DIRECTOR:
Woody Allen
SCREENPLAY:
Woody Allen
PRODUCER:
Robert Greenhut
CINEMATOGRAPHY:
Gordon Willis
EDITING:
Susan E. Morse
CASTING:
Juliet Taylor
PRODUCTION DESIGN:
Mel Bourne
RUNTIME:
79 Minutes
BUDGET:
$11-16 Million (estimated)
GROSS:
$11.8 Million
PRODUCTION:
Jack Rollins & Charles H. Joffe Productions
DISTRIBUTOR:
Orion Pictures/Warner Bros.
RATED:
PG
ASPECT RATIO:
1.85:1
U.S. RELEASE DATE:
July 15, 1983

MOVIE POSTER

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Original movie poster for Zelig

PREMISE

Mockumentary on the period of fame and infamy of Leonard Zelig in the 1920s and 1930s. He first came to world attention when it was noticed that he appeared in several newsreels more often than not prominently in the background, but sometimes with the newsreels’ more famous subjects. But what was considered more remarkable than the varied subjects and the prolific nature of his newsreel footage was that he changed his appearance, sometimes even seemingly his ethnicity, and abilities and skills to match those around him. Eventually under the care of famed psychiatrist Dr. Eudora Fletcher, he was given the nickname the Chameleon Man in his ability to change his being so effortlessly. Dr. Fletcher’s diagnosis was Zelig’s need for ultimate conformity in an effort to be universally liked, the malady which she tried to cure. The mockumentary delves not only into the psychiatric issues for Zelig, but also the legal issues he faced on wanting and being able to conform so easily. It also focuses on Zelig and Dr. Fletcher’s relationship, which became more than just patient and doctor. [1]

CAST & CREW

Woody Allen
........................................................................................................................................................................
Leonard Zelig
Mia Farrow
........................................................................................................................................................................
Dr. Eudora Nesbitt Fletcher
Patrick Horgan
........................................................................................................................................................................
Narrator
Ellen Garrison
........................................................................................................................................................................
Older Eudora Fletcher
Stephanie Farrow
........................................................................................................................................................................
Meryl Fletcher
Elizabeth Rothschild
........................................................................................................................................................................
Older Meryl Fletcher
Mary Louise Wilson
........................................................................................................................................................................
Ruth Zelig
Sol Lomita
........................................................................................................................................................................
Martin Geist
John Rothman
........................................................................................................................................................................
Paul Deghuee
Sherman Loud
........................................................................................................................................................................
Older Paul Deghuee
Deborah Rush
........................................................................................................................................................................
Lita Fox

How He Made It

– Although the shoot wrapped in twelve weeks, the postproduction took over a year, nine months of that time was for editing alone. Headed up by legendary cinematographer Gordon Willis, the visual effects team undertook the arduous task of marrying different types, ages, grains, and qualities of film footage together. [3]

– “There was a point when I thought we were never going to finish, a point when I thought I was going to go nuts. I have never worked so hard at making something difficult look so simple.” –Gordon Willis [3]

– At the time Woody Allen’s friend Dick Cavett was hosting a series of Time-Life historical specials for HBO in which a process was used to insert Cavett into archival footage. The process so intrigued Allen it became the impetus for making this film. [1]

– To create authenticity, the production used actual lenses, cameras and sound equipment from the 1920s, and used the exact same lighting that would have been done. In addition, ‘Gordon Willis’ took the exposed negatives to the shower, and stomped on them. [1]

– To help create the look of genuine footage from the 1930s, DuArt, the lab that handled processing, called some of their experienced technicians (who were experienced with processing techniques of the 1930s) out of retirement. [1]

"I’m 12 years old. I run into a Synagogue. I ask the Rabbi the meaning of life. He tells me the meaning of life… But, he tells it to me in Hebrew. I don’t understand Hebrew. Then he wants to charge me six hundred dollars for Hebrew lessons."
—Zelig (Woody Allen)

REVIEW HEADLINES

Zelig innovation cited as Woody Allen’s best
—ASSOCIATED PRESS
The most beautifully conceived and realized movie Allen has created
—THE WASHINGTON POST
Masterpiece
—THE GUARDIAN
Zelig’ is not for everyone
—SANTA CRUZ SENTINEL
WOODY ALLEN’S STORY ABOUT A ‘CHAMELEON MAN’
—THE NEW YORK TIMES
Consistently funny, though more academic than boulevardier
—VARIETY
THE HUMAN CHAMELEON CHANGES COLORS
—CALIFORNIA AGGIE
STATELY, PLUMP … BEARDED
—THE BOSTON REVIEW
DOING THE CHAMELEON
—CINEMA RETRO
"I have an interesting case. I’m treating two sets of Siamese twins with split personalities. I’m getting paid by eight people."
—Zelig (Woody Allen)

DID YOU KNOW?

