Citizen Kane - How to Run a Newspaper Scene (3/10) | Movieclips

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  • Опубликовано: 15 сен 2024
  • Citizen Kane movie clips: j.mp/2jlHFgl
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    CLIP DESCRIPTION:
    Kane (Orson Welles) stands up to Thatcher (George Coulouris) when he tries to tell him how to run the Inquirer.
    FILM DESCRIPTION:
    Orson Welles first feature film -- which he directed, produced, and co-wrote, as well as playing the title role -- proved to be his most important and influential work, a ground-breaking drama loosely based on the life of William Randolph Hearst which is frequently cited as the finest American film ever made. Aging newspaper magnate Charles Foster Kane (Orson Welles) dies in his sprawling Florida estate after uttering a single, enigmatic final word -- "Rosebud" -- and newsreel producer Rawlston (Phil Van Zandt) sends reporter Jerry Thompson (William Alland) out with the assignment of uncovering the meaning behind the great man's dying thought. As Thompson interviews Kane's friends, family, and associates, we learn the facts of Kane's eventful and ultimately tragic life: his abandonment by his parents (Agnes Moorehead and Harry Shannon) after he becomes the heir to a silver mine; his angry conflicts with his guardian, master financier Walter Parks Thatcher (George Coulouris); his impulsive decision that "it would be fun to run a newspaper" with the help of school chum Jedediah Leland (Joseph Cotten) and loyal assistant Mr. Bernstein (Everett Sloane); his rise from scandal sheet publisher to the owner of America's largest and most influential newspaper chain; his marriage to socially prominent Emily Norton (Ruth Warrick), whose uncle is the President of the United States; Kane's ambitious bid for public office, which is dashed along with his marriage when his opponent, corrupt political boss Jim Gettys (Ray Collins), reveals that Kane is having an affair with aspiring vocalist Susan Alexander (Dorothy Comingore); Kane's vain attempts to promote second wife Alexander as an opera star; and his final, self-imposed exile to a massive and never-completed pleasure palace called Xanadu. While Citizen Kane was a film full of distinguished debuts -- along with Welles, it was the first feature for Joseph Cotten, Everett Sloane, Ray Collins, Agnes Moorehead, and Ruth Warrick -- the only Academy Award it received was for Best Original Screenplay, for which Welles shared credit with veteran screenwriter Herman Mankiewicz.
    CREDITS:
    TM & © Warner Bros. (1941)
    Cast: Joseph Cotten, Everett Sloane, George Coulouris, Orson Welles
    Director: Orson Welles
    Producers: Orson Welles, George Schaefer
    Screenwriters: Herman J. Mankiewicz, Orson Welles, Roger Q. Denny, John Houseman, Mollie Kent
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Комментарии • 250

  • @scottm8292
    @scottm8292 3 года назад +572

    "I don't know how to run a newspaper Mr Thatcher, I just try everything I can think of."
    Perfectly mirrors how Welles made this film - and it paid off.

    • @NaughtyVampireGod
      @NaughtyVampireGod 3 года назад +12

      this is true

    • @Practical-Theoretical
      @Practical-Theoretical 3 года назад +6

      For the Emperor

    • @TheWchurchill4pm
      @TheWchurchill4pm 3 года назад +6

      A lot of success is the result of trial-and-error. Some people don’t have the time or resources to do it long enough. And others just don’t have the will.

  • @Garrus1995
    @Garrus1995 4 года назад +418

    “I don’t know how to run a newspaper, Mr. Thatcher, I just try everything I can think of.” This quote alone is why I find Kane to be such a fascinating character. He doesn’t care how he’ll be judged, he doesn’t care if he’ll make a profit off of what he’s doing; he wants to try and do something so he does it without a care as to whether or not it’ll work out. I envy that kind of boldness.

    • @TheRedhenProductions
      @TheRedhenProductions 4 года назад +44

      Don't be too envious, its a lot easier to be that bold when you have a mountain of money at your disposal

    • @pannik_lucas
      @pannik_lucas 3 года назад +9

      Not only the mountain of money alone, but the fact that as he thought it would be fun to run a newspaper, he is toying with it and the people that affects

    • @TheWchurchill4pm
      @TheWchurchill4pm 3 года назад +6

      I think he understood that it doesn’t matter what people are saying about you so long as they are saying something.

