Martin Scorsese On CITIZEN KANE

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  • Опубликовано: 7 сен 2010
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    Martin Scorsese talks about Orson Welles and CITIZEN KANE.
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Комментарии • 393

  • @bscottb8
    @bscottb8 11 лет назад +1188

    Scorsese always sounds like a 33 1/3 RPM record played at 45.

    • @seanmercer2057
      @seanmercer2057 4 года назад +10

      Possible that it's been sped up

    • @ferociousgumby
      @ferociousgumby 3 года назад +22

      @@seanmercer2057 Oh no! He always sounds that way. Compare a few other interviews. It's hard to keep up.

    • @kenkunta4879
      @kenkunta4879 3 года назад +9

      “Cocaine’s a hell of a drug” - Rick James

    • @guyincognito5706
      @guyincognito5706 3 года назад +9

      bscottb8 Play the video back at 0.75x speed and it almost sounds normal. But I love Scorsese’s mile-a-minute speech pattern. He’s a wealth of film knowledge and expertise.

    • @renhig7743
      @renhig7743 2 года назад +3

      LMAO

  • @derfanddarf1
    @derfanddarf1 6 лет назад +1069

    I just love how excited and passionate Martin Scorsese is when talking about movies.

    • @cezar211091
      @cezar211091 5 лет назад +29

      His enthusiasm is contagious

    • @avataraang7760
      @avataraang7760 4 года назад +15

      was just thinking about this! crazy how beautiful people look and sound when they're talking about the things that they love

    • @michaelotis223
      @michaelotis223 3 года назад +1

      It's his hearty laugh that gets me!

    • @alfonsogayman9699
      @alfonsogayman9699 3 года назад +6

      @Papwithanhatchet he is a film encyclopedia. He’s literally seen every film since 1920. And can speak abt them all

    • @shafi2718
      @shafi2718 2 года назад +2

      Scorsese is literally me

  • @99Filmo
    @99Filmo 11 лет назад +564

    I love the fact that Martin Scorsese is more willing to talk about the films of others than his own films. My tied favourite director!

    • @altunuzwwiiraidreplaysrobl4129
      @altunuzwwiiraidreplaysrobl4129 4 года назад +8

      Which one is first

    • @cha5
      @cha5 4 года назад +16

      @Cyberdemon Mike Meh, One of the inspirations for Welles's Citizen Kane was comics, especially Will Eisner's The Spirit
      and Milt Caniff's Terry and the Pirates among others of that era, so for me Scorsese's opinion on the mcu is kind of irrelevant there.
      He's still one of my favorite director's regardless.

    • @dbceltics11
      @dbceltics11 4 года назад +105

      @Cyberdemon Mike He has a hell of a valid point. There is a viable difference between dramatic films like Citizen Kane and summer blockbusters like The Avengers. He didn't say you shouldn't watch comic book movies if that's what you fancy, he just noted the vast variance in artistic integrity and depth between the two. CGI comic book movies are clearly the fast food of the art form. Your palette is your palette. Ingest what you want, but don't convince yourself that consuming a Royale with Cheese gives you aristocratic taste.

    • @Meesterlijker
      @Meesterlijker 3 года назад +4

      @@dbceltics11 underrated comment 👌

    • @tillerman7272
      @tillerman7272 3 года назад +1

      is that noodles in ur profile pic/

  • @HoovyTube
    @HoovyTube 3 года назад +248

    Passionate. Yet, quiet and reserved. His words are music for my soul.

  • @garrison968
    @garrison968 11 лет назад +32

    One of the greatest scenes in cinema is the one of Kane's mother looking through the window at Charlie playing in the snow with that incredibly sad look on her face all in deep focus so you see Charlie, her and the room behind her and the husband coming in.
    I think this is what he means by the self conscious camera. Most American films had a shallow focus around that time. Like Capra.

  • @danielmcdermott138
    @danielmcdermott138 10 лет назад +295

    Wow Martin Scorcese is just such a nice, humble man. Yet he's made some of the greatest pictures in cinematic history (taxi driver, raging bull, goodfellas etc). It's really interesting to see him talk about THE greatest picture in cinematic history. R.I.P Orson Welles and thank you for the great films you left behind (citizen kane, the third man, touch of evil)

    • @themarinect
      @themarinect 6 лет назад +7

      Coppola is an one hit wonder. Scorsese is a much better director. He's very consistent.

