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Analyzing Orson Welles 'Citizen Kane'

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Struggle defines the movie Citizen Kane by Orson Welles. We struggle to follow along with it’s haphazard sequencing of events. The dark lighting strains the eyes. We even struggle to follow along as to where we are. There is narration but only that which helps tell the story of Kane, not where we are at the moment. That we must discover for ourselves as we follow the journalist through his investigation. Citizen Kane utilized unique camera angles that were not used in the cookie-cutter Hollywood style. Ceilings were almost never shown because it would expose the stage. The camera did not make you feel like an audience member sitting in the middle of a theater watching the story. Citizen Kane actually takes you into the world as a member of that world, a bystander that see’s these events first hand. The camera had a lot to do with that. In the opening scene the fades from shot to shot. The camera places you in realistic positions. Classic Hollywood films at the time were very much like going to a theatrical theater, such as an opera house. The camera angles were very limited. …show more content…

He was the only one who saw it until it was released. By not having a board, banker or some other form of authoritative interference, Welles could direct and act as the artist he wanted to be. His story, his message and his style is what made the film unique and gave it character. Watching the film, compared to other films at the time, you get the sense that this was no assembly line production that was made in a week. Someone actually put thought into how this film was created. It engages the viewer by making them ask many questions in the beginning with the constant back and forth of scenes as well as the cabin scene where Kane is taken from his home. The following scene of sled accumulating snow proves his mother right, that there is nothing for him here compared to the life he could

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