Many consider Citizen Kane the greatest movie ever made. Here are six video essays to help you learn more about Orson Welles’ masterpiece.
In my last video essay round-up, I wrote about five essays that deal with Alfred Hitchcock’s masterpiece, Vertigo, the film that topped the 2012 Sight & Sound poll of the greatest movies of all time. For my next guide, it seems only fitting to examine the film that sits at number two on that poll after topping it for fifty years, Orson Welles’ debut feature, Citizen Kane.
I saw Welles’ 1941 film for the first time last fall. As I walked into the screening, I had no idea what to expect. How can something with such a reputation live up to the hype? Well, it did. I was, simply, blown away. I’m sure I’m not the first person to notice or say this, but it’s one of those films that just sits in the back of your minds for days and days. If you’re like me and looking for help as you navigate the thoughts that permeate the mind post-Kane, here are six video essays you should watch.
Orson Welles: Who Is This Man?
A good question, and the title of a recently published video essay by Luís Azevedo. In this piece, Azevedo explores the “shape-shifting roles of Orson Welles.” Though Citizen Kane was Welles’ debut film (he was the director, producer, co-screenwriter, and lead actor), he had a towering reputation as a stage and radio actor. This is, in part, why RKO took a chance on Welles and gave him the money to make the film, thus beginning one of the great acting careers in the history of Hollywood. This essay takes a look at Welles’ roles from Citizen Kane on.
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