    • @ewanmcfadyen
      @ewanmcfadyen 6 лет назад +29

      He's an at-least-4-hit wonder. All his films in the 70s are great, three of which stake a claim as the best film of the decade.
      Dipped in the 80s and 90s, came back to excellent form in 2009 with Tetro, and who knows, maybe he'll make one more before he retires.

    • @frogface66
      @frogface66 4 года назад +5

      Orsen only acted in the 3rd man.

    • @KungaMatata
      @KungaMatata 4 года назад +3

      Khang Ho Besides his four masterpieces in the 70s, The Outsiders, Rumble Fish, Dracula and The Rainmaker are really good. I think he lost his mind while making Apocalypse Now, that’s why the decline in quality afterwards.

    • @louishernandez2684
      @louishernandez2684 3 года назад

      @@KungaMatata You're beyond ignorant. That movie is widely considered a classic

  • @smichelle65
    @smichelle65 13 лет назад +65

    It's funny: Scorsese talking about realizing (appreciating), for the first time, what a director does after watching "Citizen Kane" on television--the same thing happened to me the first time I saw "Taxi Driver".

    • @randywhite3947
      @randywhite3947 4 года назад +2

      Me as well with both Taxi Driver and Raging Bull

  • @sitizenkanemusic
    @sitizenkanemusic 11 лет назад +39

    Scorcese, my favorite director, is a true master of the use of camera positioning, camera angles, fadeouts (fades in general), timed focusing, and all-around camera movements. That's only one of the many things he has mastered.

  • @halloweenfriday
    @halloweenfriday 9 лет назад +472

    I first watched Citizen Kane in film class, but I fell asleep. I watched it again and it's a pretty damn good movie.

    • @holygoalie3
      @holygoalie3 7 лет назад +15

      I like this comment

    • @mangotheif
      @mangotheif 6 лет назад +11

      Connor Morley I FELL ASLEEP TOO

    • @JustinAcevedoFilm
      @JustinAcevedoFilm 5 лет назад +4

      Lol same exact thing for me

    • @davidgray2805
      @davidgray2805 5 лет назад +16

      Its a bit better then damn good

    • @williamdamon77
      @williamdamon77 5 лет назад +1

      I couldn’t take my eyes off it just brilliant !!

  • @emperornortoni2871
    @emperornortoni2871 5 лет назад +185

    I can't imagine how fast he talked back in the day when he was coked up.

    • @timonsteup2877
      @timonsteup2877 3 года назад +16

      He talked slower before. But the coke has left a permanent damage and he can't go back now. Lol.

    • @LampwicksCigar
      @LampwicksCigar 3 года назад +12

      WHATA.44MAGNUMDOTOAWOMAN’SPUSSYTHATYOUSHOULDSEE!!!

    • @virambharvad8059
      @virambharvad8059 3 года назад

      @@timonsteup2877 What coke??

    • @carlosmontoya6894
      @carlosmontoya6894 3 года назад

      Watch him at The Dick Cavett Show, you´ll see

    • @trauma4465
      @trauma4465 3 года назад +3

      He admitted was coked up in his scene in the film “Taxi Driver” where he talks about killing his unfaithful wife.

  • @Fantod69
    @Fantod69 8 лет назад +265

    I think Scorsese is right, Kane is an enigma, in many ways. But, for the ending to work, Kane had to be an enigma. If you had gotten to know him on a deep emotional level throughout the film, the ending would have been anti-climatic. Kane is supposed to be emotionally stilted and full of ego. But, you do feel for him, at the same time: that's why he goes about "standing up for the working man" when he takes over the Enquirer-it's an effort to connect with people, even though he doesn't know how to on a sincere level. You also see his softer side on the night he meets Susan Alexander...the joking, and hand puppets. You see that he gets real joy out of making her feel better. It's the happiest we ever see Kane. The real tragedy of Kane is that he really isn't a bad man, in fact he wants to do good a lot of the time. He just ends up stumbling, because he's ill-equipped to handle complex emotions. It's a brilliant maneuver: to be able to have the audience feel that Kane is a first-class jerk...and yet we feel bad for him when he continues to be abandoned by his friends and family.

