He appeared on a raft of talk shows, taking credit for the film's astonishing festival run, during which it accrued a bunch of awards.Henneberg was livid."I was like, 'Who is this? What the f*** is going on?' And then I called Julius again and said: 'We have another problem.'"The true scale of the disaster is unfurled in the equal-parts bamboozling and thoroughly entertaining documentary The Talented Mr F, screening nationally as part of the German Film Festival.It all feels like a bad dream, now, to Drost.However, he remembers feeling far too exhausted to cope when Henneberg first broke the bizarre news."Of course I was shocked, but I was also very fed up," he says."I was so tired, because we'd just finished the film They were looking at six figures to find out."It could take two to three years," Drost says, his eyes boggling.Instead, they decided to beat Felinton at his own game.Embarking on a documentary that would expose his fraud, the filmmakers enlisted the aid of director Igor Plischke, who would trace their adventure as they headed to the US, planning to confront Felinton in his home of Morgantown in rural West Virginia.Drost and Henneberg also brought in a stateside filmmaker, W Ian Ross, to ease the way."He's from New York, so he knew how to get to Morgantown, had connections and knew where to get technical stuff," Drost says of their point man."Turns out, he was an important guy not only on the production side, but also in how we handled the situation."Ross's breezy confidence meant he was more at ease hitting up strangers.He also coached budding detectives Drost and Henneberg on how best to handle their fateful meeting with Felinton."At first, we were really excited," Henneberg recalls."It was sort of like meeting a celebrity