The Story (continued)
Interview
with Kane's best friend, Jedediah Leland:
(4) Thompson visits with and interviews Jedediah Leland,
the college friend (and later drama critic) Kane had hired to work
for him. Leland is a convalescent resident of the Huntington Memorial
Hospital, a drab Manhattan retirement center on 180th Street. Thompson
is viewed looking up at a large bridge that imposes itself above
the hospital building. Leland, frail, a bit senile, wearing dark
glasses, a cap/eyeshade and a dressing gown, and sitting in a wheelchair,
opens their discussion with: "I can remember absolutely everything,
young man. That's my curse - that's one of the greatest curses ever
inflicted on the human race, memory."
The camera imperceptibly moves closer and closer to
his face as he talks. Other patients are seen in their wheelchairs
in the grey background. Leland remembers that Kane "behaved
like a swine" but was never "brutal - he just did brutal
things. Maybe I wasn't his friend, but if I wasn't, he never had
one. Maybe I was what you nowadays call a stooge." The senile,
bitter man begs for cigars during their talk, trying to sneak them
past hospital doctors and nurses.
Leland discusses the early great days in Kane's newspaper
empire and then offers a criticism of Kane's lack of conviction as
he selfishly turns to politics:
I suppose he had some private sort of greatness,
but he kept it to himself. He never gave himself away. He never
gave anything away, he just left you a tip, hmm? Ha. He had a generous
mind. I don't suppose anybody ever had so many opinions. But he
never believed in anything except Charlie Kane. He never had a
conviction except Charlie Kane in his life. I suppose he died without
one. It must have been pretty unpleasant. Of course, a lot of us
check out without having any special convictions about death, but
we do know what we believe in, we do believe in something.
Thompson asks Leland about his understanding of "Rosebud,"
Charlie's dying words. Leland recalls having read about it in the Inquirer and
offers his opinion: "I never believed in anything I saw in the Inquirer."
Then, Leland recalls Emily Kane, Kane's first wife, as a "very
nice girl"
who he knew in dancing school. Leland comments on their disintegrating
marriage after a short honeymoon period: "Well, after the first
couple of months, she and Charlie didn't see much of each other except
at breakfast. It was a marriage just like any other marriage."
Leland's thoughts are pictured in one of the most talked-about,
virtuoso sequences in the film - the breakfast table montage comprised
of 32 shots over two minutes and 11 seconds. Succinctly portrayed,
Kane's rapidly deteriorating and failing marriage to Emily is visually
captured - from their adoring, talkative, newly-wed days to their
stony silence as an irreconciliable couple nine years later. The
flashback is introduced with a slow dissolve from a medium shot of
Leland.
The passage of time and Kane's first dissolving marriage
over the course of nine years is vividly conveyed within six perfectly-crafted
scenes by the technique of quick, swish pans, wipes or jump cuts.
Each one marks the passage of time through each of the six progressive
intervals. Changes in time are also reflected in differences in lighting
(soft vs. harsh), changes in their positioning (they are gradually
seated further apart or opposite from each other at the table), the
special effects outside the window, the food, their hairstyles (including
the appearance of Charles' mustache) and their wardrobes. Each transition
is also accompanied by waltz music on the soundtrack that progressively
becomes more dissonant as the marriage disintegrates.
Six Scenes in Breakfast Montage:
-
(With lilting, romantic music in the background)
Very much in love at the start of their marriage, Emily and Charles
(who calls his new bride "beautiful") are still dressed
in fancy evening clothes after having just returned from a
whirlwind night of six parties. They are sitting close to each
other at their breakfast room table for an early morning meal
in the dawn's light. Charles is 'waiting' on Emily - signified
by the dish-towel hanging over his arm. The fast life is new
to Emily, and she is worried about what the servants will think
- since they have stayed up all night (and the time can be
interpreted as either 'early' or 'late'). Emily complains to
Charles about the professional demands of the Inquirer on
his (and their) personal time:
Emily: I don't see why you have to go straight
out to the newspaper.