    • @usulsk
      @usulsk 5 лет назад +25

      Ok, its a two years old comment, but: I would argue that the happiest we ever see Kane is his childhood. Which is the whole point of "Rosebud".

    • @davidhenry8879
      @davidhenry8879 5 лет назад

      Fantod69 r

    • @jonathanblaze1648
      @jonathanblaze1648 4 года назад +10

      Perhaps Kane was like that due to the 'happiest' time for him being a child with his parents, and they were taken away from him. So throughout life he was subconsciously incapable of getting emotionally close to people, because they will be taken away. And he didn't want to deal with that pain.

    • @Blaqjaqshellaq
      @Blaqjaqshellaq 4 года назад +4

      Director Orson Welles understood, more clearly than screenwriter Herman Mankiewicz, that the meaning of "Rosebud" is just a McGuffin. (I think Welles wrote the speech where the butler dismissed its importance.)

    • @zingzangspillip1
      @zingzangspillip1 3 года назад

      @@Blaqjaqshellaq I think it's possible that Rosebud really does refer to the happiness of his childhood, but also that that carries no importance. After all, there is nothing in that that can carry any meaning to anyone other than Kane himself.

  • @dlphcoracl9645
    @dlphcoracl9645 8 месяцев назад +8

    What truly makes Citizen Kane one of the greatest films of all time is the cinematography of Gregg Toland. He does things with the camera that had never been done before. His use of depth of field, lighting, shadows, unusual camera angles, painfully close close-ups, etc., truly set this film apart. If you watch this film, completely ignore the acting and the plot, and focus solely on the camera, each scene and each still is a visual work of art.

    • @ramonmaximiliano3557
      @ramonmaximiliano3557 5 месяцев назад

      Cinematography is only one of the things in that movie, Orson Wells acting is superb, sometimes re watching it, I almost can't believe he assisted with the script, he directed, acted on it, it's just too much talent in one person, and he was just 25. Also the script and the work in each of the characters, the way the scenes were written, it's my all time favorite cinematography, but the movie is not only that, Lawrence of Arabia has an astonishing cinematography, each shot could be a painting on the wall, but still Citizen Kane is a better movie, and the reason is that all the rest in Citizen Kane is equally high level, it is cliche kind of... but I truly consider Citizen Kane the best movie ever made, and I don't think so soon there will be any other that will surpass that.

  • @ingvarhallstrom2306
    @ingvarhallstrom2306 Год назад +4

    That man has such a beautiful smile.

  • @smackdaddy9802
    @smackdaddy9802 2 года назад +9

    There needs to be a 10 hour film of Scorcese analyzing the best films.

  • @omirosv
    @omirosv 13 лет назад +12

    This is the first time I see and hear Scorsese speak and I just love the tone of his voice and his mannerisms. Even from sitting across the room you could tell this person is interesting.

  • @0Imtheslime0
    @0Imtheslime0 3 года назад +29

    Citizen Kane is unique. Crazy to think that it was Welles directors debut and he just wanted to make a movie out of sheer ignorance.

  • @lukegraham304
    @lukegraham304 11 лет назад +21

    Citizen Kane is my favorite movie

    • @guy2642
      @guy2642 3 года назад +2

      @Felipe Gomes lol Felipe

    • @albums8825
      @albums8825 3 года назад +4

      @Felipe Gomes it isn't overrated just because you couldn't keep up with it.

  • @Corvus887
    @Corvus887 14 лет назад +4

    I think the reason Citizen Kane is so great is because no one can really put their finger on what is so good about it, but it is truly amazing.

  • @aidanoriordan2142
    @aidanoriordan2142 6 лет назад +4

    who saw citizen Kane when they were 12 years old and instantly new it was something magical .because I did .it was so good I bought the DVD off Amazon then

  • @lexielexielexie09
    @lexielexielexie09 14 лет назад +4

    I love seeing other actors and actresses and directors talking about classics when they really know what they are talking about. Its great to hear their interpretation and comments on it all. It really helps me see new perspectives as well. Ahh its just wonderful!

