Senior Citizens Essay

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    F for Wellesian Orson Welles had a long career full of unexpected rises and falls that was marked by his personal desire to wow audiences and habitual straying from conventional means of entertainment. From his The War of Worlds broad cast that caused audiences to fear for their lives, to his performance in The Third Man, Welles strove to be memorable and invite audiences to rise to his standards of entertainment. He fancied himself a magician; a theme that helped progress his 1973 film F for Fake

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         A democracy is a system of government controlled by the people, not by one certain group or individual. In the Declaration of Independence it states that “all men are created equal,” an idea which leads to the concept that all citizens should have the same rights, responsibilities, and influence in the governing of their country. In writing the Declaration of Independence Thomas Jefferson was trying to break his ties with the harsh and non-democratic rule of the British and begin

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    The two films Citizen Kane by Orson Welles (1941) and Sullivan’s Travels by Preston Sturgis (1941) were both created in the same year, and are both considered “Classical Narrative Hollywood”. However, though both of these films follow the basic mold of classic Hollywood, they break the mold as well. Both movies incorporate new and innovative technology, shots and concepts that are new to this time, and essentially introduce them, changing the fil m industry forever. Though “Citizen Kane” is a drama

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    When watching Citizen Kane, the audience nearly doesn’t need dialogue to enhance or intertitles to explain the events that unfold. The excellent cinematography alone tells the story to the viewer. The audience’s awareness of the plot is due to the techniques behind the screen, the lens used, the composition, every technical and artistic decision made (Cowan 90). Modern films might be driven by words and accented by fancy color technology, but in this film, we the audience are able to derive emotions

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    The year is 1941, and Charles Foster Kane has died in his massive private palace and zoo, Xanadu. In the wake of his death, news show News on the March runs a segment on Kane’s life, including an interview with Walter Thatcher, Kane’s caretaker as a child. During the ensuing media storm, his last word, spoken only to his butler comes to light, “Rosebud”, and reporter Jerry Thompson is sent to investigate the meaning of Kane’s final utterance. Thompson sets out, and first visits Kane’s second wife

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    The Unknown Citizen consists of many different kinds of organizations and people that are weighing in and discussing the character of the poem our “citizen”. Our citizen had never received or made any official complaint against him or others according to the “Bureau of Statistics.” It was said that the man was a saint, whose good doings in life consisted of never getting fired and serving in the military. He had belonged to a Union, and paid his dues, he was also said to have of liked having a drink

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    The number one film, “Citizen Kane,” was directed by Orson Welles in 1941. Although it is not boldly stated in the film, the story was about William Randolph Hearst. Welles defied tradition with this film. He made it about a powerfully, well-known man, who upset him, and the film’s opening was a dead screen. By utilizing the dead screen, Welles demonstrated that his film would be different and unique than the rest. The film begins with the camera moving vertically as it shows the fences changing

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    Not all the filmmakers have the capacity of gathering sensitive political and historical material and turn it into a pleasurable satirical parody that stirs our intellect in a totally different way. With just a couple of feature-length films, Italian-born Armando Iannucci is surely one of them, asserting his gift with comedies such as “In The Loop”, and now “The Death of Stalin”, a tongue-in-cheek caricature of the post-Stalinism struggle for power. Its conception was based on the French graphic

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    PERFECTLY FLAWED Citizen Kane is presumably the best that American Cinema has ever offered, impeccable from beginning to the end. Frequently rivaling Its a Wonderful Life for number one, Citizen Kane is in a group of its own and unmatched in artistry on a number of fronts. The innovative development and the specialized headways used during production, can be minimally viewed as inconceivable and amazing, for a 1941 film. Citizen Kane has stood the test of time for well over six decades, serving

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    to access more information about their citizens. “The Unknown Citizen” tells a story of a citizen’s life to death through the eyes of the government. The government seeks to publicize their superiority so they may receive more fame and glory, but while doing so, they magnify their faults. In the poem, W. H. Auden uses formal word choice to create a serious tone with a sarcastic effect and irony through the lack of a rhyme scheme and knowledge about the citizen to illustrate how the government knows

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