Citizen Kane (1941)
Starring
Orson Welles, Joseph Cotten
Director
Orson Welles
Awards
Academy Awards
Best Screenplay - Orson Welles and
Herman J. Mankiewicz
Film Notes
"Arguably the greatest of American films, Orson Welles's
1941 masterpiece, made when he was only 26, still unfurls like a dream and carries the
viewer along the mysterious currents of time and memory to reach a mature (if ambiguous)
conclusion: people are the sum of their contradictions, and can't be known easily. Welles
plays newspaper magnate Charles Foster Kane, taken from his mother as a boy and made the
ward of a rich industrialist. The result is that every well-meaning or tyrannical or
self-destructive move he makes for the rest of his life appears in some way to be a
reaction to that deeply wounding event. Written by Welles and Herman J. Mankiewicz, and
photographed by Gregg Toland, the film is the sum of Welles's awesome ambitions as an
artist in Hollywood. He pushes the limits of then-available technology to create a true
magic show, a visual and aural feast that almost seems to be rising up from a viewer's
subconsciousness. As Kane, Welles even ushers in the influence of Bertolt Brecht on film acting. This is
truly a one-of-a-kind work, and in many ways is still the most modern of modern films this
century." (Tom Keogh, amazon.com)