Charles: You never should have married a newspaperman. They're
worse than sailors. I absolutely adore you.
Emily: (suggestively) Oh Charles, even newspapermen have to sleep.
Charles: (ready to comply) I'll call Mr. Bernstein, I'll have
him put off my appointments until noon.
-
Again, Emily (in a dressing gown) reproachfully
complains to Charles (now with a mustache) about his obsessive
work schedule. She is separated from him by a bouquet of flowers
(in the foreground), and they sit at opposite sides of the table:
Emily: Do you know how long you kept me waiting
last night while you went to the newspaper for ten minutes?
What do you do in a newspaper in the middle of the night?
Charles: Emily, my dear, your only correspondent is the Inquirer.
-
Emily is bothered by Kane's criticism of the Presidential
office in public, an office she considers a sacred cow institution:
Emily: Sometimes, I think I'd prefer a rival
of flesh-and-blood.
Charles: Oh Emily, I don't spend that much time on the newspaper.
Emily: It isn't just the time. It's what you print - attacking
the President.
Charles: You mean Uncle John.
Emily: I mean the President of the United States.
Charles: He's still Uncle John, and he's still a well-meaning
fathead who's letting a pack of high-pressure crooks run his
administration. This whole oil scandal...
Emily: He happens to be the President, Charles, not you.
Charles: That's a mistake that will be corrected one of these
days.
-
In the sixth year of their marriage, they disagree
over a gift that a matronly Emily states was given by Mr. Bernstein
to their infant son (Junior). Emily, a true blue-blood, calls
the gift:
"the most incredible atrocity." (Is this commentary on
anti-Semitism?)
[Although unidentified, the "atrocity" is possibly the
gift of a Jewish Menorah or Star of David. However, it is more
likely that the gift is a mezuzah, a parchment scroll of
handwritten Hebrew texts taken from the Torah that are enclosed
in a decorative case and affixed to a doorframe or doorpost. It
was often believed that the mezuzah act as a protective
device. Every time a Jewish person passes through a door with a
mezuzah on it, he/she touches the mezuzah and then kisses the fingers
that touch it, expressing love and respect for God.]
More objects appear on the table to separate the estranged couple.
They argue over whether the gift should be in the nursery at all:
Emily: I simply can't have it in the nursery.
Charles: Mr. Bernstein is apt to pay a visit to the nursery now
and then.
Emily: Does he have to?
Charles: (sternly) Yes!
Emily: Really, Charles!
-
Now, the couple appears to be in a formal dining
room. They are also stiff and sharp toward each other. Charles
angrily displays his oppressive egotism:
Emily: People will think...
Charles: (cutting in antagonistically and angrily) ...what I
tell them to think!
(He accentuates his last word by clinking down his coffee cup.)
-
In the last scenario, in their ninth year of a
now-disunified marriage, there is no verbal dialogue or exchange
between them - only sinister-sounding music on the soundtrack.
In the last panoramic view as the camera tracks backwards, they
unhappily read rival newspapers at breakfast: Emily disloyally
reads the competitive Chronicle in silent protest, while
Kane (smoking a pipe) reads his own Inquirer. Each of
them has become icy to each other, and more and more distant
(both physically and emotionally) at opposite ends of a long
table.
The scene dissolves back to a medium view of Leland
during his interview with Thompson on the roof garden of the hospital.
Once he achieved power through his newspaper empire,
Kane also quested for love, but it was unreciprocated - as explained
by Leland: "All he wanted out of life was love...he just didn't
have any to give." Kane confused the personal and political
realms, because of his desperate need for love, after being taken
from his mother in early childhood:
He married for love. Love. That's why he did everything.
That's why he went into politics. It seems we weren't enough, he
wanted all the voters to love him too. Guess all he really wanted
out of life was love. That's Charlie's story, how he lost it. You
see, he just didn't have any to give. Well, he loved Charlie Kane
of course, very dearly, and his mother, I guess he always loved
her.
