Citizen Kane, then...

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this film has a lot more going on than most top-ten all-time classic snoozefests.

OTM, i think kane is a way deeper film than, say, the bicycle thief or potemkin or city lights or the seventh seal or the godfather, not to mention funner to watch (tho i like all those).

J.D., Saturday, 15 December 2007 23:15 (eighteen years ago)

I saw CK for the first time just a few years ago, with all the attendant baggage, and it rocked me.

wanko ergo sum, Saturday, 15 December 2007 23:18 (eighteen years ago)

he was hot back then, Abbott.

OTM! the picture james naremore uses on the cover of "the magic world of orson welles" is quite fetching

JD's list is pretty solid except 1) falstaff/CoM is very hard to find (tho it rules), and 2) i'm not crazy about his othello

impudent harlot, Saturday, 15 December 2007 23:56 (eighteen years ago)

also, the third man, for some more great welles/joseph cotten fun, even tho it ain't a welles film as such

kingfish, Sunday, 16 December 2007 00:07 (eighteen years ago)

Why do I feel that

the bicycle thief or potemkin or city lights or the seventh seal or the godfather

weren't the "top-ten all-time classic snoozefests" enrique was referring to?

Eric H., Sunday, 16 December 2007 00:18 (eighteen years ago)

funny, that's exactly what i thought he had in mind.

BIG HOOS aka the steendriver, Sunday, 16 December 2007 00:21 (eighteen years ago)

Maybe Potemkin, but I figured he was talking about Bresson and Antonioni and Godard.

Eric H., Sunday, 16 December 2007 00:22 (eighteen years ago)

D. W. Griffith's "Birth of a Soporific"

Abbott, Sunday, 16 December 2007 00:24 (eighteen years ago)

yeah it basically is, except 'the godfather'.

not bresson/antonioni/godard. well, maybe bresson -- but the pre-1960 canon. maybe early antonioni.

That one guy that hit it and quit it, Sunday, 16 December 2007 00:24 (eighteen years ago)

ie griffith, chaplin, stroheim, lubitsch, murnau, lang, pabst, eisenstein, pudovkin, dreyer, carne, rossellini, de sica, bergman, fellini.

'kane' was like the one american sound film permissible back then -- a couple of fords, maybe, but not the westerns, that kind of thing.

changed end of the 50s -- discovery of 'regle du jeu', french new wave, rediscovery of hollywood genre cinema, blah blah.

That one guy that hit it and quit it, Sunday, 16 December 2007 00:27 (eighteen years ago)

'ambersons' would be the best if done right, and it's still yoga flame as is, but the more you see it, the more the ending just betrays the whole thing, and i say that without being able to remember how it 'should' end.

That one guy that hit it and quit it, Sunday, 16 December 2007 00:29 (eighteen years ago)

I think I like The Lady from Shanghai

Madness! I saw it again recently and it gets my vote as his worst: mannered, coy.

Alfred, Lord Sotosyn, Sunday, 16 December 2007 00:38 (eighteen years ago)

the stranger's kinda weak i think, at the very least it's a waste of edward g. robinson in a boring part

impudent harlot, Sunday, 16 December 2007 01:14 (eighteen years ago)

Madness! I saw it again recently and it gets my vote as his worst: mannered, coy.

-- Alfred, Lord Sotosyn, Sunday, December 16, 2007 12:38 AM (1 hour ago) Bookmark Link

look who's talking!

s1ocki, Sunday, 16 December 2007 02:04 (eighteen years ago)

ANyone seen this?

Crêpe, Sunday, 16 December 2007 03:05 (eighteen years ago)

look who's talking!

Ouch!

Ned Raggett, Sunday, 16 December 2007 04:32 (eighteen years ago)

Don't forget The Trial!

C0L1N B..., Sunday, 16 December 2007 06:24 (eighteen years ago)

I wish I could forget the Jess Franco edit of the Don Quixote material though.

C0L1N B..., Sunday, 16 December 2007 06:24 (eighteen years ago)

This film actually lives up to its reputation!

Tape Store, Sunday, 16 December 2007 07:36 (eighteen years ago)

look who's talking!

-- s1ocki, Sunday, 16 December 2007 02:04 (7 hours ago) Link

Now!

Alfred, Lord Sotosyn, Sunday, 16 December 2007 09:24 (eighteen years ago)

Shanghai is, um, FUNNY.

Dr Morbius, Monday, 17 December 2007 14:26 (eighteen years ago)

http://movie.yesky.com/movie/cover/353/5853_001.jpg
Is is the animals that talk in this movie? Must rescreen this.

wanko ergo sum, Monday, 17 December 2007 14:30 (eighteen years ago)

I saw <i>Journey Into Fear</i> the other night - 40s noir, starring Joseph Cotten and Orson Wells, how could it be bad? But it was bad. Or at least pretty uncompelling.

Zelda Zonk, Monday, 17 December 2007 14:38 (eighteen years ago)

Wells = Welles

Zelda Zonk, Monday, 17 December 2007 14:39 (eighteen years ago)

you didn't like Welles' fez?

Alfred, Lord Sotosyn, Monday, 17 December 2007 14:40 (eighteen years ago)

Welles was a pretty silly caricature in the movie, even by the standards of the times I think... For a noirish movie, there was something fundamentally wrong with the plot, there just wasn't any tension.