    • @jungshin87
      @jungshin87 2 года назад +4

      He is, after all, an American

    • @scottstudios5430
      @scottstudios5430 Год назад +4

      Based on the way he spoke about filmmaking in interviews, that could also describe Orson Welles himself.

  • @pawelzabicki7785
    @pawelzabicki7785 4 года назад +243

    The way it was directed and acted by Orson Wells is still entrancing.

    • @issi529
      @issi529 3 года назад +4

      No, it was good for his time but it doesnt hold up anymore. Garbage movie!

    • @LichenAndMoss
      @LichenAndMoss 3 года назад +43

      @@issi529 Garbage comment.

    • @issi529
      @issi529 3 года назад +2

      @@LichenAndMoss Why? These are just facts. Most modern movies are way better, just live with it.

    • @randywhite3947
      @randywhite3947 3 года назад +19

      @@issi529 😂 your funny kid

    • @muhammadirvansyahsyahaziz7758
      @muhammadirvansyahsyahaziz7758 3 года назад +1

      @@issi529 you idiot,tell me what movie better than citizen Kane in modern days,lotr? social network? Shawshank Redemption?pulp fiction? inglourious 😂?fight club?not even close 😂

  • @gavinjones7998
    @gavinjones7998 3 года назад +239

    People focus so much on the stellar direction and novel cinematography of Kane that it's easy to overlook just how fantastic the acting is in this film. Absolutely flawless.

    • @fightingirish5755
      @fightingirish5755 Год назад +8

      Not to mention the writing which is also amazing. Great story and great execution.🤔🧐😯😏

    • @unclesloppy8518
      @unclesloppy8518 6 месяцев назад

      quite so. the sheer intensity of Orson's expression and tone of voice at 1:30 made me feel genuinely intimidated

  • @NaughtyVampireGod
    @NaughtyVampireGod 3 года назад +274

    Everything about this film feels so damn MODERN.
    And it's 80 years old!

    • @jesusnthedaisychain
      @jesusnthedaisychain 3 года назад +31

      People don't change. It's why even the oldest stories still resonate with us.

    • @NaughtyVampireGod
      @NaughtyVampireGod 3 года назад +12

      @@jesusnthedaisychain That's true but i was refering to moviemaking.

    • @pureluck8767
      @pureluck8767 3 года назад +16

      It’s because Orson Welles was a damn good actor

    • @NaughtyVampireGod
      @NaughtyVampireGod 3 года назад +11

      @@pureluck8767 yeah - thats part of it for sure - many performances from the 30s and 40s seem out of another time, but not Welles

    • @TheWchurchill4pm
      @TheWchurchill4pm 3 года назад +6

      The best storytellers understand which themes will remain relatable in every generation.

  • @bennetcatchpole
    @bennetcatchpole 2 года назад +85

    The best and most telling line of the film is when Charles addresses mr. Bernstein and says “if I hadn’t been born rich, I might have been a great man”.

    • @SheenaRea
      @SheenaRea 4 месяца назад +2

      Great line!

  • @garrison6863
    @garrison6863 5 лет назад +548

    Not one cut in the scene until the very end with the great line about sixty years. Most directors would have shot close ups of both men, and put in reaction shots of the crowd while their voices rise. But this is part of the film's originality and Welles' theater background. He knew that if you stayed with the scene it would be like the viewer is in the room.

    • @jeffpayusan
      @jeffpayusan 3 года назад +13

      Multiple shots weren't invented at the time this film was made. The use of multiple shots certainly most engages and adds more emotional elements to films. The latter was an innovation.

    • @russlh7693
      @russlh7693 3 года назад +4

      @@jeffpayusan nope

    • @mrkaycee28
      @mrkaycee28 3 года назад

      Exactly

    • @garrison6863
      @garrison6863 2 года назад +8

      @@jeffpayusan Are you serious? This was 1941.

    • @garrison6863
      @garrison6863 Год назад +3

      Please, standard Hollywood coverage was the master, mediums and close ups. Welles was using a different mise en scene. And it not only worked, it made other directors look sick.

  • @tangocash7304
    @tangocash7304 4 года назад +255

    Love the overlapping dialogue

    • @Daud-ix4tm
      @Daud-ix4tm 4 года назад +26

      @@manhidinginasewer it makes the films feel more realistic in a way.

    • @jorawesummme609
      @jorawesummme609 3 года назад +2

      I don’t like it. Most of orson Welles movies have that but it doesn’t work for me. Most of the time I get confused and don’t understand what is happening.

