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- Path: sparky!uunet!portal!cup.portal.com!Harv
- From: Harv@cup.portal.com (Harv R Laser)
- Newsgroups: rec.arts.movies
- Subject: Re: Citizen Kane question *SPOILERS*
- Message-ID: <72273@cup.portal.com>
- Date: Wed, 23 Dec 92 07:39:08 PST
- Organization: The Portal System (TM)
- Distribution: world
- References: <1992Dec23.003118.23186@cs.uow.edu.au>
- <1h957mINNi7@jethro.Corp.Sun.COM>
- Lines: 66
-
- Argh... hard to believe anyone could watch Citizen Kane from
- beginning to end and not understand what was going on, but hey,
- I've heard worse :)
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- **SPOILER**
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- The premise of Citizen Kane is a news reporter trying to find out
- why "Rosebud" was the last word uttered by Charles Foster Kane on
- his deathbed. Though a series of incredibly inventive flashbacks,
- flashforwards, and even a few flashsideways, he interviews any
- number of people who were pivotal in Kane's life. None of them know
- what "Rosebud" means although they all have their own interesting
- (and different) stories about him.
-
- [much time passes and perhaps the greatest American film ever made
- passes before your eyes on the screen....]
-
- In the end, the reporter gives up: "I'll guess we'll never know what
- Rosebud is" or something like that. He and his comrades depart from
- Kane's Xanadu estate as workmen are tossing "non-valuable" items
- into a fire. (Kane was a collector and owned literally thousands of
- famous paintings, statues, antiques, etc.). A child's sled, assumed
- to be of no value, is tossed into the fire. The camera zooms in and
- we see the flowerly-painted word "Rosebud" being burned off the surface
- of the sled. Major irony time here, kids.
-
- At the end of his life, after he had done it all and seen it all and
- been 'round the world, and built up a fortune like no one had ever
- seen; after he'd fought the newspaper wars, and influenced world
- leaders and almost could have been President himself had it not been
- for the scandal of being caught "in a love nest with 'singer' ",
- after all of his highs and lows, the only thing that mattered to
- Kane, on his deathbed, was Rosebud, his childhood sled.
-
- So the film's core plot is about a reporter trying to find out what
- Rosebud was. And he never does. But we do. Lather, rinse, repeat.
-
- And for those of you who have never seen it, by all means go rent
- it and see it. Watch it from beginning to end. It's totally
- wonderful. When you see many inventive trick camera shots
- remember that Kane was made in 1939 when Orson Welles was 29 years
- old. No computers. No Video tricks. Absolutely movie-making magic.
-
- Harv
-