Film Study September 18, 2014 Mrs. Luchsinger Aaron Herr, Katelin Christianson, and Karley Landwehr Citizen Kane This movie was made in 1941 and you’re wondering why you still have to watch it. This movie had started to become more and more popular but every time you sit down to watch it you end up falling asleep. You wonder ‘Why’ why do i fall asleep? Why can’t I get threw the first 5 minutes of this movie? The reason you can’t get thru this movie is because the first 20 to 30 minutes its very confusing, and it just turns into a flashbacks and then flash forwards; you can’t keep up with the movie because it is not clear when the flashbacks and the flash forwards end. After the the first 30 minutes of the movie the movie become a …show more content…
I feel that the characters in this movie are realistic because you are able to put yourself in the movie and that these characters could have been real people in the 1940’s. I feel that it is well structured because even though the movie was confusing the actors and actresses did a very good job keeping the characters throughout the the whole movie. I would characterize the dialogue in the movie very very good between the characters but the dialogue had so many meaning so you really need to pay attention to the words more than the actions. The themes presented in the movie are the myth of the American dream and the unreliability of memory. The first theme of the of the movie is the myth of the American dream this means that Kane had the “American Dream” but didn’t have what everyone really want and that is being able to love someone and them to love you back. I felt this is the one thing that Kane is really missing even when he lost everything he had someone that loved him but he didn’t know how to give that love back. The second theme presented in the movie is unreliability of memory this theme is important because the whole movie is about finding out about who or what Rosebud is and everyone the reporters asked had a different story and the reporters didn’t find out about the Rosebud. The symbols in the movie are the sled from when Kane was a little boy, The snow globe in the very beginning that symbolizes …show more content…
The shots the director used is the aerial shot which is a shot taken from the sky, medium shot which is a shot in between a close up and a full shot, and a deep focus which is when all you see is one person or thing. These shot are very important to the movie because you wouldn’t be able to see the symbols, able to see the more important parts of the movie and be able to get the effect of the scene. The way the shots are put together make the opening scene feel that it’s going to be an amazing more. Having the correct shots in the opening scene can make someone keep watching a movie or change the chanel. There were so many jump cuts but it makes it the confusing movie it is, the fade ins and fade outs also make the movie because of the quotes used in the movie makes it more important so you pay attention. The music in the movie makes the more dramatic parts even more dramatic. In the scene when you find out what or who Rosebud is makes it more dramatic and confusing to the
One of the oldest and classic films in the beautiful world of cinema, Citizen Kane, has been released in 1941 by Orson Welles (Charles Foster Kane). Even though this film is an old movie, but its events, ideas, and mysteries are still on the lookout for the viewers to look at and figure out. When we talk about Citizen Kane, we are talking about a film with many ideas and a convergence of several symbols and inspirations that make the individuals think a lot about the purpose or meaning that the writer, director, producer and hero of the movie want. Perhaps the biggest and most controversial symbol of the film is “Rosebud”, the word that Kane says before he died. The film returns with flashback to the life of Charles Foster Kane, who grew up
Some of the photo shows it at last in the movie strongly proof that it is a true story which gives the film more meaningfully and this story really happened to someone. The character and the settings make it all more realistic. Second, the film being a drama has magnify feelings, one way this is done is by seeing the struggles that he goes through and the music linked great to the drama theme. It's moves the audience emotionally. Third, the theme is usual based on human emotions and issues.
Citizen Kane (Welles, Orson) is known as one of the greatest movies of all time, and I agree completely. The movie was the first of its kind, making it unique. It was the first movie to use deep focus throughout and everything on screen is seen in focus, unlike other movies made in this time. This movie had to be thought out perfectly and most scenes were filmed in one shot in order to make the most of the focus. It was visually stunning and innovative for its time.
The realism of Kane in the film shows how in the end all he really cared about was his mother. She was the only women he really loved. The snow globe was a symbol of his childhood, arguably the only time in his life when he was ever truly happy. This brings about a sad realism that Kane was just an ordinary man who craved for the love of his mother but it was cruelly taken away from him. The camera movement and shots create the many illusions which make up Citizen Kane.