    • @tangocash7304
      @tangocash7304 3 года назад +14

      @@Daud-ix4tm in away it's how people really talk. Especially if people are feeling very strong about a topic.

    • @TRVBAL
      @TRVBAL 3 года назад +1

      @@manhidinginasewer yeah but uncut Jems also has Adam Sandler. The worst actor in the history of acting

    • @joliecide
      @joliecide 3 года назад +1

      You can feel the influence in Aaron Sorkin's writing.

  • @TerryUniGeezerPeterson
    @TerryUniGeezerPeterson 4 года назад +171

    Wells admitted that he really didn't know what was possible in movie making, but believed that if the eye could see something, then the camera could as well. Wells & Toland was a match made in heaven as much as Lennon & McCartney

    • @brandoncaudill6864
      @brandoncaudill6864 4 года назад +15

      I think Kane's quote about the newspaper business was really Welles sharing his feelings about filmmaking. "I don't know how to run a newspaper I just try everything I can think of."

    • @MacIntoshMann
      @MacIntoshMann 3 года назад +7

      “the only way you can learn anything in this business is from somebody who doesn’t know what he can’t do” - gregg toland

    • @steveparadis2978
      @steveparadis2978 Год назад

      @@MacIntoshMann "He didn't know what he couldn't do."

    • @MacIntoshMann
      @MacIntoshMann Год назад

      @@steveparadis2978 ok smartass, i was quoting from the peter bogdanovich kane commentary, i'm sorry if it wasn't 100% what toland said.

  • @dillantaylor2704
    @dillantaylor2704 3 года назад +30

    Am I the only one who loves hearing Orson Welles' voice?....

  • @bencarlson4300
    @bencarlson4300 6 месяцев назад +5

    This is probably my favorite scene in the film. One long take, a ton of funny, interesting, revealing dialogue, and an excellent and witty performance from Orson Welles. It's not as innovative as the rest of the film, but it tells us everything we need to know about the character as efficiently and entertainingly as any "exposition" scene ever has.

  • @cameronkoontz6393
    @cameronkoontz6393 5 лет назад +216

    He's pretty two-faced and manipulative. While he is genius, it does filter into the films theme of Kane trying to manipulate people into loving him on his own terms.

    • @mablebloom8798
      @mablebloom8798 4 года назад +10

      So like all powerful people

    • @TheWchurchill4pm
      @TheWchurchill4pm 3 года назад +6

      That’s why people say Kane isn’t so much a satire of Hearst as he is an avatar of Welles himself.

    • @mr.c2569
      @mr.c2569 Год назад +2

      Makes perfect sense since Kane is essentially a narcissist.

    • @dancingvirgil
      @dancingvirgil 5 месяцев назад

      Thank you Jed Leland

  • @CompelledUsername
    @CompelledUsername 2 года назад +236

    The finest Bruce Wayne we never had.

    • @evanricheson1630
      @evanricheson1630 Год назад +7

      Fr

    • @titan133760
      @titan133760 Год назад +15

      Except that Charles Kane is driven by a selfish desire to be loved. Bruce Wayne genuinely wants to help redeem people

    • @TheStockwell
      @TheStockwell Год назад +6

      True, aside from the fact that his only strengths were having money and self-centered arrogance. He's more like Tony Stark without the technical genius or discipline.
      No offense intended, but Charles Foster Kane was a generic capitalist who lost sight of what he believed in. He was the sort of useless millionaire Bruce Wayne worked hard not to be, someone who probably would've failed at even being a supervillain worth going after.
      Bruce Wayne had the Batcave and the Batmobile.
      Charles Foster Kane had an overly large mansion - and a sled. 😏
      Best wishes from Vermont 🍁

    • @solovevkiril
      @solovevkiril Год назад +6

      @@titan133760 Well, Bruce HAS to be a selfish generic wall-street capitalist, so when he's not saving the city, he behaves just like Charles.

    • @Creator-saml
      @Creator-saml 7 месяцев назад

      Nerd

  • @davidmonica2047
    @davidmonica2047 3 года назад +93

    I like how they’re arguing and Kane is helping him with his jacket.

    • @TheWchurchill4pm
      @TheWchurchill4pm 3 года назад +12

      That’s what happens in an age when men were taught to be gentlemen.

    • @TheJonathanNewton
      @TheJonathanNewton 2 года назад +10

      Kane’s only too happy to see Thatcher out.