Leland then moves on to discuss Kane's second marriage
to singer Susan Alexander, whom Charlie called "a cross section
of the American public," suggesting that he believes this proved
he could be loved by the people. "Guess he couldn't help it.
She must have had something for him. Well, that first night, according
to Charlie, all she had was a toothache." [While Emily was associated
with Kane's political and public life, Susan represented his personal
and private life - a return to his first love for his mother.]
In a chance encounter on a wet, New York City street
corner, Kane meets twenty-two year old Susan. Emerging from a drug
store where she has had a prescription filled for a painful toothache,
she giggles at him after a passing carriage splashes mud on him: "You're
funny, mister. You've got dirt on your face." Having both suffered
minor misfortunes (a toothache and muddiness), they commiserate with
each other. He accepts her offer to get hot water in her nearby rooming
house to clean the "mud" off of him. As they enter her
apartment, the camera lingers behind in the hallway, almost voyeuristically,
and views them through the light of the open door. Kane closes the
door to Susan's room, causing the camera to rush forward, stopping
only when Susan reopens the door. In the open doorway, she tells
him: "Excuse me, but my landlady prefers me to keep this door
open when I have a gentleman caller."
She sits at a dressing table in front of a mirror,
decorated with a portrait of herself as a child, and where the snowstorm
glass paperweight is again seen. [Second Appearance of Glass Ball
in Film - chronologically, this is its first appearance
- and represents or symbolizes Susan. It reminds Kane of his boyhood
home.] To take her mind off the pain of her tooth and make her laugh,
he wiggles both his ears at the same time, and she laughs in the
reflection. He explains it was a boyhood trick taught him at one
of the world's best boys school by the present President of Venezuela.
During their conversation, filmed in gauzy fuzziness,
the camera captures their growing attraction for each other in a
series of close-ups and shot/counter-shots. Kane cleverly makes illusory
hand-shadows of a rooster on the wall to entertain her. She is impressed
by his ability to make shadows on the wall come alive:
"Gee, you know an awful lot of tricks. You're not a professional
magician, are you?" He is delighted that she likes him even though
she does not know who he is or how wealthy he is. She expresses a simplicity,
lack of sophistication and ignorance that appeals to him. Kane feels
a sentimental empathy towards her:
Susan: I don't know many people.
Kane: I know too many people. I guess we're both lonely.
He tells Susan what his mission was that evening -
he was on his way to his warehouse "in search of (his) youth" and
to look at his mother's belongings after her death [Do the belongings
of his past include his boyhood sled?]:
I was on my way to the Western Manhattan Warehouse
in search of my youth. You see, my mother died a long time ago
and her things were put in storage out West. There wasn't any other
place to put them. I thought I'd send for them now. Tonight, I
was going to take a look at them. You know, a sort of sentimental
journey.
[Note: during restoration efforts, a lone 35mm master
negative and soundtrack of Orson Welles' The Tragedy of Othello:
The Moor of Venice (1952), long thought to have been destroyed,
was found at the New Jersey-based Western Manhattan Warehouse --
an interesting, synchronous coincidence that part of Welles' 'youth'
was also discovered there. In Welles' version of Othello as
with Citizen Kane, the title character of the Moor was already
dead at the start, and then the facts were investigated.]
He also explains his profession:
I run a couple of newspapers. What do you do?
After mentioning his own mother (only the second time
in the film), Kane learns that Susan works in a sheet music store
as a salesgirl. Her career ambition to be an opera singer was mostly
her mother's idea:
I wanted to be a singer, I guess. That is, I didn't,
my mother did.
