Javascript must be enabled to continue!
Orson Welles ’s Citizen Kane
View through CrossRef
Abstract
Citizen Kane is arguably the most admired and significant film since the advent of talking pictures. No other film is quite so interesting from both artistic and political points of view. To study it even briefly is to learn a great deal about American history, motion-picture style, and the literary aspects of motion-picture scripts. Rather than a sterile display of critical methodologies, James Naremore has gathered a set of essays that represent the essential writings on the film. It gives the reader a lively set of critical interpretations, together with the necessary production information, historical background, and technical understanding to comprehend the film's larger cultural significance. Selections range from the anecdotal —Peter Bogdanovich’s interview with Orson Welles—to the critical, with discussions on the scripts and sound track, and a discussion of what accounts for the film’s enduring popularity. Contributors include James Naremore, Peter Bogdanovich, Jonathan Rosenbaum, Robert L. Carringer, François Thomas, Michael Denning, Laura Mulvey, Peter Wollen, and Paul Arthur.
Oxford University PressNew York, NY
Title: Orson Welles ’s Citizen Kane
Description:
Abstract
Citizen Kane is arguably the most admired and significant film since the advent of talking pictures.
No other film is quite so interesting from both artistic and political points of view.
To study it even briefly is to learn a great deal about American history, motion-picture style, and the literary aspects of motion-picture scripts.
Rather than a sterile display of critical methodologies, James Naremore has gathered a set of essays that represent the essential writings on the film.
It gives the reader a lively set of critical interpretations, together with the necessary production information, historical background, and technical understanding to comprehend the film's larger cultural significance.
Selections range from the anecdotal —Peter Bogdanovich’s interview with Orson Welles—to the critical, with discussions on the scripts and sound track, and a discussion of what accounts for the film’s enduring popularity.
Contributors include James Naremore, Peter Bogdanovich, Jonathan Rosenbaum, Robert L.
Carringer, François Thomas, Michael Denning, Laura Mulvey, Peter Wollen, and Paul Arthur.
Related Results
Orson Welles' Artwork
Orson Welles' Artwork
Titan Books, Welles, orson, 1915-1985, 2019, Titan Books Limited...
Touch of Evil
Touch of Evil
Orson Welles' classic 1958 noir movie Touch of Evil, the story of a corrupt police chief in a small town on the Mexican-American border, starring Charlton Heston, Janet Leigh and M...
Van Dyke Parks' Song Cycle
Van Dyke Parks' Song Cycle
Posing more riddles than the average sphinx, with its decipherable answers pointing somewhere dark, Song Cycle was anything but passive. I had already witnessed hippie bands playin...
Memoirs of Hans Hendrik, the Arctic Traveller, Serving under Kane, Hayes, Hall and Nares, 1853–1876
Memoirs of Hans Hendrik, the Arctic Traveller, Serving under Kane, Hayes, Hall and Nares, 1853–1876
First published in 1878, this English translation of the memoirs of Hans Hendrik (c.1834–89), a native Greenlander, provides a valuable alternative perspective on polar exploration...
The Heart of Long-Term Care
The Heart of Long-Term Care
Abstract
Long-term care in the United States has taken the nursing home as its benchmark, but the monetary, social, and psychological costs of nursing home care are ...