Citizen Kane challenged the traditional narrative and technical elements of classic Hollywood cinema mainly in the area of sound. Orson Welles was ahead of his time when he created his works of manipulating sound to transfer meaning in the film Citizen Kane. Welles used concealed hanging microphones to obtain different levels of sound throughout the film. The manner, in which the story was told, from Kane’s death flashbacked to his life of success and ultimate failure, was also a new style of storytelling for films. Welles also used symbolism with his last mumbling word “Rosebud.”
This uneasiness around the main character of the film makes it very hard to watch. I felt restless, and as if there was always something missing as I watched. I believe that that was done on purpose, but for that reason I dislike the film. Charles Kane was played by Orson Welles.
The themes that are most prevalent in Citizen Kane are the American Dream, power and egotism. When this movie was released in the 1940s, the American Dream was supposed to have a positive connotation attached to it. It was supposed to be what every
The movie overlaps the interviews to tell the life story of Kane while the flashbacks are doing the storytelling. The story is not told in chronologic manor, uses several techniques to tell the story of Kane. The angles used to portray certain scenes, getting all of views in, having lighting changes, shadows are all creative to the movie and introducing these techniques into Hollywood
Citizen Kane is a film first released in 1941, staring Orson Welles, who also directed, produced and helped write the script. We follow the life and death of Charles Foster Kane, an intelligent but incredibly egotistical man. Throughout his life, he takes control of a newspaper business, marries twice, and runs for Governor of New York. Towards the end of his life he retires to Xanadu living alone, and passes away of old age, his last words being "Rosebud." In this film, we're following a reporter's journey to discover what rosebud means.
The dialogue was realistic. The theme present in the movie is “money can't buy happiness.” Some symbols in the movie are the sled, “rosebud”, which is the sled that kane had as a kid, and were his final words right before he died. The snow globe, representing how peaceful his life would have been if he hadn't been adopted by the banker. Statues, representing how he could never control people, so he bought statues so he could feel like he was in control of
The first scene we viewed in Citizen kane was of the large castle type house through the opening in a fence. The shot goes up the fence until we get full focus of the xanadu home. The scene gives us the feeling that the camera is being held by paparazzi because of the place it is being used and the way the camera is snaking as the holder is filming with it. As the scene progresses further, we get the view of two monkeys sitting on their cage fading into a closer fuller shot of the home. The scene continues and we see a large variety of different landscapes that looked unfinished and messy overlapping, directing us closer and closer to the mysterious building we see in the background.
Each of the characters in Orson Welles’ films show some aspect of human nature in a negative light, as Welles himself was “dark, self-absorbed, and very troubled.” Revealing Welles’ most biting critique of man, most of his characters manifest some form of egocentrism. Such selfishness is exemplified in Citizen Kane, though it is slightly different than Welles other films in that there are no gunfights and no one is murdered. Throughout the film, we see that Kane accumulates an increasing amount of power while losing more of his soul.
Welles’ appreciation and relationship with the audience makes this film stand out. He frankly values the audience’s presence. Nonlinear narrative editing helps to further the story and keep viewers questioning the meaning of rosebud. The unchronological plot is something that revolutionized cinema because filmmakers wanted to prove they could create previous films. It was common for films of 1940s to be follow the cliché rules and guidelines of precedent films.
The movie “Citizen Kane” directed by Orson Welles is an interesting movie about a young boy and his struggle of life. It is about Charles Foster Kane a young boy starting from the very bottom, and making his way to the very top. The movie is about a reporter is trying to find why the famous and very rich Charles Foster Kane said “Rosebud” as his final dying words. As the movie goes on, the reports go around everyone who knew, talked, liked or disliked Charles Kane, asking is “Rosebud” meant anything. They went around asking his first wife, who left him because Kane would spend all his time working on the newspaper business he bought when he was younger.
As the movie goes on, it dissolves into different views of the house, which portrays Kane as a dominant and sociable part of society. Although it seems as if Kane has a bountiful amount of close