Full Title: Citizen Kane

Director: Orson Welles

Lead Cast: Orson Welles as Charles Foster Kane, Joseph Cotten as Jedediah Leland, Dorothy Comingore as Susan Alexander Kan, Everett Sloane as Mr. Bernstein

Supporting cast: George Coulouris, Ruth Warrick, Agnes Moorehead, Harry Shannon, William Alland, Ray Collins

Writer: Herman J. Mankiewicz and Orson Welles

Producer: Orson Welles

Genre: Drama

Language:  English

Awards

Academy Awards:

Nominated: Best Picture, Best Director (Orson Welles), Best Actor (Orson Welles), Best Original Screenplay, Best Art Direction (Black-and-White), Best Cinematography, Best Film Editing, Best Sound Recording, and Best Score of a Dramatic Picture.

Won: Best Original Screenplay (Herman J. Mankiewicz and Orson Welles)

Date of Release: May 1, 1941

Setting (time & Place): America, approximately 1860 to 1950

Major Conflict: Kane tries to control press coverage of his political career and suppress his affair with Susan Alexander.

Rising Action: Kane’s political rival, Jim “Boss” Gettys, forces a showdown between Kane, Kane’s wife, and Susan Alexander in an attempt to force Kane from the governor’s race.

Climax: Kane chooses to stay with Susan and sends his wife away while daring Gettys to expose him by threatening impotently that he’ll make sure Gettys goes to prison.

Falling Action: The papers are filled with the news of Kane’s “love nest,” and he loses the election.

Foreshadowing:

The snow globe. Also known as the glass ball, the snow globe first appears in the dying Welles’s hand at the beginning of the movie and foreshadows the later flashback to his abandonment as a child. Chronologically, it first makes its appearance in Kane’s life the night he meets Susan. The snow globe belongs to her and is sitting on her dressing table. We see it next when Susan leaves Kane and he destroys her room. After this episode, Kane is left only with the snow globe, which foreshadows his lonely death.

Rosebud, the sled. We don’t know its name when we see it at the scene of young Kane’s abandonment by his mother, but it foreshadows the film's final scene, when we finally learn the meaning of Kane's last word.

Crusader, the sled. Given to young Charles Kane by Thatcher, this sled foreshadows Charles’s later crusading work against Thatcher and his business enterprises.

Kane’s statement to Thatcher that if his paper lost $1 million a year he could still run it for sixty years. This cocky comment foreshadows Kane’s bankruptcy and the selling of his assets to Thatcher.

The scene in which Leland, in conversation with Bernstein, questions the new staff’s loyalty to Kane. Kane has just stolen them from the rival paper by offering them more money. Leland wonders if this is enough to make them loyal to Kane. Leland’s doubts foreshadow the departures of Leland and Susan from Kane's life.