences but also through dialogue-driven scenes as well. At one point during the film, Wilson and Kindler meet face to face over a family dinner. Kindler delivers a chilling monologue that starts off cordially and then, as he lets the faηade slip ever so slightly, he expounds on Germany and the Nazi philosophy. He claims that the Germans are not waiting for another Messiah a la Jesus but rather another Hitler. It is a powerful speech delivered with zeal by Welles (who relished playing villains) that anticipates his famous monologue in The Third Man (Carol Reed, 1949). The looks that Welles and Robinson exchange during this scene make it clear that the two men have no illusions about who they really are – but proper dinner decorum keeps them in check during the meal. It is what is not being said that is just as telling as what is being said.

Story-wise, The Stranger lacks originality. It is essentially a reworking of Alfred Hitchcock's Shadow of a Doubt (1943), with Uncle Charlie being substituted by Franz Kindler. Both films are set in postcard perfect small-town America, feature the villain launching into a psychotic monologue while sitting at a family dinner-table, and climax with a dramatic scene atop a bell tower. Edward G. Robinson also seems to be channelling his cranky investigator from Double Indemnity (Billy Wilder, 1944), and in doing so instils a methodical intelligence in his stereotypical character.

Welles completed The Stranger under budget and on time. It was released in May of 1946 and performed quite well at the box-office, earning an Academy Award nomination for, ironically, Best Original Screenplay. More importantly, it proved to Hollywood that Welles was a bankable director, and paved the way for his next film, The Lady from Shanghai. Even though Welles disowned The Stranger, it still contains enough of his personal touches and pre-occupations to elevate it above the generic thriller, to a movie that belongs alongside his other artistic successes.

J.D. Lafrance, a film critic from Canada, is currently researching and writing a book on the films of Michael Mann.

© J.D. Lafrance, November 2003.

Endnotes:

1. The 30 minutes of footage that was cut featured a large chase between Wilson and Meinike as he tried to locate Kindler in Argentina. Producer Sam Spiegel ordered the film's editor to cut this footage because he felt that it did not advance the story.

2. Welles originally wanted Agnes Moorehead to play the role of the investigator but was overruled by the studio.

-www.sensesofcinema.com/contents/cteq/03/29/
the_stranger.html


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Series Works on paper: Drawings 5
WD_400/ 2007WD_401/ 2007WD_402/ 2007WD_403/ 2007WD_404/ 2007WD_405/ 2007WD_406/ 2007WD_407/ 2007WD_408/ 2007WD_409/ 2008WD_410/ 2008WD_411/ 2008
WD_412/ 2008WD_413/ 2008WD_414/ 2008WD_415/ 2008WD_416/ 2008WD_417/ 2008WD_418/ 2008WD_419/ 2008WD_420/ 2008WD_421/ 2008WD_422/ 2008WD_423/ 2008
WD_424/ 2008WD_425/ 2008WD_426/ 2008WD_427/ 2008WD_428/ 2008WD_429/ 2008WD_430/ 2008WD_431/ 2008WD_432/ 2008WD_433/ 2008WD_434/ 2008WD_435/ 2008
WD_436/ 2008WD_437/ 2008WD_438/ 2008WD_439/ 2008WD_440/ 2008WD_441/ 2008WD_442/ 2008WD_443/ 2008WD_444/ 2008WD_445/ 2008WD_446/ 2008WD_447/ 2008
WD_448/ 2008WD_449/ 2008WD_450/ 2008WD_451/ 2008WD_452/ 2008WD_453/ 2008WD_454/ 2008WD_455/ 2008WD_456/ 2008WD_457/ 2008WD_458/ 2008WD_459/ 2008
WD_460/ 2008WD_461/ 2008WD_462/ 2008WD_463/ 2008WD_464/ 2009WD_465/ 2009WD_466/ 2009WD_467/ 2009WD_468/ 2009WD_469/ 2009WD_470/ 2009WD_471/ 2009
WD_472/ 2010WD_473/ 2010
Biography of 'Satoshi Kinoshita'
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