james naremore. context the work of the young orson welles proto-fascist demagogues after the...

16
THE MAGICIAN & THE MASS MEDIA James Naremore

Upload: winfred-sanders

Post on 19-Jan-2016

216 views

Category:

Documents


1 download

TRANSCRIPT

Page 1: James Naremore. Context  The work of the young Orson Welles  Proto-Fascist demagogues  After the whispered “Rosebud,” is “Don’t believe everything

THE MAGICIAN & THE MASS MEDIA

James Naremore

Page 2: James Naremore. Context  The work of the young Orson Welles  Proto-Fascist demagogues  After the whispered “Rosebud,” is “Don’t believe everything

Context

The work of the young Orson Welles Proto-Fascist demagogues After the whispered “Rosebud,” is “Don’t believe

everything you hear on the radio.” Against one of America’s most wealthy media

moguls Mrs. Kane sits at the right foreground, her face

the very image of stern puritanical sacrifice The mise-en-scène under fairly rigid control

Page 3: James Naremore. Context  The work of the young Orson Welles  Proto-Fascist demagogues  After the whispered “Rosebud,” is “Don’t believe everything

Scene

Page 4: James Naremore. Context  The work of the young Orson Welles  Proto-Fascist demagogues  After the whispered “Rosebud,” is “Don’t believe everything

Analysis Two snow sleds

The first is named “Rosebud” & is given to Kane by his mother

The second is a Christmas present from Kane’s guardian, Thatcher

Which is called “Crusader,” is presented fully to the camera

The title character has not only two sleds but t & two friends

In its last moment, the film shifts from intellectual irony to dramatic irony, from apparent skepticism to apparent revelation

Page 5: James Naremore. Context  The work of the young Orson Welles  Proto-Fascist demagogues  After the whispered “Rosebud,” is “Don’t believe everything

Analysis Voyeurism inherent in the medium, Y each leaves

Kane an enigma In the first shot, we see a “No Trespassing” sign

that the camera promptly ignores All the while encountering a bizarre montage:

monkeys in a cage, gondolas in a stream, a golf course

As voyeuristic as anything in a Hitchcock movie Like Kane’s own newspapers, the camera is an

“inquirer,” are like teasing affronts to our curiosity Aligning himself first with the progressives &

then with the Fascists

Page 6: James Naremore. Context  The work of the young Orson Welles  Proto-Fascist demagogues  After the whispered “Rosebud,” is “Don’t believe everything

Analysis

As a mythical character like Noah or Kubla Khan Everybody is involved in a dubious pursuit It’s a film about complexity, not about relativity Once again the search for “Rosebud” seems

tawdry She never heard of Rosebud With a mild shock or a witty image at the

beginning & a joke or an ironic twist at the end

Page 7: James Naremore. Context  The work of the young Orson Welles  Proto-Fascist demagogues  After the whispered “Rosebud,” is “Don’t believe everything

Analysis

In a charmingly exuberant & altogether antirealistic montage, he constantly turns to face the camera, muttering in disgust as the young Kane grows up, founds a newspaper, & then attacks Wall Street

Capital, it seems, is always in charge of Kane’s life The inquirer offices He always places personal loyalty above principle Bernstein’s reminiscences are chiefly about

adventure & male camaraderie

Page 8: James Naremore. Context  The work of the young Orson Welles  Proto-Fascist demagogues  After the whispered “Rosebud,” is “Don’t believe everything

Analysis

As the doggedly loyal Bernstein Hinting that his involvement with Kane has

sexual implications Where Kane unsuccessfully tries to interest

Leland in a woman, but even without that scene he seems to have no active sex life

It is Leland, not Emily Kane, who behaves like a jilted lover

Page 9: James Naremore. Context  The work of the young Orson Welles  Proto-Fascist demagogues  After the whispered “Rosebud,” is “Don’t believe everything

Analysis The comic toothache scene is Susan Alexander’s apartment The closing line of Susan’s song concerns the theme of

power; it comes from The Barber of Seville, & roughly translates “I have sworn it, I will conquer.”

