Citizen Kane (1941)

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Citizen Kane: Directed by Orson Welles. With Joseph Cotten, Dorothy Comingore, Agnes Moorehead, Ruth Warrick. Following the death of publishing tycoon Charles Foster Kane, reporters scramble to uncover the meaning of his final utterance; ‘Rosebud’.

“Iu0026#39;ve heard so much told about Citizen Kane and Orson Welles, so I finally decided to get the film, and find out if it really is all that itu0026#39;s cracked up to be… I must say, itu0026#39;s great. The plot is great, and the way itu0026#39;s told is amazing. The story is first summed up in a matter of minutes, about 15, to be more accurate, and then the rest of the film has characters telling the story through flashbacks and retelling. We hear just about every opinion about Charles Foster Kane, apart from his own. The story is told after his death, and we see everything important that leads up to it, and only in the very end do we understand him, only then do we fully understand who he was, and what made him so. The ending also reveals one of the very most important things in any man or woman… one thing that everyone needs and knows of. I wonu0026#39;t reveal it here, as it would almost be a crime to spoil the experience of this film to anyone. The acting is excellent; Welles himself is stellar as Kane, and his impressive appearance, along with his commanding voice, makes the character a forceful sight, nay, experience. The characters are well-written and credible. The character of Kane is probably the most well-rounded and perfectly built up Iu0026#39;ve seen in a movie, ever. The cinematography is excellent… the editing is great. I canu0026#39;t praise the angles, pans, zooms and transitions enough… it just has to be experienced. Now, for the one thing I can criticize in the film; the pacing. Itu0026#39;s only two hours long, but it feels like much, much more. There were portions of the film where it felt like it didnu0026#39;t move at all. When there werenu0026#39;t great dialog or something equally as good in the film, it dragged terribly. There were too many scenes where the dialog seemed pointless, as well, I think. It didnu0026#39;t seem to be leading to anything. However, this criticism is so minor, due to the ending more than making up for it, that I still give this film a perfect score. I canu0026#39;t do anything but agree with its placing at the top of the top #250 films of all time, here on IMDb. As Iu0026#39;m writing this, itu0026#39;s #11. Thatu0026#39;s pretty much what it deserves, in my opinion. Not higher, not lower. Not the greatest film of all time(that pretty much still belongs to The Godfather, I think… at least, I havenu0026#39;t seen a better film than that, yet), but definitely far up there. I recommend this to any fan of film in general, and anyone who thinks they can understand it; it has a truly profound point that any man(and woman) should know of(preferably through seeing the film for themselves). Donu0026#39;t let the fact that itu0026#39;s old and black u0026amp; white deter you from seeing this masterpiece. A true cinematic masterpiece, in every sense of the word. 10/10”

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