My favorite is Joseph McBride's Orson Welles. The first edition was monograph 19 in the marvelous BFI "Cinema One" series (1972), but get the latest revision (1996). McBride devotes a chapter to each work and displays his usual sharp insights and humor (as in the Hawks interview and John Ford book with Wilmington); in particular, his passionate defense of Chimes at Midnight (at a time when the film was considered a messy failure) is enthralling. This book also gets the approval of Rosenbaum in his Welles chapter in Essential Cinema; Rosenbaum pillories Thomson's, Higham's, and Callow's books (not to mention Kael's wreck). By the way, Rosenbaum calls Naremore's The Magic World of Orson Welles "the best critical study of Welles in any language", so, y'know, it's got that going for it.THX wrote:which book or bio is the best to read about Welles and his life/work?
Back to the CC release, I'm particularly excited to hear the Rosenbaum and Naremore commentaries, two of my favorite film critics.