  • @CreedHouse
    @CreedHouse 14 лет назад +10

    OMG!!!! one of the best directors talking about one of the best movie ever made

  • @harrisonraybuck9510
    @harrisonraybuck9510 Год назад +4

    Has it ever occurred to anyone that Scorsese might be in some ways be the Steve Wozniak of cinema? His genius combined with the passionate way he talks?

    • @stepha5926
      @stepha5926 9 месяцев назад +2

      Yeah. And I'd say that'd make Tarantino Jobs - a thief (whose entire career is based upon stolen ideas - many from Scorsese) hailed by many as a genius.

    • @blakefieldmalcolm5638
      @blakefieldmalcolm5638 2 месяца назад

      Wow. Both Harrison and Stepha. What an amazing take

  • @maxdixon232
    @maxdixon232 3 года назад +2

    cant get enough of his mouth sounds

  • @WalterLiddy
    @WalterLiddy 12 лет назад +1

    Of all the directors speaking about Kane, this is by far the most clear and correct perspective offered. Scorcese understands cinema better than anyone else imo.

  • @HugAcreeper12
    @HugAcreeper12 11 лет назад +8

    Martin Scorsese one of my favourites ever!

  • @rockchickstar
    @rockchickstar 12 лет назад +1

    you have no idea how much i love this guy!!!

  • @ferabra8939
    @ferabra8939 3 года назад +10

    Don't ever try to get Citizen Kane the first time you see it...You will never think "wow, this is the best movie I've ever watched". After seeing it 30 times, and hundreds of other movies from every decade, you'll begin to get it. See, it would take a time travel to 1941 and erasing your brain from all you've watched to actually be able to get how advaced the movie is watching it the first time.

  • @popazo8556
    @popazo8556 3 года назад

    The thing at the end about feeling for Welles but notfor Kane is sooo on point

  • @abhaythegodfather
    @abhaythegodfather 3 года назад +3

    Scorsese never seemed so enthusiastic while talking about his own films! But here you see a child like excitement in him!

  • @chrisjames4297
    @chrisjames4297 3 года назад +20

    0.75 speed is just perfect for Mr Scorsese - in his coke days, 0.5 or less

    • @sreekarkarakala2378
      @sreekarkarakala2378 3 года назад +2

      In his coke days..I like this line.

    • @tillerman7272
      @tillerman7272 3 года назад

      @@sreekarkarakala2378 "This LINE"? XD

    • @prisma6799
      @prisma6799 3 года назад

      @@sreekarkarakala2378 you are the king of comedy

    • @endymionas8240
      @endymionas8240 3 года назад +1

      I tried it. You are absolutely right

    • @tillerman7272
      @tillerman7272 3 года назад

      @@endymionas8240 you mean you tried the coke or changing the speed

  • @ferociousgumby
    @ferociousgumby 3 года назад +2

    Now I want to hear an hour of him talking about Citizen Kane. I see some Welles in Scorsese's work, particularly how his movies are morality tales that force us to "look": at the corruption of the characters, but also at the darkness in our own hearts.

  • @92jwiener
    @92jwiener 4 года назад +3

    I just learned and can't believe that this movie premiered when Welles was 25, nearly 26. Wow.

  • @dlphcoracl9645
    @dlphcoracl9645 8 месяцев назад

    Listening to Martin Scorcese analyze another great film is a master class in itself.

  • @HughMorristheJoker
    @HughMorristheJoker 4 года назад +12

    Orson Welles was one of the most brilliant humans to have lived since Schopenhauer.

  • @GarenGarson
    @GarenGarson 10 лет назад +42

    Forgot to say that I have seen Kane so many times I've lost count. My take is that it is and will forever remain an enigma. That is to say we all know that it is a masterpiece but nobody has come up with a really good reason as to WHY it is. It is one of the riddles in life. We watch it over and over like we watch sunsets. And it's not the beauty of the sunset that keeps us coming back. It is something more universal, something that we know we within all of us, something waiting for us in eternity. Garen

    • @zallesproductions
      @zallesproductions 9 лет назад +12

      Scorsese says Kane was "picking up where silent films left off". This is the key. Kane renewed the drive to innovate in the cinema.