Large-scale effects with a modest budget Painted, Expressionistic image suggesting Kane’s delusions

of grandeur & the crowd’s lack of individuality. Everything is dominated by Kane’s ego: the initial “K” he wears as a stickpin, the huge blowup of his jowly face on a poster, & the incessant ”I” in his public speech

Occasionally we see Kane’s supporters isolated in contrasting close-ups; but his political rival stands high above the action, dominating the frame like a sinister power

Page 10: James Naremore. Context  The work of the young Orson Welles  Proto-Fascist demagogues  After the whispered “Rosebud,” is “Don’t believe everything

Analysis Just at the moment when Kane’s political ambitions are

wrecked, the film shifts into its examination of his sexual life His tyranny is his treatment of Susan An absurd plagiarism case against Welles & Mankiewicz She represents for Kane a “cross-section of the American

public.” when Kane meets her she is a working girl, undereducated & relatively innocent, & his relationship with her is comparable to his relationship with the masses who read his papers

“you talk about the people as though you owned them,” Leland says. Kane’s treatment of Susan illustrates the truth of his charge

Susan is reduced from a pleasant, attractive girl to a near suicide

Page 11: James Naremore. Context  The work of the young Orson Welles  Proto-Fascist demagogues  After the whispered “Rosebud,” is “Don’t believe everything

Analysis Begin the arduous, comically inappropriate

series of music lessons She attempts to quit the opera, but Kane orders

her to continue because “I don’t propose to have myself made ridiculous.” In a scene remarkable for the way it shows the pain of both people, his shadow falls over her face – just as he will later tower over her in the “party” scene, when a woman’s ambiguous scream is heard distantly on the sound track

Personal concerns, how the public & the personal are interrelated

Page 12: James Naremore. Context  The work of the young Orson Welles  Proto-Fascist demagogues  After the whispered “Rosebud,” is “Don’t believe everything

Analysis

Throughout, Kane is presented with a mixture of awe, satiric invective, & sympathy

The surreal picnic, with a stream of black cars driving morosely down a beach toward a swampy encampment, where a jazz band plays

Both shots are impressive uses of optical printing. In response, Kane blindly destroys her room & remembers his childhood loss

Thompson becomes a slightly troubled onlooker Here it might be noted that Welles was uneasy

about the whole snow-sled idea

Page 13: James Naremore. Context  The work of the young Orson Welles  Proto-Fascist demagogues  After the whispered “Rosebud,” is “Don’t believe everything

Analysis

A child-man, he spends all his energies rebelling against anyone who asserts quthority over his will

Imprisoned by his childhood ego, Kane treats everything as a toy: first the sled, then the newspaper, then the Spanish-American War

Ultimately settling on the “No Trespassing” sign outside the gate. We are back where we began. Even the film’s title has been a contradiction in terms

Page 14: James Naremore. Context  The work of the young Orson Welles  Proto-Fascist demagogues  After the whispered “Rosebud,” is “Don’t believe everything

Conclusion Richard Nixon, the “Hotel Xanadu” In translating Hearst into a creature of fiction, he &

Mankiewicz borrowed freely from the lives of other American capitalists (among them Samuel Insull & John McCormack). They salted the story with references to Welles’s own biography, & at several junctures they departed from well-known facts about Hearst

The Hearst press, this in contrast to the Hearst-Davies relationship

Most of these changes tend to create sympathy for Kane

By showing Kane as a tragicomic failure

Page 15: James Naremore. Context  The work of the young Orson Welles  Proto-Fascist demagogues  After the whispered “Rosebud,” is “Don’t believe everything

Conclusion Kane clearly does satirize Hearst’s public life Kane’s manipulative interest in the Spanish-

American War In the election scenes it depicts the corruption of

machine politics with the force of a great editorial cartoon

The film is explicit in its denunciation, showing his supposed democratic aspirations as in reality a desire for power. We even see him on a balcony conferring with Hitler

Kane suggests that the process of discovery is more important than any pat conclusion

Watching a movie rather than reality itself

Page 16: James Naremore. Context  The work of the young Orson Welles  Proto-Fascist demagogues  After the whispered “Rosebud,” is “Don’t believe everything

Conclusion

Because of the power he wielded in Hollywood The paradox is that Welles had no desire to

wreck the motion-picture industry. Kane was held to a relatively modest A-picture budget

Industry bosses perceived Welles as an “artist” & a left-wing ideologue who might bring trouble

He would never again be allowed such freedom at a major studio