On The 100th Birthday Of
Citizen Welles-A Review Of Orson Welles Classic For The Ages- Citizen Kane
The BBC celebrates Orson Welles 100th Birthday
http://www.bbc.co.uk/programmes/articles/3r2qyBrTFpTPv2rZxGrJBtT/cinema-giant-orson-welles-at-100
The BBC celebrates Orson Welles 100th Birthday
http://www.bbc.co.uk/programmes/articles/3r2qyBrTFpTPv2rZxGrJBtT/cinema-giant-orson-welles-at-100
From The Pen Of Frank Jackman-American Left History blog (2011)
Citizen Kane, starring Orson Welles,
Everett Sloane, Joseph Cotton, directed by Orson Welles, hell, written by Orson
Welles, RKO Radio Pictures, 1941
Recently I reviewed the 2011 Academy
Award –winning film The Artist and commented in that review that the
silent movie directors and producers of the 1920s (the actors I am not quite as
sure of) would have given their eye-teeth (or at least their first born) to
have had the technology available now back then to produce higher technical
quality films. I am not so sure that I could say the same about director Orson
Welles’ 1941 film classic, Citizen Kane.
Oh sure some of the technical stuff
today could (and has on the re-mastered versions ) enhance the sound, and maybe
some of the production values but this magnificent film does not rely on
technical skill so much (although some of the scenes and backdrops are of high
quality) as the driving plot line, the script, and above the acting of director
Orson Welles’s merry band of Mercury Theater players (think Joseph Cotton,
Agnes Moorehead, Everett Sloan and, oh yes, Orson Welles, among others).
The plot line and the way it unfolds
beginning with a clever news-of-the-week video of Charles Foster Kane’s life
after he passed away to bring us up to speed really is something to watch. Of
course it did not hurt that this piece was a thinly-veiled portrait of the
famed newspaperman and arch imperialist war-monger (the Spanish-American War
and other little adventures be exact) William Randolph Hearst. He of “yellow
journalism” fame although today he would be strictly minor league, maybe
scandalous in Toledo or someplace like that but passe in the real war of scandal
sheets.
Then to have the strong cinematic
personality of actor Orson Welles (shown as well in other films like Falstaff,
The Lady From Shang-hai, and The Third Man) play that strong Hearst
personality just added to the drama. As well as did the flashbacks by various
parties who knew Kane, had worked for Kane, had loved Kane, had hated Kane or
were just pure baffled by him. And then that dramatic undercurrent throughout
the film of Kane’s characteristic that would banish him from the godly
pantheon, his utter incapacity to love anybody but himself that left him alone
at the end. Yet he was still able to go back into deep childhood to remember
the good part of his life, the part many of us harken back to as we age. We
all, or almost all, have our Rosebud memories and maybe that is the connecting
thread to the continuing relevance of this classic film. Just make sure you don’t
go for popcorn out at the concession stand at some retro-theater or something
out in the kitchen at the beginning of the film, okay. Trust me on that,
please.
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