
A top-rated movie amongst critics, Citizen Kane was, for me, a slight disappointment. Directed by Orson Welles in 1941, this film won several awards including Best Film (1941). Perhaps, with credentials such as these, I expected more from the movie. However, I do believe that there are many people who would get a lot more out of the film than I did.
Citizen Kane follows a group of reporters attempting to find the meaning of the last word ("Rosebud") of the newspaper tycoon Charles Foster Kane. (In the film Ghost Busters, the small green ghost utters only one coherent word: Rosebud.) Citizen Kane utilizes flashbacks as a means of chronicling Kane's (portrayed by Orson Welles) life.
As a child, while sledding in the fresh snow in his yard, Kane is forced to leave his mother after becoming amazingly wealthy when he became an heir to a silver mine. He is sent to live with Mr. Thatcher. When Kane grows up, he is wealthy and has power, but he seems as if he is lacking something in his life. Kane takes control of the newspaper The Inquirer and reports whatever news he sees fit. He marries Emily Norton (played by Ruth Warrick), niece to the president, but his attachments to the newspaper are too strong and the couple often argue.
Kane runs for governor but fails when his biggest rival newspaper, The Chronicle, prints a story about Kane's affair with Susan Alexander (portrayed by Dorothy Comingore), a young singer who will eventually become his second wife. This blow ruins not only Kane's political career but also his first marriage. More importantly to Kane, the love of his wife and his countrymen is taken away, reminding him of his past.
For his second wife, Kane builds an enormous castle in Florida. Xanadu is vast and lovely, but Susan feels as if she is imprisoned in her home and eventually leaves Kane. Kane goes on a rampage around the room until he comes across a snowglobe. Gripping it in his hand, he utters only one word: "Rosebud." Again, Kane loses love.
The final scene of the movie shows the reporters giving up their search for the truth. They state that "Rosebud" is a mystery that will never be solved. The camera then pans out over the vast collection of items that Kane's piles of money bought for him and comes to a stop over his childhood sled. Painted on the front of the sled is a single word: "Rosebud." As soon as the word becomes visible, a man casts the sled into a fire and thus ends the film.
Throughout Kane's life, he feels unloved and attempts to make up for it with power. The problem with being sent away at such a young age is that Kane seems to have a difficult time commiting any long-term relationship. Although he has all the money and power in the world, Kane never feels fulfilled because he never felt loved. The last time he was truly happy and loved, Kane felt, was when he was sledding the day he was taken away from home.
My scale is set up thusly:
10-Best movie I've ever seen
9-Amazingly good
8-Definitely recommended
7-Decent
6-Worth watching
5-Average
4-Fine
3-Boring or uninteresting
2-idea is overdone, too common
1-Terrible, don't waste your time
On my rating scale, I give this movie a 6.5/10.
I feel that the movie gives an interesting look into the condition of a person who feels unloved. Also, I enjoyed the way that many of the scenes were shot. For example, there is a reflection of Kane dancing while his business partners are talking about him. Artful ideas such as this made the film more interesting. Everyone should watch this movie at some time in his/her life if only to be able to understand references to it in today's society.
Genre: Drama
wikipedia.com
Citizen Kane follows a group of reporters attempting to find the meaning of the last word ("Rosebud") of the newspaper tycoon Charles Foster Kane. (In the film Ghost Busters, the small green ghost utters only one coherent word: Rosebud.) Citizen Kane utilizes flashbacks as a means of chronicling Kane's (portrayed by Orson Welles) life.
As a child, while sledding in the fresh snow in his yard, Kane is forced to leave his mother after becoming amazingly wealthy when he became an heir to a silver mine. He is sent to live with Mr. Thatcher. When Kane grows up, he is wealthy and has power, but he seems as if he is lacking something in his life. Kane takes control of the newspaper The Inquirer and reports whatever news he sees fit. He marries Emily Norton (played by Ruth Warrick), niece to the president, but his attachments to the newspaper are too strong and the couple often argue.
Kane runs for governor but fails when his biggest rival newspaper, The Chronicle, prints a story about Kane's affair with Susan Alexander (portrayed by Dorothy Comingore), a young singer who will eventually become his second wife. This blow ruins not only Kane's political career but also his first marriage. More importantly to Kane, the love of his wife and his countrymen is taken away, reminding him of his past.
For his second wife, Kane builds an enormous castle in Florida. Xanadu is vast and lovely, but Susan feels as if she is imprisoned in her home and eventually leaves Kane. Kane goes on a rampage around the room until he comes across a snowglobe. Gripping it in his hand, he utters only one word: "Rosebud." Again, Kane loses love.
The final scene of the movie shows the reporters giving up their search for the truth. They state that "Rosebud" is a mystery that will never be solved. The camera then pans out over the vast collection of items that Kane's piles of money bought for him and comes to a stop over his childhood sled. Painted on the front of the sled is a single word: "Rosebud." As soon as the word becomes visible, a man casts the sled into a fire and thus ends the film.
Throughout Kane's life, he feels unloved and attempts to make up for it with power. The problem with being sent away at such a young age is that Kane seems to have a difficult time commiting any long-term relationship. Although he has all the money and power in the world, Kane never feels fulfilled because he never felt loved. The last time he was truly happy and loved, Kane felt, was when he was sledding the day he was taken away from home.
My scale is set up thusly:
10-Best movie I've ever seen
9-Amazingly good
8-Definitely recommended
7-Decent
6-Worth watching
5-Average
4-Fine
3-Boring or uninteresting
2-idea is overdone, too common
1-Terrible, don't waste your time
On my rating scale, I give this movie a 6.5/10.
I feel that the movie gives an interesting look into the condition of a person who feels unloved. Also, I enjoyed the way that many of the scenes were shot. For example, there is a reflection of Kane dancing while his business partners are talking about him. Artful ideas such as this made the film more interesting. Everyone should watch this movie at some time in his/her life if only to be able to understand references to it in today's society.
Genre: Drama
wikipedia.com