[Later, Susan charges that Kane forced - or bullied
- her into being an opera singer against her will, using the pretext
that he was improving her hidden talent.] He requests that she sing
for him while playing the piano in the parlor. [The combination of
nostalgic reminders of his lost childhood and past, the glass ball,
and thoughts of his mother become connected to Susan's singing in
this crucial scene. The scene also has metaphoric sexual connotations
in the way she performs for him.] He presides quietly to her right,
pipe-smoking and contented (he doesn't appraise her singing ability
correctly - even at this early stage) - listening to her struggling
notes. The last line of Susan's song, taken from The Barber of
Seville can be translated: "I have sworn it, I will conquer."
In another "lightning mix" (linking sexual
and political conquest) - another of the film's ingenious transitions,
his quiet applause (hand-clapping) for her private piano recital
for him dissolves into applause during Jedediah Leland's campaign
speech for Kane before a small crowd. [His interest in Susan through
applause is ultimately linked to his downfall in the campaign due
to an affair with Susan.] Kane seeks election as governor of New
York in the 1916 elections. Leland introduces Kane on a workingman's
ticket to a small outdoor audience, describing him with mythic proportions:
...the fighting liberal, the friend of the working
man, the next governor of this state, who entered upon this campaign...
The
scene jump cuts to Kane's memorable political speech in vast Madison
Square Garden in front of a gigantic poster of himself - on the eve
of the gubernatorial election. The echoing, booming Kane voice finishes
Leland's words (in another
"lightning mix"), a dramatic dovetailing of scenes to illustrate
Kane's quick rise to power:
...with one purpose only, to point out and make public
the dishonesty, the downright villainy of Boss Jim W. Gettys' political
machine, now in complete control of the government of this state. I made
no campaign promises, because until a few weeks ago, I had
no hope of being elected. Now however, I am something more
than a hope. Jim Gettys, Jim Gettys has something less than a chance.
Every straw vote, every independent poll shows that I'll be elected.
Now I can afford to make some promises. The working man,
the working man and the slum child know they can expect my best
efforts in their interests. The nation's ordinary citizens know
that I'll do everything in my power to protect the underprivileged,
the underpaid, and the underfed.
In the enthusiastic audience that is captivated by
Kane's rousing speech, his son Junior sits in awe with his mother:
Junior: Mother, is Pop governor yet?
Emily: Not yet, Junior.
Kane's egotistical oratory and campaign goals center
on ending corruption. His rivalry focuses on political boss and opponent
Jim Gettys. Kane angrily makes one firm, final promise to his supporters
- to imprison by his first official act as governor his incumbent
opponent:
But here's one promise I'll make, and Boss Jim Gettys
knows I'll keep it. My first official act as governor of this state
will be to appoint a special district attorney to arrange for the
indictment, prosecution, and conviction of Boss Jim W. Gettys.
After these threatening words, an unseen Gettys is
sighted on a balcony high above Madison Square Garden, watching Kane
on the stage below. Gettys turns and puts on his hat - off to a damaging
rendezvous that will ultimately dash Kane's election hopes. The crowd
roars its approval as band music plays a rousing number - Kane is
heavily favored and expected to win the governor's race. As he leaves
triumphantly, Emily sends their son Junior home in the car with the
chauffeur - the family is symbolically broken up. With self-possessed
dignity, Emily sits in a taxi wrapped in a white fur and melodramatically
confronts him with a note she has received and suspicions she has
of an affair he is conducting at 185 W. 74th Street (the house Kane
has provided for Susan). Kane accompanies Emily by taxi to Susan's
apartment. When they arrive, Kane is familiarly greeted by name by
the maid at the front door: "Come right in, Mr. Kane."
Emily glances stiffly at Charles and they enter the
building and proceed up the stairs at the start of the tense, brilliant,
emotionally-effective confrontation scene. Waiting apprehensively
at the top of the stairs is Susan, who admits that Gettys forced
her to write a letter to Emily to smear and expose Kane's relationship
and affair with her:
Charlie, he forced me to send your wife that letter.