  • @65g4
    @65g4 10 лет назад +4

    ive never seen Citizen Kane on tv ive only seen it on dvd the first time i rented it then i bought it and ive watched 3 more times since

  • @zidanecristianoaveiro
    @zidanecristianoaveiro 4 года назад +1

    a masterpiece

  • @TheGrant59
    @TheGrant59 3 года назад

    My favorite director

  • @joaotarrafa4523
    @joaotarrafa4523 4 года назад +2

    When I see Scorsese's interview, I always have to check if I accidentally set the video to 1.25x speed

  • @mkpatel3137
    @mkpatel3137 3 года назад +1

    If you watch it in 0.75x, it'll be more comfortable

    • @stepha5926
      @stepha5926 9 месяцев назад +1

      Or 0.25x for Tarantino.

  • @felixwatkins958
    @felixwatkins958 2 года назад

    A great director on another great director.

  • @kingcaesar5
    @kingcaesar5 14 лет назад

    @Corvus887 it greatness lies in how Welles was able to incorporate techniques from the early masters like Ford, Renoir, Land etc. and blend them harmoniously.
    Kane is sort of a textbook for filmmaking.

  • @telecine
    @telecine 3 года назад +2

    Se Martinho falou, tá falado! 👏

  • @MrHenridaniel
    @MrHenridaniel 8 лет назад

    its I foundation to the modern cinema.
    i think everyone has there own rosebud. and this movie is so amazing that it could reveal something so personal with out revealing to much.

  • @continentalgin
    @continentalgin Год назад +1

    Very insightful. In the top five greatest American films is... Raging Bull. Every shot, every scene is great. I think Marty learned that from KANE.

  • @peggyh4805
    @peggyh4805 4 года назад +5

    There is always a moment or two when I’m watching a movie that I feel the movie is dragging along or boring. 1 exception is Goodfellas. Never a dull moment. It has all my attention every time I watch it which I have many times. It is a masterpiece, Mr. Scorsese. Thank you. 🇺🇸🇺🇸🇺🇸

  • @robbieardura
    @robbieardura 11 лет назад

    Wow! He saw it on television! I wish tv was like that nowadays.

  • @AndyJay1985
    @AndyJay1985 8 месяцев назад

    He must have been so excited to get the legendary Bernard Hermann to score Taxi Driver.

  • @Bill-uo6cm
    @Bill-uo6cm 3 года назад

    Very smart guy.

  • @stevestarscream5182
    @stevestarscream5182 5 лет назад +1

    There is nothing special about the story
    except the controversy it caused being about Hearst... it’s the cinematography that makes this movie so special

  • @MapleSyrupPoet
    @MapleSyrupPoet 3 года назад

    Martin ...great master of film ...so intelligent ...not a movie maker ...he is a true artist, making a film ...nice man, funny :)

  • @nickellicker
    @nickellicker 13 лет назад

    @Larkinchance You are just too right.. Advertisements can get realy out of hand...

  • @williamtoad8040
    @williamtoad8040 3 года назад +1

    It’s funny Citizen Kane the story the pacing and timing of it in a lot of ways is similar to his biopic films

  • @MarkGloverMasterson
    @MarkGloverMasterson 8 лет назад +25

    Marty is always on Amphetamine even when he isn't on Amphetamine
    (although he did have his demons in the past.)

    • @zazzzy
      @zazzzy 5 лет назад

      Mark Glover Masterson seriously he’s coked out

  • @Th3NrY
    @Th3NrY 7 лет назад +10

    it's funny because at nine years old I noticed cinematography with Goodfellas

    • @Johnlindsey289
      @Johnlindsey289 6 лет назад

      Why you try to be cool Tyler? what makes Tyler "cool" and what's with his hair style which is stupid and his clothes and jailmanners?

  • @lexielexielexie09
    @lexielexielexie09 14 лет назад

    @buckshoty Ya, it seems like directors can appreciate it from a more creative perspective than critics can. Their personal experience behind the camera probably helps in a sense because they know the work and technique that was used in the film. Critics base it more on the acting and plot, rather than all of the other aspects that make a film good.