    • @jayblazek
      @jayblazek Месяц назад +1

      Well they are father and son of sorts... a guardianship Kane resents

  • @YEDxYED
    @YEDxYED 2 года назад +53

    A damn fine actor
    A damn director
    Freaking legend

  • @Milestonemonger
    @Milestonemonger Год назад +15

    "You're right, Mr Tachar, I did lose $1M last year. I expect to lose $1M this year, and I expect to lose $1M next year!At this rate, I would have to close this place in... oh....60 years". Brilliant 👏

  • @Sisyphos420
    @Sisyphos420 3 года назад +46

    The dynamic of this scene is extraordinary. Taught there are no cuts and little camera movement.

  • @Dane_Youssef
    @Dane_Youssef Год назад +12

    "You furnish the pictures, I'll furnish the war."
    This is an actual quote from William Randolph Hearst.

  • @dnasty312
    @dnasty312 Год назад +9

    0:01 Orson always knew how to make an entrance on film 🙌🏻

  • @cynthiahawkins2389
    @cynthiahawkins2389 3 года назад +37

    I love the way Welles also used overlapping rat-a-tat dialogue to create drama, and also for comedic effect...

    • @JohnArnaud-dq8gq
      @JohnArnaud-dq8gq 4 месяца назад

      Welles is the main purpose of me watching it

  • @HovaNirvana
    @HovaNirvana 3 года назад +31

    “You may, if you can form such a committee, put me down for a contribution of one thousand dollars.” The first time I saw this movie, I was a bit hesitant at first because of the historical weight and heritage attached to it, and I thought I’d be bored. That line made me bust out laughing and let me know I was in for a hell of a ride. Very worthy of its GOAT designation.

    • @TheWchurchill4pm
      @TheWchurchill4pm 3 года назад +1

      It’s an interesting examination of the human psyche. We each have multiple selves: ones that allow us to feel comfortable in others’ company; and ones that help us live with ourselves. The tragedy is when we can’t decide which one we really want to be.

  • @joliecide
    @joliecide 2 года назад +26

    24 years old, made a masterpiece.

    • @jamesa2482
      @jamesa2482 Год назад +2

      Orson would have been 25-26 when this came out

  • @libertas_americana
    @libertas_americana 3 года назад +64

    Kinda weird to think that Orsen Welles is only 25 years old when he made Citizen Kane.

    • @pradabears
      @pradabears Год назад +3

      To create a film of this caliber he was SUPER young. Damn

  • @oasiscrushinglife6878
    @oasiscrushinglife6878 4 года назад +37

    That final line and delivery is SOOOOOOOOO baller

    • @vingasoline5068
      @vingasoline5068 3 месяца назад

      My personal favorite line from the movie, that delivery is soooooo damn good

  • @ProfessorTime
    @ProfessorTime 4 года назад +160

    THE ENTIRE SCENE IS ONE SHOT ! ! !
    Directors & Editors today would cut this scene into 128 pieces,
    draw attention to the editing, and jolt the viewer out of the story.

    • @ryanlocke1117
      @ryanlocke1117 4 года назад +2

      Cuts are necessary insofar as the director wants

    • @randywhite3947
      @randywhite3947 4 года назад +9

      Is this were fincher this scene would have been at least 100 takes

    • @TechnologicallyTechnical
      @TechnologicallyTechnical 3 года назад +2

      +Z. Z. Le Mans "Directors & Editors today would cut this scene into 128 pieces"
      Did you not see 1917? Uncut long takes have practically become a gimmick lately.

    • @mgreco712
      @mgreco712 3 года назад +1

      @@TechnologicallyTechnical How was 1917 gimmicky?

    • @TechnologicallyTechnical
      @TechnologicallyTechnical 3 года назад +1

      @@mgreco712 I didn't say it was.

  • @americanpatriot6938
    @americanpatriot6938 4 года назад +18

    For some reason newer movies hate using numbers when talking about money. The classic "let me show you an offer - slides paper towards them, they look at it with amaze, and the audience assumes"
    I kinda appreciate the math breakdown in the end.

  • @LPJack02
    @LPJack02 Год назад +5

    RIP Orson Welles (May 6, 1915 - October 10, 1985), aged 70
    You will always be remembered as a legend.

  • @dannyhmmcup
    @dannyhmmcup 3 года назад +21

    Man I want his voice. That is a boss voice, you could read the ingredients off of a ketchup bottle and make it sound alive and electric.