Zelda Zonk, Monday, 17 December 2007 15:03 (eighteen years ago)

don't think much of his shakepeares (except 'chimes') or noirs (except 'touch of evil').

That one guy that hit it and quit it, Monday, 17 December 2007 17:15 (eighteen years ago)

http://img403.imageshack.us/img403/7161/youneedamorticianmx4.jpg

mookieproof, Monday, 17 December 2007 17:22 (eighteen years ago)

YOU NEED A MORTICIAN! YOU NEED A MORTICIAN!

impudent harlot, Monday, 17 December 2007 17:35 (eighteen years ago)

three months pass...

I love how great Welles looks as an old man, and how he nails how old people move and think -- their habit of sharing curdled witticisms and phony insights -- without condescension. The newsreel section, for example, where a young reporter interviews Kane after he returns from speaking to "the great powers of Europe."

Alfred, Lord Sotosyn, Wednesday, 26 March 2008 02:23 (eighteen years ago)

Malpertuis

remy bean, Wednesday, 26 March 2008 02:28 (eighteen years ago)

I read his credit as "Orson Welles (cassava)"

Alfred, Lord Sotosyn, Wednesday, 26 March 2008 02:29 (eighteen years ago)

youtube of worst thing welles ever did

remy bean, Wednesday, 26 March 2008 02:29 (eighteen years ago)

You sure about that?

Dingbod Kesterson, Wednesday, 26 March 2008 10:34 (eighteen years ago)

Well that video didn't last for long.

Eric H., Wednesday, 26 March 2008 11:03 (eighteen years ago)

Well, you all know how it goes, crumb crisp coating, IN July, I'll go down on you &c.

Dingbod Kesterson, Wednesday, 26 March 2008 12:18 (eighteen years ago)

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=K3qg4i22x9M

deeznuts, Wednesday, 26 March 2008 12:20 (eighteen years ago)

two years pass...

is bogdanovich's commentary on the 2-disc edition worth hearing?

dan138zig (Durrr Durrr Durrrrrr), Wednesday, 12 May 2010 03:46 (sixteen years ago)

no iirc

sir gaga (s1ocki), Wednesday, 12 May 2010 14:07 (sixteen years ago)

I thought it was pretty silly.

That's staring you in the face when you open up this thread--it's way, way up at the top (Sept. 28, 2001--within three weeks of 9/11). I got into a big back-and-forth on Kane once with a friend; can't remember if he said exactly the same, but he was dismissive in any event. I can see where someone would come away from a first viewing thinking it's slightly overrated--I don't think so, but with so much advance build-up, such a reaction seems more than reasonable--but it's hard for me to understand not thinking it's pretty great anyway. Even if you don't think it's profound (I do), I would still think you'd love the humour, the performances, and/or the whirlwind technique. I saw an interview a few years ago with Graham Yost (the guy who wrote Speed), and he recalled the time in high school when his dad, Elwy Yost (long-time host of a classic-movie show in Toronto), wrote a letter explaining that his son would be absent tomorrow because he wanted him to stay up and watch a midnight airing of Citizen Kane. I generally cringe when people well up on camera, but that time it seemed very spontaneous and genuine.

clemenza, Wednesday, 12 May 2010 15:05 (sixteen years ago)

I still haven't gone back to finish this, and I'm not usually put off by hype about the 'classics'. Just feel no compunction to go through with the rest of it on what I've seen so far (Young dude gets old and crusty at a dinner table montage)

Black IP's (darraghmac), Wednesday, 12 May 2010 15:07 (sixteen years ago)

rolling my damn eyes

Greatest contributor: (history mayne), Wednesday, 12 May 2010 15:08 (sixteen years ago)

don't bother Black IP's

conrad, Wednesday, 12 May 2010 15:12 (sixteen years ago)

yeah am aware of that reaction, but i felt it was important my voice was unstifled by your entrenched luvviness

Black IP's (darraghmac), Wednesday, 12 May 2010 15:17 (sixteen years ago)

don't bother Black IP's

conrad, Wednesday, 12 May 2010 15:22 (sixteen years ago)

Young dude gets old and crusty at a dinner table montage

You can do this with any film:
Vertigo -- Old nervous dude stalks blonde babe around San Francisco
Chinatown -- Detective dude gets bloodied up by short foreign dude
Persona -- Actress babe pulls silent treatment on chatty nurse

clemenza, Wednesday, 12 May 2010 16:32 (sixteen years ago)

Retitle:Dude, Where's My Snowglobe?

Generation Blecch (James Redd and the Blecchs), Wednesday, 12 May 2010 17:29 (sixteen years ago)

Moby-Dick: Nut chases a big fish

[sic]

kind of shrill and very self-righteous (Dr Morbius), Wednesday, 12 May 2010 17:36 (sixteen years ago)

kinda enjoying this tbh.

Black IP's (darraghmac), Wednesday, 12 May 2010 21:32 (sixteen years ago)

am i the only one to have cried at the ending? such a pitiful man in the end..

dan138zig (Durrr Durrr Durrrrrr), Wednesday, 12 May 2010 23:18 (sixteen years ago)

will we see a colorized version at last

So who you gonna call? The martini police (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Monday, 16 August 2021 17:27 (four years ago)

I think the dream is now a 3D version.

Halfway there but for you, Monday, 16 August 2021 17:32 (four years ago)


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