  • @oliverholmes-gunning5372
    @oliverholmes-gunning5372 3 года назад

    I seem to remember reading somewhere that Welles had no idea what he was doing on Citizen Kane, because he had only directed theatre productions before and had never worked with cameras, lights, etc. It would follow then that his deviation from the "seamless film" norm that Scorsese mentioned was a result of this.
    It's amazing how many times great art is born from a simple but fortuitous mistake...

  • @chrisallitt2113
    @chrisallitt2113 Год назад

    I can't remember but doesn't it show him as a kid playing in the snow? That shot was supposedly break through but the scene was put in just for the shot

  • @ethanmiller631
    @ethanmiller631 6 месяцев назад +2

    last time to look at me hector

  • @innovativesyd
    @innovativesyd 9 лет назад +34

    Best director hands down

  • @IsmaelGarcia-fg8ww
    @IsmaelGarcia-fg8ww 10 лет назад +18

    Kane is William Randolph Hearst
    mixed with Welles.

    • @Dane_Youssef
      @Dane_Youssef 6 лет назад +5

      Among others. Check out the other influences Welles and Mankewicz used for Kane.

    • @aadityabhattacharya
      @aadityabhattacharya 6 лет назад

      Oreon I also feel there is a little bit of hamlet in it

  • @beflygelt
    @beflygelt 8 лет назад +23

    comparing this with what Spielberg had to say about the movie just shows how much better a director Scorsese is. One of the best of all time and he's still around. Wonderful man

    • @4tCa4mzUPqRZZo
      @4tCa4mzUPqRZZo 8 лет назад +17

      +beflygelt Or Spielberg just isn't as verse in explaining his thoughts as Scorsese is about films, one should judge a director's talent on his films not his ability to talk about them.

    • @halimghani
      @halimghani 8 лет назад +17

      +slayerming1 you're right. If it is, then John Ford is the most terrible filmmaker ever. "Mr. Ford, you're alway shoot a scene with incredible composition. How do you that?" And Ford be like : "with a camera"

    • @beflygelt
      @beflygelt 8 лет назад +1

      slayerming1 ya I see that.

    • @OliverRWeber
      @OliverRWeber 7 лет назад +1

      Scorsese is a film historian, Spielberg is not! They are both amazing directors!

    • @ElPopeSmoke
      @ElPopeSmoke 7 лет назад +3

      slayerming1 well based on that also Marty is far better,what is the last good Spielberg film?

  • @taffysaur
    @taffysaur 10 лет назад +1

    What does he mean specifically when he says that the self-aware camera technique in its way picked IP from where silent film left off?

    • @filmsagainstempires1388
      @filmsagainstempires1388 9 лет назад +8

      He means that the camera movements are interesting enough that the audience is going to notice them, they aren't too subtle, so the audience will pay attention to the technique. The cinematography draws attention to itself.

  • @pardyhardly
    @pardyhardly 12 лет назад +1

    Scorsese brings up some good points about that film, but I disagree that you don't get to really know Kane. I think the film presents a pretty good psychological portrait of the character. It's all done through conjecture, which is probably why he says you don't really know him, but I think a perceptive viewer can get a pretty good idea as to what Kane's motivations are.

  • @Stratword_
    @Stratword_ Год назад

    See, Scorsese doesn't hate TV, he watched Citizen Kane on TV.

  • @hotdog7988
    @hotdog7988 6 лет назад +1

    Best movie ever made - 'The Room'.

  • @justincates2548
    @justincates2548 4 года назад

    The Passion. Redd. ⚡️💊

  • @mugilanloganathan
    @mugilanloganathan 3 года назад +1

    Anyone after Mank movie???

  • @thefierce4324
    @thefierce4324 3 года назад

    The way Scorces talks about the visible camera, it reminds me so much of fleabag.

  • @kewkabe
    @kewkabe 3 года назад +1

    Meanwhile Hitchcock called Welles' style of camera placement silly (e.g. camera in an active fireplace looking out).

  • @user-lt3bt7nj8j
    @user-lt3bt7nj8j 3 года назад

    He is definitely living 1.5 times than myself

  • @HansRoht
    @HansRoht 14 лет назад

    Citizen Kane for the win!