I didn't want to. He's been saying the most terrible -
Gettys (Ray Collins) appears in the doorway of Susan's
place as a menacing, black silhouetted shadow. Trapped like a dog,
Kane is incensed by Gettys' tactics and threatens to break his neck
right there. Emily calmly cautions Charles to keep his reason:
Charles. Your breaking this man's neck would scarcely
explain this note. (She reads the note outloud) 'Serious consequences
for Mr. Kane, for yourself and for your son.'... (To Susan) What
does this mean, Miss - ?
Susan introduces herself to Emily and admits to writing
the letter, but it was only after Gettys threatened her, as the blackmailer
explains: "She just sent it because I made her see it wouldn't
be smart for her not to send it."
In the remarkably-directed scene in the apartment,
in a two-minute unbroken shot with dramatic use of lighting for emphasis
and precise blocking and placement of characters, Kane, Emily, Susan,
and Gettys discuss the affair and how it will affect the race for
governor. Gettys refuses to be called a gentleman by Kane:
I'm not a gentleman. (To Emily) Your husband's only
trying to be funny calling me one. I don't even know what a gentleman
is. (He steps forward into the light to tell Emily that he has
a more honorable character than the unscrupulous Kane himself.)
You see, my idea of a gentleman...Well, Mrs. Kane, if I owned a
newspaper and I didn't like the way somebody was doing things,
some politician say, I'd fight him with everything I had. Only
I wouldn't show him in a convict's suit with stripes so his children
could see the picture in the paper, or his mother.
Gettys is fighting for both his political life and
his own existence. He counter-threatens to make the affair public
by exposing Kane's extra-marital relationship with Susan in every
newspaper in the state not owned by Kane, blackmailing him with the
information to get Kane to withdraw from the race. The scandalous
information would tarnish the public image that Kane had carefully
nurtured in his moral crusade and campaign. Gettys proposes that
Kane explain that his withdrawal is due to illness and threatens
to make the headlines look bad if he doesn't withdraw:
Unless Mr. Kane makes up his mind by tomorrow that
he's so sick he has to go away for a year or two, Monday morning,
every paper in this state, except his, will carry the story I'm
going to give them...The story about him and Miss Alexander...We
got evidence that'll look bad in the headlines. Do you want me
to give you the evidence Mr. Kane? I'd rather Mr. Kane withdrew
without having to get the story published.
As a counterpoint to the vengeful rivalry, both Susan
and Emily voice their own views:
Susan (in a shrill, selfish voice): What about me?
(turning to Kane) Charlie, he said my name'd be dragged through
the mud. That everywhere I went from now on...
Emily (in a calm, determined voice): There seems to be only one decision
you can make Charles. I'd say it had been made for you.
Kane: You can't tell me the voters of this state...
Emily: I'm not interested in the voters of this state right now.
I am interested in our son.
Ultimately, Kane doesn't consider the consequences
of his actions on his family and on his professional reputation (or
on Susan's). He refuses to give up the race, in effect self-obsessively
renouncing his own family and ultimately forfeiting the election.
As he steps forward into the light, Kane decides to remain and stay
with Susan and face a public scandal rather than return home with
Emily. He insists on remaining wholly autonomous, forsaking good
sense and reason:
Charles: I'm staying here. I can fight this all alone.
Emily: Charles, if you don't listen to reason, it may be too late.
Charles: Too late. For what? For you and this public thief to take
the love of the people of this state away from me?
Susan: (begging) Charlie, you got other things to think about. Your
little boy, you don't want him to read about you in the papers.
Charles: There's only one person in the world who decides what I'm
going to do, and that's me.
Emily: You decided what you were going to do, Charles, some time
ago.
As Emily and Gettys leave and descend the apartment
building staircase, Kane chases after and shouts down to them:
Don't worry about me. I'm Charles Foster Kane! I'm
no cheap, crooked politician, trying to save himself from the consequences
of his crimes. Gettys! I'm going to send you to Sing Sing. Sing
Sing Gettys. Sing Sing.
Kane's threats and insults are powerless - his words
are silenced by the closing of the front door and the sound of an
auto horn.