– Zelig was originally intended to be a made-for-TV movie before plans for a theatrical release were finalized. [3]

– Like the namesake character, the film went through some changes of its own; working titles ranged from The Chameleon Man, The Cat’s Pajamas, The Changing Man (the name of the film within the film), and Identity Crisis and Its Relationship to Personality Disorder. [3]

– In 2007, Italian psychologists discovered a rare form of brain damage which affects its victims much like Zelig’s condition (without, of course, the accompanying physical transformations). Researcher Giovannina Conchiglia and associates have proposed the name “Zelig-like Syndrome” for the disorder, because of the parallels to the film. [1]

– The first cut ran only 45 minutes, so Woody Allen had to include more archive footage and shot some scenes to fill up the time (mostly public scenes with narration). [1]

– A number of the film’s interiors were shot at the Kaufman Astoria Studios in Queens, which served as the East Coast office of Paramount during the silent and early sound era. Other locations included the John Jay College of Criminal Justice on West 51st St. in Manhattan and Teaneck, New Jersey where D. W. Griffith and the Biograph Company players had made films some 70 years earlier. [3]

– Mae Questel, the voice of Betty Boop from 1931 to 1989 is the voice of Helen Kane singing “Chameleon Days”. [1]

– Silent screen legend, Lillian Gish, was filmed for a scene in “Zelig”. She scolded director of photography, Gordon Willis, on his lighting set-up and, while the crew watched aghast, gave Willis step by step instructions on how to re-light the scene. Willis complied. The scene did not make it into the final version of the film.

– The house in the closing scene is the same house used as the location for A Midsummer Night’s Sex Comedy. [1]

– John Gielgud was originally cast as the narrator and recorded the entire narration for the film, but Woody Allen decided to recast the role after hearing it because he thought Gielgud sounded “too grand” for the part. [1]

– Woody Allen originally wanted Greta Garbo to be one of the people interviewed. [1]

– The filmed footage of F. Scott Fitzgerald is, in fact, the only filmed footage of F. Scott Fitzgerald in existence. [2]

– Academy Award nominations: Best Costume Design and Best Cinematography. The latter is somewhat bizarre, as there’s not much “cinematography” in stitching Woody Allen and Mia Farrow into stock footage and photographs. It was perhaps the best way the Academy could think of to to honor the film’s significant technical achievement — after all, there was, at that point, no Special Effects category yet. [2]

"I worked with Freud in Vienna. We broke over the concept of penis envy. Freud felt that it should be limited to women."
—Zelig (Woody Allen)

RECEPTION

– A general success with critics and audiences, the film garnered good receipts but great reviews and was Allen’s first #1 film on Variety’s Box Office chart. Zelig is admired by almost all as a masterful technical achievement in film except perhaps its creator who, as ever, maintains a unique perspective: “To me, the technique was fine. I mean, it was fun to do, and it was a small accomplishment, but it was the content of the film that interested me.” Well, would we expect any less? [3]

– Newsweek’s Jack Kroll spoke for the majority when he called “Zelig” “a brilliant cinematic collage that is pure magic.” [4]

– Vincent Canby wrote that the film was nothing less than the perfection of ideas Woody had been systematically exploring in every film since “Take the Money and Run.” [4]

– Few critics or viewers realized how intensely personal the picture was for Woody, nor did they associate its themes with “Stardust Memories.” Only Pauline Kael was impolite enough to bring this up, writing that despite Woody’s claims to the contrary, his films could not be more autobiographical; he is constantly showing audiences how bad he feels about himself. [4]

– “A Midsummer Night’s Sex Comedy was an unfortunate debut for the Allen/Farrow partnership, partly because it’s a forgettable movie, but also because Farrow was last minute replacement for a role that didn’t really suit her. Here, Farrow is playing a part that was written specifically for her, and it’s hard to imagine anyone else in it. This is the first example (and a very good one) of Allen using Farrow’s warm, nurturing, slightly anxious presence to create an indelible and sympathetic character.” [2]

– Zelig is filled with [special effects], and they are as brilliant and impressive, in their own way, as those of Return of the Jedi, which came out the same year. Aging and manipulating images is no big deal today, but Zelig’s tricks were all analog. Filming the scenes of Allen and Farrow to be interspersed had to be done under absolutely precise conditions, and the two had to be manually removed from the film, frame by frame, and then added to the historic reels. [2]

– Zelig might not cohere as a classic, and it doesn’t challenge viewers in the way great art is supposed to, but more so than any other Woody Allen movie so far, it’s a film which is impossible to dislike. [2]

– Zelig has a 100% Rotten Tomatoes rating as of 2021.

CITATIONS

[1] – imdb.com
[2] – Every Woody Allen Movie website
[3] – Turner Movie Classics
[4] - “The Unruly Life of Woody Allen” by Marion Meade