  • @knurdyob
    @knurdyob 11 лет назад

    Martin Scorcese has proved himself that he's a great director, he could have stopped by now, but he didn't, because making movies is what he loves, so stop saying that he is a bad director or not. Because you know, he will go but his movies will stay, so ... great director once, great director forever.

  • @richardsiciliano7117
    @richardsiciliano7117 2 года назад +1

    Scorcese brings up a good point. I always find myself "rooting" for Orson Welles, even when he's playing evil characters, as in The Third Man and The Stranger, or Charlie Kane. Charm goes a long way, and Orson had plenty.

  • @HugAcreeper12
    @HugAcreeper12 11 лет назад

    I think that the best actor is Johnny Depp based from all the movies he's been in, because he always plays such difficult and varied roles, from one movie, i'd say it was Michael Colreone in the Godfather and for one scene, it would be Marlon Brando in The Godfather, when he's crying.

  • @TheCelticTiger32
    @TheCelticTiger32 8 лет назад +20

    Oscar Issacs should play a young version of Martin in a biopic

    • @mhaecoper7298
      @mhaecoper7298 7 лет назад

      I watсhеd Citizen Kane full mоvie here twitter.com/1b0020ce81cbd60bd/status/795841908022984704 Martin Scoooorsese On CITIZEN KANE

    • @ElPopeSmoke
      @ElPopeSmoke 7 лет назад

      H.S I totally agree,I'm curious to see what he can do with other talented actors,and oscar Issac is one of them

    • @matrixano74
      @matrixano74 7 лет назад

      I watсhed Citizеn KККKaanе full movie heеere twitter.com/9bb1e0fbd3709d425/status/822768373054328833 Martin Sсorsesе Оn CIТTТIZЕN КАNЕE

    • @true9962
      @true9962 7 лет назад

      karim dido ص

  • @Warriorcats64
    @Warriorcats64 12 лет назад +1

    People will remember Hugo and The Aviator though

  • @Zatzzo
    @Zatzzo 12 лет назад

    i havent seen a good movie in my life. maybe i should try this one.

  • @MrEYTheInternational
    @MrEYTheInternational 13 лет назад

    @ThePragmo : Cinema was around decades when Kane came out, although it's true that it was ahead of its time & an anomaly. The lack of immediate success had everything to do with some RKO execs general opinion of Welles, or lack of interest in him plus Hearst's work to block distribution/ exhibition. Had Welles/Mankiewicz used a word other than "Rosebud" which (for reasons well-documented) greatly angered Hearst , perhaps WRH would've been less wrathful - Kane is also based on Welles, himself!

  • @LukeLovesRose
    @LukeLovesRose 14 лет назад

    Is he saying that the camera angles in Kane were just an extension of what Charles was feeling??
    Anyway, this was a nice interview. Marty sure knows a lot about film.

  • @anyleuniter14
    @anyleuniter14 3 года назад

    That's exactly happens when I watch Citizen kane, I can't think of Orson Wells being a anarquist

  • @Paperbag-om6mh
    @Paperbag-om6mh 3 года назад

    I had to put this in .75× playback speed

  • @LAVATORR
    @LAVATORR 3 месяца назад

    "I saw Citizen Kane on television for the first time last week.
    Pretty good, 3 1/2 out of 4 stars."

  • @jaycepero8069
    @jaycepero8069 10 месяцев назад

    Not that my opinion matters but Scorsese proved his brilliance with Hugo. He completely went against what was expected of him and made a beautiful film.

  • @gursimransachar
    @gursimransachar 7 лет назад +1

    if you also wonder if the speed is 1.5 or 2 then you're wrong my friend!!

  • @michaelynedwards1043
    @michaelynedwards1043 5 лет назад +1

    Lack of ceilings in CK gives it more cinematic depth.

  • @whitrulzes
    @whitrulzes 11 лет назад +1

    None of the films you mentioned are bad. They're all quite good and I think the departed is a really good film. I agree, I think Deniro was much more poewerful that DiCaprio. I don't know about bringing him back though. Deniro has been in some serious turkeys this past 10 years.