Outside the door of Susan's house, Mrs. Kane waits
for her car ride. Gettys and Mrs. Kane walk off in opposite directions.
The live image freezes on the doorway, the camera withdraws, and
then the doorway is seen as part of the newspaper photograph of the "love
nest" underThe Chronicle's headlines broadcasting: "CANDIDATE
KANE CAUGHT IN LOVE NEST WITH 'SINGER'" The picture is captioned: "THE
HIGHLY MORAL MR. KANE AND HIS TAME 'SONGBIRD.'"
A subheading reads: "Candidate Kane Caught in Love Nest With Singer,
Entrapped by Wife as Love Pirate Kane Refuses to Quit Race." The
story is told to the media and Kane's political dreams and aspirations
are shattered by newspaper accounts of the affair. He loses the race
and a possible stepping-stone to the Presidency.
Jedediah Leland, a once-ardent Kane supporter, is offered
a Chronicle but responds bitterly, "No thanks." He
swings through the saloon doors of a local bar. In the offices of The
Inquirer, Bernstein must decide between two alternative headlines
for the front page of Kane's own paper:
"KANE ELECTED" or "CHARLES FOSTER KANE DEFEATED,
FRAUD AT POLLS!" He chooses the latter. A drunken Leland staggers
into the confetti-strewn makeshift campaign headquarters of the newspaper
offices following the defeat. [To appear realistically drunk for this
scene, Cotten remained awake for 24 hours before this scene was shot.
At one point in the conversation, he flubs his line and says "dramatic
crimiticism" - causing a grinning reaction from Welles.] As the
dejected staff leave the office, the melancholy tune A PocoNo is
heard. In the background, Kane's campaign poster has the shadows of
the venetian blinds forming bars across it.
Kane reflects on his loss (in a scene filmed with camera
angles shooting upwards) as Leland confronts and accuses him of being
a self-serving egomaniac - patronizing in his political/civic relationships
with his readership (and in his personal relationships). Leland is
disillusioned and disgusted by Kane's arrogance in assuming that
the people would vote for him despite the scandal:
Kane: I set back the sacred cause of reform, is that
it? All right, that's the way they want it, the people have made
their choice. It's obvious the people prefer Jim Gettys to me.
Leland (as he speaks, only Kane's pants leg can be seen at the left
of the frame): You talk about the people as though you owned them.
As though they belong to you. Goodness. As long as I can remember,
you've talked about giving the people their rights, as if you can
make them a present of Liberty, as a reward for services rendered...You
remember the working man?
Kane: I'll get drunk too, Jedediah, if it'll do any good.
Leland: Aw, it won't do any good. Besides, you never get drunk. You
used to write an awful lot about the workingman...He's turning into
something called organized labor. You're not gonna like that one
little bit when you find out it means that your workingman expects
something is his right, not as your gift! Charlie, when your precious
underprivileged really get together, oh boy! That's gonna add up
to something bigger than your privileges! Then I don't know what
you'll do! Sail away to a desert island probably, and lord it over
the monkeys! [imagery of Xanadu and its private zoo]
Kane: I wouldn't worry about it too much, Jed. There'll probably
be a few of them there to let me know when I do something wrong.
Leland (sneering): Mmm, you may not always be so lucky...You don't
care about anything except you. You just want to persuade people
that you love 'em so much that they oughta love you back. Only you
want love on your own terms. It's somethin' to be played your way,
according to your rules.
Leland asks to be transferred to the Chicago paper
to be their drama critic. Kane protests but gives in when Leland
offers to resign. Kane doesn't want his friend to leave New York
so soon: "I warn you Jedediah, you're not going to like it in
Chicago. The wind comes howling in off the lake and gosh only knows
if they ever heard of Lobster Newburg." Kane proposes an ironic
toast, the most definitive line in the film:
A toast, Jedediah, to love on my terms. Those are
the only terms anybody ever knows - his own.
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