The Most Profound Moment in Movie History
This short segment from Orson Welles' cinematic essay, F for Fake, may be the profoundest moment in cinema history. It is both uniquely moving, as well as stunningly deep philosophically---a truly rare cinematic combination. This clip should be required viewing, not only for every student of cinema, but for everyone who seeks an antidote to the world's increasing descent into cruelty and darkness. Here, Welles achieves the miraculous with amazingly simple means (note the lack of music as an emotional "guide", for example). God created Orson Welles...then broke the mold. Introduced by media psychologist, Dr. James N. Herndon.

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The Third Man (1949): 20 Dark Facts you Didn't Know!

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Peter Bogdanovich on F for Fake

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Orson Welles and Peter O'Toole on Hamlet

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“No one understood my Dad”: Daughter of the Legendary Orson Welles

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The Greatest Scene In All Of Cinema - Kingdom Of Heaven

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Orson Welles receiving an Honorary Oscar®

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Orson Welles discusses the effect of violent films - Talk Collection - BBC

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Mel Brooks on Orson Welles | BFI

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Orson Welles - The Paris Interview (1960)

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You'll NEVER Look at 2001: A Space Odyssey the SAME Way Again!

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Jeff Bridges on CITIZEN KANE

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I know thee not, old man

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Rita Hayworth Interview Early 1972

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John Candy as Orson Welles on the Billy Crystal Comedy Hour (1982)

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Why is the Original THX 1138 Still Forbidden?

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Overdramatic Parrots Who Deserve an Oscar 😂 Funny Parrot Videos 2026

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Orson Welles's BRILLIANT Way of Speaking

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Orson Welles on American Imperialism

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A Space Odyssey (1968): 20 Hidden Details You Completely Missed!

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