Why do people love Citizen Kane?

CthulhuRlyeh

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Jegsimmons said:
2 kubrick films followed by fight club?

i'll give you kubrick who was an artist in his purist form, but whats with the love for fight club?
THAT'S the overrated movie here (not bad but not great),
but i digress, Citizen Kane is one hell of a good movie.
(my personal favorite movie is to Kill A Mocking Bird, if anyone cares.)
Not trying to be "that guy", but how many times have you seen Fight Club? I shared the same opinion about it the first time I watched it, but fell in love with it the second time. It is currently in my Top 5. Danny Boyle and David Fincher are truly modern masters of film.
 

xdiesp

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Because they desperately need roots for US cinema which aren't just cheap westerns and vaudeville.
 

oliveira8

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Mr Somewhere said:
Also, Orson Welles a "meh" actor... for shame, for shame...
Don't be so gloomy. After all it's not that awful. Like the fella says, in Italy for 30 years under the Borgias they had warfare, terror, murder, and bloodshed, but they produced Michelangelo, Leonardo da Vinci, and the Renaissance. In Switzerland they had brotherly love - they had 500 years of democracy and peace, and what did that produce? The cuckoo clock. So long Holly.

Not even some sort of hybrid between Robert DeNiro and Daniel Day Lewis, could deliver those lines like Orson Welles. The man's acting, just like his directing, is unique and something to behold.
 

LiquidGrape

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Lateinos said:
LiquidGrape said:
Fritz Lang's M was filmed nearly a decade earlier, and I would argue it is a far more humane and resonant film than Kane.
I felt the opposite. M seemed to lack any means of making the audience care. The lack of characterization to anyone really was to the point that the people barely registered as being human to me. This, obviously, is a problem when you're trying to build tension with a serial killer. That seemed to be a serious problem with it to me.
But don't you think that apparent lack of audience involvement was subverted in the final scenes, where...

...the child killer is put on trial by the assembled criminal underworld, effectively rendering the viewer complicit in an ironic and inherently immoral condemnation of the character? In a lesser film, the child killer would have been portrayed as a soulless monster, but that is not the case in "M". Beckert is strangely the single most fleshed-out character.
 

Mr Somewhere

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oliveira8 said:
Mr Somewhere said:
Also, Orson Welles a "meh" actor... for shame, for shame...
Don't be so gloomy. After all it's not that awful. Like the fella says, in Italy for 30 years under the Borgias they had warfare, terror, murder, and bloodshed, but they produced Michelangelo, Leonardo da Vinci, and the Renaissance. In Switzerland they had brotherly love - they had 500 years of democracy and peace, and what did that produce? The cuckoo clock. So long Holly.

Not even some sort of hybrid between Robert DeNiro and Daniel Day Lewis, could deliver those lines like Orson Welles. The man's acting, just like his directing, is unique and something to behold.
The Third Man was also my first exposure to Orson Welles, still one of my very favourite films.
 

FunKing

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Croix Sinistre said:
You we're born in the wrong time frame. Citizen Kane was and in legacy is a great movie in many ways, but to today's audience it's just some old movie.

It's akin to growing up with a PS2 and wondering why everyone gives DOOM so much credit, its graphics are shit, the music is bland and its not scary in the least, but when it came out it was groundbreaking, scary and controversially gory.
that i believe is an excellent point/argument w/ a lot of posts i read of the same nature.....ive noticed there is a large "younger" crowd on this site (and no there's nothing wrong w/ that in the slightest)

as you pointed out w/ the ps2 thing.........Kings Quest, Space Quest, Police Quest (and i mean the origional ones not the revamps)for my tandy 1000 ex we're ground breaking and awsome for their time, and you just cant let that go.....i would watch old western movies w/ my dad back in the day, and yes while i was entertained and grew to like them, they didnt hold the same flame for me as they did my dad.........and for the record.....i miss txt adventures like Zork
 

Lukeje

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SmashLovesTitanQuest said:
Lukeje said:
SmashLovesTitanQuest said:
Lukeje said:
Clockwork Orange are regarded as Kubrick's worst works..


What the fuck are you talking about? Clockwork Orange? Considered one of his worst works?

What is this I dont even... How... I... Just... Let me quote a great movie because I cant find my own words for this. What in gods name are you blabbering about? Thats not just wrong, its so false it mindfucked me to the point where... What critics, or whatever, are you thinking of, when you state that CLOCKWORK ORANGE is considered one of his worst movies?
That was unnecessarily bileful.

Here's an example:
http://rogerebert.suntimes.com/apps/pbcs.dll/article?AID=/19720211/REVIEWS/202110301/1023

There's also the fact that with Kubrick such things are relative; a quick check on e.g. rottentomatoes.com shows that it has only 91 % as compared to most of Kubrick's works (which have > 96 %). This of course excludes EWS and Barry Lyndon in the `most'.
I realize that this sounds stupid coming out of my mouth, but that is a bad review. I am well aware that Roger Ebert knows more about films than I ever will. And I am also aware that people would always take his word over mine when it comes to movies, and they would be right in doing so. But that review read like something I would have expected to find on the user reviews section of this very forum, posted by some smug bastard who probably walks around with his nose so high you would think someone smeared shit on his upper lip.