  • @coolbeans7296
    @coolbeans7296 3 года назад

    He lokks like a cool granpa

  • @TomKloseMusic
    @TomKloseMusic 8 месяцев назад

    For normal speed go down to 0.75

  • @kortexsirvasil
    @kortexsirvasil 13 лет назад +1

    So... I came here to view a Scorsese's view on Kane. And RUclips forces me to watch an advertisement on a wrestling videogame. Good thinking, RUclips.

  • @bartonim
    @bartonim 13 лет назад

    I know exactly what he says about the Kane character. It is of the most brilliantly conceived cinema creations. Welles was so misunderstood. Yes, he had an ego, but he knew why--he was brilliant, beyond his years, a visionary whose ideas were trampled by jealous Hollywood nobodies. At least the arrogant Walt Disney, in an ill-fated meeting with Welles to film The Little Prince, knew enough: 'This room is too small for two geniuses' Disney reportedly barked.

  • @edwardscott2498
    @edwardscott2498 3 года назад

    Sounds totally normal at .75 speed

  • @themacguffin
    @themacguffin 4 года назад

    ¡Para los hispanohablantes! Les dejo un video que hice en mi canal: 'Cuando Borges criticó a Citizen Kane... y Orson Welles le respondió'. (ruclips.net/video/5LVNtnQ92_o/видео.html) ¡Les aseguro que les resultará muy interesante! :D

  • @thechallenger9000
    @thechallenger9000 13 лет назад

    Interesting that he didn't talk about the directors influence on actors.

  • @kingcaesar5
    @kingcaesar5 14 лет назад

    @dextersmith2000 how so.... he took complicated and creative filmmaking techniques and used them in a way no one else could, creating a distinct style for himself.

  • @ramonmaximiliano3557
    @ramonmaximiliano3557 5 месяцев назад

    Orson Wells acting is superb, sometimes re watching it, I almost can't believe he assisted with the script, he directed, acted on it, it's just too much talent in one person, and he was just 25. Also the script and the work in each of the characters, the way the scenes were written, it's my all time favorite cinematography, but the movie is not only that, Lawrence of Arabia has an astonishing cinematography, each shot could be a painting on the wall, but still Citizen Kane is a better movie, and the reason is that all the rest in Citizen Kane is equally high level, it is cliche kind of... but I truly consider Citizen Kane the best movie ever made, and I don't think so soon there will be any other that will surpass that.

  • @lynnturman8157
    @lynnturman8157 11 лет назад

    I don't agree with you about Scorsese (seriously, I LOVED Shutter Island, Departed, & Aviator--didn't care so much about Gangs of New York) but I gotta admit, that's a great comeback. Mind if I use it?

  • @Matheus64888
    @Matheus64888 11 лет назад +1

    I like all these films, maybe not as great as some of his previous work, but pretty good. And you're saying a movie that hasn't even RELEASED yet is mediocre? And how the hell is it overrated, no critic has seen it yet. I mean, I understand not liking DiCaprio, but saying a movie is bad without seeing it first is extremely stupid, specially if it's from someone like Scorsese.

  • @Elizabeth-dl1cg
    @Elizabeth-dl1cg 8 лет назад +1

    0:26 letting the audience _____
    1:09 (the thing about??) _____ Kane himself
    1:40 In the beginning, when I first saw the film, and he _____
    what does the Scorsese say? He's speaking incredibly fast for me at these moments, I can't keep up!

    • @hkfilmfreak1995
      @hkfilmfreak1995 8 лет назад

      1. Letting the audience ascend.
      2. The enigma of it is Kane himself

    • @Elizabeth-dl1cg
      @Elizabeth-dl1cg 8 лет назад

      hkfilmfreak1995 Thanks man :D

    • @hkfilmfreak1995
      @hkfilmfreak1995 8 лет назад +1

      You're welcome, but rewatching this I think, I got the first one wrong. It would make sense, but it doesn't quite sound like what he said.

    • @Elizabeth-dl1cg
      @Elizabeth-dl1cg 8 лет назад +1

      hkfilmfreak1995 i think he kinda merged "ascend" and "as" in "as the camera's looking through the floor" and that made an extra syllable. It sounds okay.

  • @Xervello
    @Xervello 2 года назад +1

    Citizen Kane is no Marvel film but it's not bad.