Rush Blowdry Sonning Flowers Broad Street Mall La Tasca
Malmaison Bravissimo ZoZo Events It's in Berkshire

Skip Navigation,Sitemap

Reading Chronicle

Send your loved one a FREE Valentines day Message,

and see it HERE on the 14th February
Pick up The Reading Chronicle today.

Send your loved one a FREE Valentines day Message,

and see it HERE on the 14th February
Pick up The Reading Chronicle today.

Send your loved one a FREE Valentines day Message,

and see it HERE on the 14th February
Pick up The Reading Chronicle today.

Send your loved one a FREE Valentines day Message,

and see it HERE on the 14th February
Pick up The Reading Chronicle today.

Film of the week: Me & Orson Welles (12A)

Damon Smith • Published 13 Dec 2009 14:00 Mobiles Print Comments 0 Comments

Jump to first paragraph.

Share this Facebook Twitter Google Buzz Delicious DIGG Reddit Stumbleupon Email RSS

HIGH School Musical star Zac Efron attempts to step away from cutesy, teen-friendly fare with this handsome period piece.

To a large degree he succeeds, testing his acting mettle as part of an impressive ensemble cast in a drama inspired by Orson Welles's notorious 1937 Broadway staging of Julius Caesar.

However, you evidently can't take the boy away from the musical completely, because Richard Linklater's film culminates in the handsome pin-up singing sweetly to a hushed theatre audience, while plucking a ukulele that doubles as a lute.

For all of the attention focused on Efron, Me & Orson Welles is ultimately a showcase for newcomer Christian McKay as the bullying, egocentric titular legend.

With a rumbustious, eye-catching portrayal that puts his co-stars in the shade, the Lancashire-born actor can look forward to an Oscar nomination as supporting actor for his revelatory performance.

Every moment McKay is on-screen, we're fascinated to see which member of the company Orson will manipulate next to achieve his grand vision.

Based on the novel by Robert Kaplow, Linklater's film unfolds through the eyes of fresh-faced high-school student Richard Samuels (Efron), who happens to be in the right place at the right time and blags the role of Lucius, replacing a kid who had a personality problem with Orson.

"Meaning?" asks Richard. "He had a personality," replies a member of the troupe, warning the new boy not to upstage the production's conceited director and star.

The great man is cast as Brutus, and he dispatches Richard to learn his lines with beautiful production assistant Sonja (Claire Danes).

Meanwhile, the selfish star drives the rest of the company to the brink of mutiny, not least fellow thesp and co-star George Coulouris (Ben Chaplin) and Mercury Theatre president John Houseman (Eddie Marsan).

While the production threatens to collapse around him, Richard pursues the seemingly unattainable Sonja.

"Fight for her, that's what she wants," fellow actor Joseph Cotten (James Tupper) advises. "I'm not sure that's who I am," counters Richard.

Me & Orson Welles is a gently-paced nostalgia piece that recalls Mrs Henderson Presents, set to a score re-arranged and performed by Jools Holland and Eddi Reader.

Efron's role doesn't stretch him, he plays another likeable guy chasing the girl, but at least this film doesn't contrive a happy ending when reality would dictate otherwise.

Chaplin is gentle comic relief as a pessimistic, plummy Brit, and Kelly Reilly adds a touch of glamour as insecure diva Muriel Brassler, who knows how she wants to be lit to look her best.

Partly shot on location on the Isle of Man, with the restored Gaiety Theatre standing in for the Mercury, Linklater's picture evokes a vibrant period in New York history.

Not once do we doubt the illusion.

This article appeared in Reading Chronicle 10 Dec 09

Post a comment

Registered users log in here

If you are registered with us, you can login here. If you are not registered, do so now.
Once logged in you wont have to complete word verification each time you post.

Prefer not to register?

Usernames must be 4 - 20 characters. Registration only takes a few minutes. Registered users can also take part in competitions and other features of the site.


Enter the text as shown.

Return to the main index, get more from this section or browse our The Guide archives.

Other Stories

» View more stories

Click Here
First Friday Club
alt : http://www.itsinreading.co.uk/

Most Read

  1. 'Be prepared for severe weather' - Met Office
  2. Gunnarsson to return to Iceland?
  3. UPDATED: Loddon Bridge Park and Ride open
  4. Send us your Berkshire snow pics
  5. McDermott: 'We can catch top two'
  6. Revamped Tilehurst pub re-opens on Friday

» View More Stories

You may have missed

Hot Jobs

Taste

View our Taste Guide

Your social, local Business Directory - It's in Reading | It's in The Directory | Directory Network

Copyright ©2012 Berkshire Media Group, 50/56 Portman Road Reading Berkshire RG30 1BA • Tel: 0118 955 3333 • Fax:

FacebooK Twitter RSS Feeds