  • @darkreyule
    @darkreyule Год назад +4

    My vote for single best scene in cinema history. It's perfect on so many levels. Staging, blocking, inflection, nuance, symbolism, detail.
    Literally perfect.

  • @manco828
    @manco828 6 месяцев назад +4

    Notice how everyone stops what they're doing as soon as Kane says 'you're talking to 2 people'.

  • @justsayno1734
    @justsayno1734 Год назад +5

    Am I the only one who thinks Welles has the same smile and facial expression as Jack Nicholson... especially in 0:46

    • @tfe1788
      @tfe1788 Год назад +1

      Damn your so right 😂😂😂 Two of the greatest actors share the same great same ❤

  • @spideraxis
    @spideraxis Год назад +7

    I saw the movie twice. The first time I was very young and didn't quite understand it. The second time I was in my late teens and understood its greatness much more clearly.

  • @acampbell2178
    @acampbell2178 4 года назад +51

    Funny that so many newspapers DID close down around his estimated time frame.

    • @RichV20
      @RichV20 4 года назад +3

      1958?

    • @acampbell2178
      @acampbell2178 4 года назад +3

      @@RichV20 "60 years" would be around 2018. (2000-2013 saw 27% of newspaper firms go out of business) Since 2013 the pace has been increasing, though.

  • @ianmillerdevilsfan1223
    @ianmillerdevilsfan1223 2 месяца назад +1

    Might be in my top 5 favorite scenes in movie history.

  • @taylorervin264
    @taylorervin264 2 года назад +13

    I love how the entire tone of the room changes when Mr. Thatcher starts yelling at 1:07. All the background noise stops and the background actors turn around in their seats to watch whats happening as the argument escalates.

    • @r5t6y7u8
      @r5t6y7u8 Год назад

      That's the only flaw in this scene. I hate it when background noise - especially in a crowded area - suddenly goes quiet in a movie.
      (Related: when a radio/TV is on and its volume suddenly goes up when something vital to the plot is being announced)

    • @taylorervin264
      @taylorervin264 Год назад

      @@r5t6y7u8 It isn't arbitrary. The background noise goes quiet because everyone has stopped working. They are watching the argument because it has escalated. It increases the tension. It's great.

  • @totallynotalpharius2283
    @totallynotalpharius2283 3 года назад +18

    This man was a genius

  • @tremorsfan
    @tremorsfan 2 года назад +3

    Every time you watch this movie you notice something new. I never noticed that halfway through this scene the background noise stops and the lights dim to focus only on the two actors. In fact everybody in the background stops.

  • @pureluck8767
    @pureluck8767 3 года назад +24

    Orson Welles was a damn good actor

  • @flaggerify
    @flaggerify 3 года назад +9

    The typing stops when they start arguing.

  • @davidfernandez1992
    @davidfernandez1992 3 года назад +14

    This arguing scene is as good as the arguing between Tom Hagen and Sonny Corleone in The Godfather (1972).

  • @Telechontar09
    @Telechontar09 3 года назад +17

    This is the best version of my alter ego I’ve ever seen.

  • @Lidoe
    @Lidoe 16 часов назад

    Still some of the best cinematography in all of cinema!

  • @wanlitan7406
    @wanlitan7406 3 года назад +7

    Effortlessly hilarious.

  • @janicea135
    @janicea135 3 года назад +12

    At 0:46 doesn't Orson Welles look just like a young Jack Nicholson? Similar smile and eye brow move.

  • @jupiterlegrand4817
    @jupiterlegrand4817 Год назад +1

    The greatest film of all time.

  • @Bronco541
    @Bronco541 3 года назад +15

    he helps him put his coat on while arguing with him... people fought differently back then.

    • @NaughtyVampireGod
      @NaughtyVampireGod 3 года назад +1

      also there was much love and respect between Kane and Thatcher - as I recall, Thatcher was Kane's guardian at one time

    • @tangocash7304
      @tangocash7304 3 года назад +3

      @@NaughtyVampireGod more of hate and very little respect relationship between Thatcher and Kane. You are correct that Thatcher was Kane's legal guardian, but Kane still blamed Thatcher for taking him away from his mother and destroying his childhood, although in truth it was really the mother's fault in what mold Kane to become the man he ended becoming.

