Me and Orson Welles: DVD Review
Me and Orson Welles
Released by Madman Entertainment
1930s New York and young teen wannabe actor Richard Samuels (Zac
Efron) finds himself on the steps of the Mercury Theatre.
Samuels
is a dreamer and wants to tread the boards - and thanks to a chance meeting with
soon to be legendary Orson Welles (a brilliant and stellar performance from
Christian McKay), he finds himself cast in a minor role in Welles' Julius
Caesar.
But from there, Samuels begins to learn
the reality of the life backstage isn't all it's cracked up to be.
Particularly not when the director is Orson Welles, a
brilliant, impetuous, temperamental and arrogant man who firmly believes the
play's the thing.
Me and Orson Welles surprises on
a few levels - it's a spot on recreation of 1930s New York (complete with a spry
soundtrack) but it's the acting talent and the story which really shine.
While Zac Efron's better than you'd expect given his
High School Musical pedigree, it's really Christian McKay who excels in his role
as Orson. From the vocal performance and the perfect encapsulation of the
volatile Welles, to the characteristics of the man who polarised many, McKay is
spot on and emerges as the real winner of this film.
His Orson is a sleaze, the kind of man who takes ambulances to
appointments to beat traffic, a real cad and bounder whose passion for
performance eclipses everything else. And it's McKay's performance which
eclipses everyone else - he steals every scene he's in and is scarily
impressive.
Combined with a sweet central romance
between Efron's character and Claire Danes' manager, Me And Orson Welles is an
unexpected treat, well worth two hours of your time.
Extras: Interview with original theatre players,
star interviews, trailers and obligatory deleted scenes
Rating: 8/10
At Darren's World of Entertainment - a movie, DVD and game review blog. The latest movie and DVD reviews - plus game reviews as well. And cool stuff thrown in when I see it.
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