Its one of those rare times a reviewer didnt miss the point of a movie, but went looking for one when he shouldnt have, pulled one out of his ass because he couldnt find one that would justify his stance on the movie, published it and waited for everyone to eat it up.

Maybe the movies rating is so low because there are so many douchebag reviewers out there.
You're probably right; it's telling that wikipedia cited only two bad reviews as evidence of controversy between reviewers: that one, and one that was more overt about a feeling that the film was `morally depraved'. This is why I added an amendment to my original post after such was pointed out by a poster above.

About the bile thing: I want to clarify im not trying to pick a fight (read: trolling) or anything, but seriously, deal with it. Some people have a harsh tone and you are more than likely to run into a lot of people like that on an internet forum. I dont really understand how you could have over 4000 posts and think my post is above average on the bile factor.
It is above average[footnote]At least in a modal average (which avoids having to provide exact numerical weights to amount of bile) when you consider that the vast majority of posts are inoffensive.[/footnote], but I appreciate that you were civil in this exchange.
 

Locko96

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At the time, it was virtually flawless production-wise. It really just became the benchmark for making movies, even to this day.
 

Serge A. Storms

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GrimTuesday said:
I don't understand how you could even say that Citizen Kane is overrated. As others have mentioned, it pioneered many of the cinematography techniques that we think of as normal, every day effects and are completely overlooked. Not only that, but another thing people don't seem to like about it is there isn't any action, suspense, or even any real romance. This is a result of the movies that we see today that has to have at least one of those things in it. Citizen Kane is a story about a man and his life, his rise to power, and how it ultimately drove him to become a cold uncaring, bitter old man who died alone. If one can't appreciate the tragedy in that, they shouldn't be watching anything more complex than Power Rangers.
I'm glad and not a little bit relieved that someone said it. With the lack of great modern tragedies in recent mainstream movies (the best fucking movies these days seem to be whatever Pixar releases that doesn't involve talking cars), it's easy to call Kane an old movie that doesn't live up to its billing if one has never seen or been exposed to tragedy before, but it's probably a better excuse to figure out what all those writers were raving about the last couple millennia than to write off a classic tragedy as a movie who's critical appeal you "don't get."

EDIT: Also, referring to a conversation in the thread, I think Kubrick improved on the book with A Clockwork Orange. It didn't need the last chapter and the movie made more sense without it.
 

Pontus Hashis

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The_root_of_all_evil said:
Pontus Hashis said:
I can say without any doubt that Eyes wide shut,A clockwork orange or even Fight Club is better by far!
Eyes Wide Shut('99): 77% - Ugh. Based on a novella.
Clockwork Orange('71): 91% - Major diversion from the book. (Two Kubrick films?)
Fight Club('99): 81% - Interesting twist but has been used often. Also diversion from the original book.

All three of your films are adaptations that didn't follow the plot of the original.

Citizen Kane('41): 100%. No-one, repeat NO-ONE, of the film critic studios gave it less than a stellar review. (Bergman famously called it boring, but his view on things is..interesting)

Kane works on many, many levels - with the music, storytelling, acting, choreography all working to produce a film that has more in common with opera than simple storytelling.

You can call it boring (Kubrick's 2001 often gets that, as does Dune), but it doesn't rely on sexual "deviance" to divert from the main plot (All three of your choices).

You may not agree it is brilliant, but it's built from layers that even Kubrick didn't quite manage. Also it has that timeless quality (like other greats) that allow Charles Foster Kane to appear as Randolf Hearst in the 40's, or Rupert Murdoch in the 10's.
I knew CO and FC were based on books, but not EWS... Good to know =D
Anyways, I don't think it's a bad thing when something gets addapted. Wasn't Hitchikers guide to the galaxy a radio-drama at first?
 

Pontus Hashis

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Jegsimmons said:
2 kubrick films followed by fight club?

i'll give you kubrick who was an artist in his purist form, but whats with the love for fight club?
THAT'S the overrated movie here (not bad but not great),
but i digress, Citizen Kane is one hell of a good movie.
(my personal favorite movie is to Kill A Mocking Bird, if anyone cares.)
Is it as good as the book?
 
Feb 13, 2008
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Lateinos said:
That said, when a movie adds something for seemingly no reason, it can be a bit disconcerting, but I try to give it a chance, even then. (Clockwork Orange does this apparently, although I've never read the book.)
Clockwork Orange misses something vital out though. Alex repents in the end. He rejoins society.

The film makes him succumb to his darker desires. That totally alters the entire story.

