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citizen kane
(1940)

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citizen kane


    credits

    directed:

    prod co:

      Mercury Productions/RKO

    exec prod:
      George J. Schaefer

    prod:
      Orson Welles

    sc:
      Herman J. Mankiewicz. Orson Welles

    photo:
      Gregg Toland

    sp eff:
      Vernon L. Walker

    ed:
      Robert Wise, Mark Robson

    art dir:
      Van Nest Polglase, Darrell Silvera, Hilyard Brown

    cost:
      Edward Stevenson

    mus:
      Bernard Herrmann

    sd:
      Baiiey Fesler, James G. Stewart

    ass dir:
      Richard Wilson

    r/t:
      119 minutes

    new york premiere:
      1 May 1941

    citizen kane


    cast:

    - Orson Welles (Charles Foster Kane)
    - Joseph Cotten (Jedediah Leiand) - Dorothy Comingore (Susan Alexander)
    - Everett Sloane (Mr Bernstein)
    - Ray Collins (James W. Gettys)
    >> - George Coulouris (Walter Parks Thatcher)
    - Agnes Moorehead (Kane's mother) - Paul Stewart (Raymond)
    - Ruth Warrick (Emily Norton)
    - Erskine Sandford (Herbert Carter)>>
    - William Alland (Thompson; newsreel reader)
    - Fortunio Bonanova (Matisti)
    - Gus Schilling (head-waiter)
    - Philip Van Zandt (Mr Rawlston) - Georgia Backus (Miss Anderson)
    - Harry Shannon (Kane's father)
    >> - Sonny Bupp (Kane III)
    - Buddy Swan (Kane age 8)
    - Richard Barr (Hillman)
    - Joan Blair (Georgia)
    - Al Eben (Mike)
    - Charles Bennett (entertainer)
    >> - Milt Kibbee (reporter)
    - Tom Curran (Teddy Roosevelt)
    - Irving Mitchell (Dr Corey)
    - Edith Evanson (nurse)
    - Arthur Kay (conductor)
    - Tudor Williams (chorus master) - Herbert Corthell (city editor)
    - Benny Rubin (Smather)
    - Edmund Cobb (reporter)
    - Frances Neal (Ethel)
    - Robert Dudley (photographer)
    - Ellen Lowe (Miss Townsend)
    - Gino Corrado (Gino the waiter) - Alan Ladd, Louise Currie, Eddie Coke, Walter Sande, Arthur O'Conneil (reporters)

    citizen kane

    making

    Up to the Forties, orthodox Hollywood camera style consisted of diffused lighting and soft focus, even for such brutally realistic films as I Am a Fugitive From a Chain Gang (1932). Photographed in this way a typical sequence might consist of a long or medium establishing shot with cuts to close-up shots to show detail. Orson Welles's Citizen Kane (1940), however, signalled the beginning of a new period in American cinema. Composition in depth, obtained by increased depth-of-field photography, meant that images on several planes could all be held in sharp focus. The dramatic effects of a scene were created by images within the composition itself rather than by editing; and because both foreground and background remained in focus, the spectator could see everything there was to see in a single shot.

    citizen kane

    Depth of field in Citizen Kane results from a number of factors including the use of faster film and wide-angle lenses. These lenses possess certain inherent optical properties which can dramatically affect the appearance of a composition. As well as keeping foreground and background in focus, they create the illusion of perspective by exaggerating the relative scale of objects on different planes - objects closer to the camera appear much larger than those further away.

    The relationship between visual style and narrative content seems almost inseparable in the film. The character of Kane is revealed not so much by what he says and does as by how he made to appear in the context of his surroundings.


    citizen kane


    Early in the film there is a scene where Walter Thatcher has come to Colorado to take the young Kane away with him. In one of the shots Mrs Kane sits reading the terms of her son's inheritance in the foreground and at the right of the frame. Thatcher is seated slightly behind and to the right of her, and Kane's father stands at the left of the frame in the middle distance. By their position and size the three figures appear to be visually and dramatically at the centre of the scene. Initially their relative sizes on the screen seem to indicate their relative narrative importance: Mrs Kane, the mother who is trying to do the best for her son, is the dominant personality; Thatcher is the interloper; and the elder Kane, ineffectively voicing his opposition, is a figure of weakness. After looking through the foreground diagonally to the middle distance, attention centres on a window at the very back of the room. Through it can barely ve identified the figure of a young boy who is all but obliterated by falling snow.

    The boy may at first appear to be the least important figure in the composition, but the opposite is true. Much greater dramatic coherence is given to the scene when it is scanned in reverse order, from background to foreground. The smallest figure becomes the local point of the narrative - it is Kane's future his parents and Thatcher are discussing, his life that, from that point onwards, will be irrevocably changed.


    citizen kane


    Time and again in the film secondary figures are positioned to act as a frame within the film frame in order to concentrate the spectator's attention on Kane in the distance. But a point occurs during the political rally sequence where, although a similar framing technique is used, the dramatic effect is suddenly reversed. Kane is giving the supreme performance of his career: his magnificient rhetoric about protecting working men, slum children and ordinary citizens alike captivates the audience. The scene ends, however, with a shot that dispels this effect and signals the beginning of the end for Kane. Political boss Jim Gettys is seen standing high up in a balcony, his figure filling the right side of the frame. To the left and far below, Kane is finishing his speech to wild applause. But the exaggerated perspective and the disproportionate size of Gettys foreshadows the despairing events about to befall Kane

    Up to this point in the film Kane is depicted as being in control of space on the screen. The spectator's attention, manipulated by the expressive dynamics of the composition and lighting, is unerringly drawn to him. But from the time he loses the election to the end of the film, his presence is made to seem increasingly insignificant in relation to his surroundings. This is most noticeable in the concluding scenes of Kane and Susan's self-imposed exile in Xanadu where Kane appears dwarfed by the volume of the rooms and the sheer depth of the huge, gaping fireplace. Space in the cavernous mausoleum of Xanadu now controls Kane and isolates him in a void of darkness.

  • rko 281 the true story of citizen kane


citizen kane



    plot

    Charles Foster Kane utters his final word, 'Rosebud', and dies on his massive, crumbling estate, Xanadu.

    Newsreel journalists prepare a film showing Kane's rise and : fall, but it lacks an angle. A reporter is sent to find out who Rosebud may be. He interviews Susan Alexander (Kane's second wife), Bernstein and Jed Leiand (two old employees) and Kane's butler, Raymond. Through them the jigsaw of Kane's life is pieced together.

    Five-year-old Kane has inherited an immense fortune; at his mother's wish he is placed under the guardianship of banker Walter Thatcher and is taken away from his Colorado home.

    Thirty years later Kane buys up the New York Inquirer and begins his career as a scandal-sheet publisher. He marries Emily Norton but later meets Susan Alexander and establishes a love-nest with her. His attempt to run for governor is shattered along with his marriage when political enemy Jim Gettys exposes the affair.

    Kane marries Susan and launches her on a disastrous career as an opera singer. But her failure and the set-backs he suffers during the Depression force him to retreat to his castle, Xanadu.

    Susan, bored by the isolation of Xanadu and by Kane's autocratic behaviour, eventually leaves him. Kane dies and his chattels are disposed of, among them a childhood sled bearing the painted-on name of Rosebud.

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citizen kane
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