  • @sr.little2128
    @sr.little2128 Год назад +1

    2:26 and the sixty years had come in a extraordinary speed

  • @Cherriheart
    @Cherriheart 2 года назад +1

    I love how the background noise becomes completely silent at the climatic part of the scene.

  • @ricebrown1
    @ricebrown1 6 месяцев назад +1

    Even while arguing he helps him with his coat.

  • @chrisza9782
    @chrisza9782 Год назад +2

    1:27 He casually offers money to have a boycott formed against himself😂

  • @crossroadsc-1378
    @crossroadsc-1378 6 лет назад +26

    1 year, 1 month, 3 weeks, a few hours ago

    • @zach11590
      @zach11590 4 года назад +3

      That is today... we finally meet

  • @teanmace
    @teanmace 5 месяцев назад

    What were you doing ? Taking pictures of squirrels ? You're fired.

  • @HereForAStorm
    @HereForAStorm 2 года назад +3

    0:43 ... oh, hi there 2022

  • @shobhitbhatnagar729
    @shobhitbhatnagar729 10 дней назад

    This movie is way ahead of it's time.

  • @steveparadis2978
    @steveparadis2978 3 года назад +5

    George Coulouris cited this scene when he described how Hollywood directors back then didn't like intensity--they'd have quieted everyone down a notches. Not Welles.

  • @norwegianwoode6870
    @norwegianwoode6870 2 года назад +3

    Kane finally closed down his newspaper shop in 2001 after losing too much money.

  • @LanDred1
    @LanDred1 6 лет назад +25

    rosebud

  • @chadwilliams9141
    @chadwilliams9141 2 года назад +1

    Such a great scene..

  • @lizriveratoro8729
    @lizriveratoro8729 4 месяца назад

    I just love this scene 🎉🎉🩷👏🏼👏🏼

  • @outonthetownco
    @outonthetownco 4 года назад +15

    "citizen kane" is often considered, by many, to be the greatest film ever made.
    it is from this reference point that cinéma, as the art form was originally conceived, is to be analyzed.
    this is what i mean when contrasting the differences between REALISM and ROMANTICISM, and how much of what is put forth on screen today isn't "film" in the historical sense.
    𝘖𝘣𝘪 𝘋𝘢𝘯
    ©2019

    • @DC-zi6se
      @DC-zi6se 4 года назад +1

      It's considered so mostly because of it's technical innovations over it's writing's indication.

    • @stopwatchg
      @stopwatchg 4 года назад +1

      @@DC-zi6se no,even without it its master movie.

    • @Views-ui2xh
      @Views-ui2xh 4 года назад

      The Godfather 1 and 2 is better

    • @stevenmartinek4419
      @stevenmartinek4419 4 года назад +1

      @@Views-ui2xh Sharknado beats them all!

  • @po9318
    @po9318 3 года назад +1

    He really knew how to yank Thatcher's chain.

  • @cdm386
    @cdm386 2 года назад +1

    That camera angle….25 y/o Orson….What a genius.

  • @sohambanerjee99
    @sohambanerjee99 Год назад

    Excellent Words! Kane is to the point!

  • @redbeard36
    @redbeard36 4 года назад +3

    You can see how influenced directors like Cassavetes were in that camera work

    • @thorn262
      @thorn262 3 года назад

      Few attentive directors have not learned from Welles.

  • @cmvogt5951
    @cmvogt5951 4 года назад +3

    This is Mr. Kane got the Company.

  • @manjur597
    @manjur597 4 года назад +36

    No wonder why hearst wanted to destroy this film

  • @fishdawg6495
    @fishdawg6495 3 года назад +1

    BWAAAAHAHAA THE FRENCH CHAMPAGNE!!!

  • @StickFigureStudios
    @StickFigureStudios 7 месяцев назад +1

    I believe I can sat without fear of contradiction that Orson Welles never looked better than he does in this scene.

  • @Natedawg38
    @Natedawg38 2 года назад +1

    60 years... Ah there's my man

  • @rennatsinned5451
    @rennatsinned5451 2 года назад

    Pretty much 1 take in a long winded scene?. I've never seen it but intrigued about this film now... The camera shots are actually delightful and don't give you headache like alot of old films.

