Film Review
Remarkably, Orson Welles was just 25 when he made
Citizen
Kane, which is quite possibly the most influential film in history.
He had by this time made a name for himself in theatre and on radio with
the company he founded, Mercury Theatre.
Welles was eager to begin a career as a film director and was planning an adaptation of
Joseph Conrad's
Heart Of Darkness
when he was given an initial draft of a screenplay by Herman
Mankiewicz, brother of the acclaimed writer-director Jospeh
Mankiewicz. Welles helped to develop Mankiewicz's screenplay, and
the result was
Citizen Kane.
Welles was particularly fortunate with the team who worked with him on
this film. Not only did he have a first rate cast - made up of
many of his Mercury Theatre colleagues, including Joseph Cotten, Agnes
Moorehead and George Coulouris - but he had one of the best
cinematographers in the business, Gregg Toland, and Bernard Herrmann
(famous for his later collaborations with
Alfred Hitchcock)
to compose the film's score. Certainly, Welles played a significant
part in defining the film's striking visual style (as can be seen from
the films he subsequently made), but much of the technical and artistic
brilliance of this film can be attributed to his talented associates.
After Welles, the person who had the greatest impact on
Citizen Kane was cinematographer
Gregg Toland. At the time, Toland was a pioneer in the use of
deep focus photography, which allows the background and foreground of a
shot to be in sharp focus simultaneously. The technique brings a
cold realism and unsettling atmosphere which serves this film
particularly well. Toland and others would use the same
cinematographic approach in the numerous brooding crime dramas that
would be made over the decade that followed, defining a cinematic style
that we now refer to as
film noir.
Another device that was to become a popular film noir motif was the use
of low-angle shots. In
Citizen
Kane, these are used sparingly but very effectively, the best
example being the sequence in which Kane's attempts to play god (by
using his position as a newspaper chief to help the common man) are
exposed as an act of self-deluded vanity. The low-angle
perspective puts the spectator in the position in which he or she
should be dominated by Kane, but Kane's failure to persuade us that he
is acting from sincere motives merely makes him appear as a tragic tyrant,
a man doomed to fail in both his professional and personal life.
The third important film noir device which
Citizen Kane employs - and perhaps
better than any other film since - is the flashback. After the
(hilarious) faux newsreel introduction, much of what follows is told in
flashback, in each case from the perspective of a single
character. The different accounts of Kane's life marry together
to make a strangely satisfying whole, the pieces of a cinematic jigsaw
that tell the poignant tale of a man who never achieves what he needs
to make his life complete.
It is hard to watch
Citizen Kane
and not be struck by the similarities between Kane and Welles,
suggesting the film may have a subconsciously autographical
component. Like Kane, Welles garnered celebrity and
success early in his career but would veer towards monomania and
increasing isolation in later years. Kane was in fact based on
William Randolph Hearst, a media magnate known for his influence and
ruthlessness. When he heard about the film, Hearst was so
incensed that he made every attempt to prevent it from being released,
and then when it was released did what he could to prevent it from
being publicized. This could partly account for the fact the film
failed to turn a profit, despite some very positive reviews.
Not long after its first release,
Citizen
Kane disappeared from view and was soon forgotten - for a
while. In the mid-1950s, it was rediscovered and subjected to an
immediate reappraisal. The consensus was that this is not just a
masterpiece but possibly the greatest film ever to have been made in
America. It is a view that stands, pretty well unchallenged, to
this day.
Citizen Kane
shows the expressive power and beguiling poetry of the moving image
more vigorously than virtually any other film in history. It is
also an emotionally engaging and deeply ironic portrait of a man who
fails to find meaning in his life - an allegory of sorts for the
web of existential anxieties that haunt us all.
For Orson Welles, his first full-length film was to be the
high point of his career as a director. Although there were
to be some other notable achievements -
The Magnificent Ambersons (1942),
The Trial (1962),
Othello (1952) -
Welles would never again attain the dizzying heights of his one
unparalleled masterpiece.
© James Travers 2008
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Next Orson Welles film:
The Magnificent Ambersons (1942)