Fight Club also makes Tyler accept his alter-ego rather than struggle with it.

Eyes Wide Shut? Acceptance rather than struggle. That's indicative of the film audience rather than the basis of the books.

Citizen Kane? Struggle right to the end.

It's a better film, imho, because it doesn't take the comforting "heroic" way out. Charles Kane suffers due to his excesses, rather than revels in them - like Alex, Tyler or Bill Harford.

The Picture of Dorian Gray wouldn't be the masterpiece it is without Dorian's decline into madness. Same with Frankenstein, Gone with the Wind, Bladerunner, 2001,Dr Jekkyl and Mr Hyde...
 

Pontus Hashis

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Lukeje said:
You guessed the plot twist? That doesn't really make any sense.

As regards your other suggestions for best movie, they seem flawed. I can't testify to Fight Club, having not seen it, but Eyes Wide Shut and A Clockwork Orange are regarded as Kubrick's worst works...

Long story short, is this an attempt at trolling? I found the movie fresh and original even though I watched it 60-odd years after it was filmed...

Edit: apparently A Clockwork Orange is considered on a par with the rest of Kubrick's good works. Who knew?
I'm not trolling, guess I just had to high hopes... And EWS is a great experience.
Also, didn't mean they were best movies ever (That would be MP: Holy Grail) , just top of my head best movies I've seen.
 
Feb 13, 2008
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Pontus Hashis said:
Anyways, I don't think it's a bad thing when something gets addapted.
It's not always a bad thing, but the original message is usually lost. That can turn it into a vanity project.
Wasn't Hitchikers guide to the galaxy a radio-drama at first?
God, H2G2 was originally part 3 of "Ways the World Ended" (I think), then it grew into the radio play, then the stage play, then the novels, then the TV series, then the computer game, then the extra novels, then the extra radio, then the film, then the final novel...I think.

There is a theory which states that if ever anyone discovers exactly what the Universe is for and why it is here, it will instantly disappear and be replaced by something even more bizarre and inexplicable.
There is another theory which states that this has already happened.


And WOE betide you say that one version is better than the others - mainly because Douglas Adams didn't even agree on which was the best.

But, if we're talking Adams, the BBC's version of Dirk Gently was bloody awful - which goes back to my original point - don't try and re-write what the author's sweated blood over.
 

DanielDeFig

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I'm not sure if OP is also in Sweden, baecause it might explain why I also just saw Citizen Kane with my Grandmother (I semi-watched while playing Hitman: Blood Money on my laptop).

The main problem I have with the movie being called "the best movie ever" as it was presented here on Swedish state television, is that it's NOT timeless or universal. I found it to be heavily american, with dated ethics and rationale (Attitude towards women, non-whites, poor/uneducated) Along with a very unlikable central character.

I get that it is very well filmed. The atmosphere and cinematigraphy is something that we unfortunatley don't see much more of today (Am I the only one who hates the current trend of shaky close-ups of actors faces during fights?). I get the point of the story that tells about the life of a man from the outside, post-mortem. It would have been great if I hadn't seen similar things done better (Probably inspired by this movie), and if the character they centered on was actually likeable or even interesting.

Like several ppl on this thread have said: it was groundbreaking at the time, and very well filmed. Unfortunatley the story is NOT timeless nor universal, which, as far as I'm concerned, makes it impossible to even nominate it as a candidate for "best movie ever". But it is clear throughout this thread that I'm not the only one who thinks that this movie has lost it's relevance and "greatness" as time has moved on.

Also, like the OP I got the "Rosebud" thing before they revealed it at the end. The "complex" character of Kane was summed easily by my grandmother and me: "A boy torn away too early from his mother, the only one who showed him love, was always searching for that love from someone, anyone, throughout his life."

Eh, if you want a good character-driven movie, that will affect you deeply both emotionally and psychologically, then watch Rainman. I have been unable to watch it again, but I don't think I will ever forget it (unlike Citizen Kane).
 
Apr 24, 2008
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I loved Citizen Kane within the first few minutes, the music that was written for it stirs something up inside me.

The character of Kane is far more complex than what I'd been used to from watching modern Hollywood films. He's very witty, and the odd combination of forceful but guarded...perhaps hiding behind humour. I kinda liked the character, but I didn't feel like I ever got to know him or what made him tick, I get the feeling that the other characters in the film didn't really have deep relationships with him either, his relationships with women seeming particularly baseless.

I dunno...it was completely engrossing though.
 

Pyramid Head

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Think of it as letting someone who has only played Wolfenstein his entire life play Condemned: Criminal Origins. The sheer jump in quality when compared to it's predecessors was what made Citizen Kane so famous. Yes it's nostalgia got stale by the 90s when better cinematography and scripts were available, but if you hold it against the other movies of it's time it earns it's praise.
...mostly. It certainly doesn't belong at the top position of AFI's Top 100 Films List.