  • @killerchicken750
    @killerchicken750 5 месяцев назад

    I really like when they showed the cane from citizen Kane

  • @MCO18
    @MCO18 10 месяцев назад

    Welles was only 25 years old but actually made himself look younger by having his face pulled back

  • @SweetChuck008
    @SweetChuck008 Год назад

    This always comes to mind when people talk about company boycotts and how they will be loosing money

  • @bethmcavoy8062
    @bethmcavoy8062 2 года назад

    What a boss! 60 years ! hahaha

  • @fbistatmajor5918
    @fbistatmajor5918 2 года назад +1

    These guys were just a cut above the rest

  • @thisdeath
    @thisdeath Год назад +1

    damn this film is older than my grandfather

    • @tfe1788
      @tfe1788 Год назад +1

      Yesterday, I learnt it was released the 1 day before my grandmother was born she was born on the 17th of May 1941 😂😂😂

  • @mws755
    @mws755 Месяц назад

    It's Frasier before Frasier lol

  • @audreyhjcducati2926
    @audreyhjcducati2926 4 года назад +10

    Orson looks like Christopher Nolan.

  • @GenerationX1967
    @GenerationX1967 3 года назад +4

    11 people don't know how to run a newspaper...

  • @GarethEvans-ri9mb
    @GarethEvans-ri9mb Год назад +1

    Actions have consequences

  • @GarethEvans-ri9mb
    @GarethEvans-ri9mb Год назад

    I lost X Factor! Polly pocket!

  • @jesusjavierondo6774
    @jesusjavierondo6774 4 года назад +3

    2:23 jajajajajaja

  • @marcellusdiocletian2487
    @marcellusdiocletian2487 2 года назад

    This is one of my favorite scenes in a movie when the typewriters stop

  • @nobodysXghost
    @nobodysXghost 3 года назад

    I have to work at 5 am tomorrow and miss seeing my kids because of it.

  • @frankstrick7000
    @frankstrick7000 3 месяца назад +1

    Don't know how people place Hitchcock's Vertigo in the same league as Citizen Kane. Not even close. Citizen Kane is light years ahead of Vertigo (in this reviewer's opinion). 😁

  • @Telechontar09
    @Telechontar09 3 года назад +3

    Honestly, this guy should have played me.

  • @crystinamarie1
    @crystinamarie1 Год назад

    Orson Welles was awesome and handsome 😍

  • @geokaker9630
    @geokaker9630 4 года назад +4

    that pipe’s not even almost lit

  • @lordscribe9765
    @lordscribe9765 3 года назад

    25 years old when orson did this

  • @jackg2630
    @jackg2630 Год назад

    Goddamn this movie is good

  • @mathispodcz6923
    @mathispodcz6923 3 года назад +1

    Who's watching this scene and think about Mank ?

  • @Superboologan1
    @Superboologan1 Год назад +3

    Elon musk running twitter

  • @davidstevenson9517
    @davidstevenson9517 3 месяца назад +1

    I'd swear Elon Musk is emulating this character; like Kane, he plays with money, economies and societies just for the hell of it.

  • @TheMinderEngineer
    @TheMinderEngineer 6 лет назад +6

    Seeing the perspectives of other entrepreneurs always sparks an inner fire in me, keep on hustling! 🚀

  • @lillycassandra6395
    @lillycassandra6395 2 года назад +2

    Why is the consider one of the best movies of all time??? I don't get it 😒

    • @jwwprod3862
      @jwwprod3862 Год назад +1

      It’s because it was way ahead of it’s time. And the fact that this was Orson Welles’ first movie also supports this.

    • @davidpar2
      @davidpar2 Год назад

      I’m glad my father introduced me to this movie when I was a kid, decades before social media and before all of the hype surrounding it was so immediately accessible. I don’t know anything about cinematic techniques or acting styles; I’ve always just enjoyed it for the story and the indirect way it unfolds in relation to the time period in which it was made, when these types of psychological, not straightforward plots were essentially unheard of

  • @nathansmith6944
    @nathansmith6944 3 года назад

    0:57

  • @SpectacularSpiderMan
    @SpectacularSpiderMan 3 года назад +1

    How MrBeast spends money.

  • @derickjohnson5402
    @derickjohnson5402 3 года назад

    Why I don't have a tv or computer.

  • @brajkishorjha2729
    @brajkishorjha2729 3 года назад +3

    Is this the best movie made ever?

  • @stevenmartinek4419
    @stevenmartinek4419 4 года назад +13

    I'm sorry,this movie can't compare with Sharknado.

    • @issi529
      @issi529 3 года назад

      Yeah this movie is even worse.