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By Dr Ismail S Talib

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Although my main concentration for this additional lecture ... Use of a leitmotif? The Problem of Authorship. Writer. Director. Cinematographer. Camera-eye' ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: By Dr Ismail S Talib


1
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2
Some Observations on Narrative in Citizen Kane
  • .

By Dr Ismail S Talib
3
Preamble
  • Although my main concentration for this
    additional lecture will be narrative in Citizen
    Kane and in the cinema in general, I will also be
    taking this opportunity to review some of the
    main ideas discussed in the first half of the
    semester.

4
Session Format
  • I will begin with some observations on film and
    narrative and how you may want to view Citizen
    Kane.
  • Students should view the film if they have not
    done so.

5
What you should do
  • You should bear in mind some of the topics we
    have discussed in viewing the film.
  • Although I will be going through some of them in
    relation to the film, there may be some that I
    will overlook.

6
A Fundamental Question
  • A fundamental question in the analysis of cinema
    is how a narrative can be conveyed via
    non-linguistic means
  • While viewing or thinking about the film (or any
    film for that matter) you should ask yourselves
    how this is done.

7
Extension of This Question
  • Although cinema may extend the possibilities of
    narrative via non-linguistic means, there are, as
    you know (earlier in this lecture topic), some
    scholars of cinema who have made use of
    linguistic concepts.
  • How successful are they?
  • Does a movie like Citizen Kane make any
    difference to their theorising?

8
One Problem That Cannot be Resolved?
  • Of course, a limitation of analysing only one
    film is that it is not possible to generalise for
    all films.
  • But Citizen Kane in my view is more
    representative of the art of cinematic narrative
    than many other films.
  • Nonetheless, you should ask yourselves at the
    same time whether its features are really
    generalisable, or if they are, the limits of
    generalisation.

9
Story and Discourse
  • An important issue
  • The significance of discourse in the film story
    remains elusive because of the multiple
    perspectives and the reliability of the main and
    other narrators in the narrative.

10
Setting Micro- and Macro-
  • The difference between micro- and macro-settings
    may be of relevance here
  • What is the default setting? Is there one?

11
Setting Internal and External
  • How are internal and external settings done in
    cinema when compared with narratives in other
    media?
  • How are the changes in the emotional makeup of
    the characters (especially Kane) reflected on
    screen?
  • In this connection, how is setting (both external
    and internal) related to film characterisation?

12
Setting Indirect Presentation
  • How is indirect presentation of setting done in
    cinema?
  • Is it really indirect here?
  • Does narration of a setting bring you there?
  • There are several examples in the film where a
    characters narration brings one back to the
    scenes themselves.
  • This question has to do with the treatment of
    time (anachrony).
  • It also has to do with the nature of the medium.

13
Setting Questions Specific to the Cinema
  • Use of natural settings as opposed to studio
    settings
  • The studio plays an extremely important part in
    Citizen Kane.
  • Setting as seen through the camera
  • Tilting of camera
  • Positioning the camera at a low angle
  • Use of wide-angle lens

14
Setting As Seen By the Camera
  • Use of wide-angle lens
  • Created illusion of space
  • Tilting of camera
  • Positioning the camera at a low angle
  • What happens if the camera is positioned at a
    higher angle?

15
Characterisation Linkage of Characterisation and
Acting
  • How closely linked are characterisation and
    acting in the film?
  • Is the conception of film characterisation and
    acting historically different from what it is
    today?
  • Is this a relevant question
  • Are we less familiar today with the actors who
    make the film?

16
Characterisation Make-Up
  • A question you should ask concerning the medium
    how important is make-up to characterisation?

17
Characterisation Microscopic Nature of Film
Acting
  • How relevant or evident is the microscopic
    nature of film acting in Citizen Kane?

18
Characterisation Contribution of the Camera
  • A further question concerning the medium is the
    contribution made by the camera to
    characterisation some of the points on setting
    mentioned in a previous slide
  • Tilting of camera
  • Positioning the camera at a low angle
  • Use of wide-angle lens
  • Also close-ups and long shots
  • Camera movements.

19
Characterisation Dominant Traits
  • How closely linked are the characters to certain
    dominant traits?
  • Do these result in typecasting?
  • Are the dominant traits appearing in certain
    characters due to the nature of the medium not
    enough time to develop the characters?
  • How closely related are the characters to the
    theme of the movie? Do their dominant traits
    help in developing the theme?

20
Characterisation Mimesis
  • Mimesis quite obviously close to actual human
    beings than in written fiction?

21
Characterisation Mimesis Actual Person
  • The issue of mimesis becomes especially pertinent
    in Citizen Kane, as the character of Kane is
    based on an actual person the newspaper magnate,
    William Randolph Hearst.

22
Characterisation Psychological Depth
  • How much psychological depth is possible in film?

23
Characterisation Ideological Dimension
  • Ideologically, the film is quite obviously a
    reflection of American society at that time 30s
    40s
  • How relevant is it to us?
  • Is our ability / inability to relate to this of
    significance?
  • In this regard, do these difficulties create
    problems in the evaluation of standards of
    behaviour in characterisation?

24
Characterisation Evaluation of Standards of
Behaviour
  • With reference to evaluation of standards of
    behaviour, what is your view of
  • Kanes first wife?
  • Her treatment by him?
  • Or does the movie leave one with insufficient
    grounds for moral judgment?
  • If this is so, what is the reason?

25
Characterisation Kane as Hero
  • What kind of hero is he?
  • Is he really the hero?
  • If hes not the hero, who is?
  • Is the concept of the hero of relevance to the
    movie?

26
Characterisation The Past
  • How important is Kanes past in
  • molding him as a person?

27
Characterisation Direct and Indirect Presentation
  • Are direct and indirect presentation of
    characters distinguishable in this film?
  • This question hinges on the narratives emerging
    from the flashbacks centred on certain
    characters.
  • Perhaps all characterisation in this film is
    indirect? Your answer here is related to
    characterisation in voice-over narration.

28
Events Many More to Choose From
  • As far as events in visual narratives are
    concerned, there are many more in film than in
    the comic strip.
  • Are there too many to choose from in film?

29
Events Macro- and Micro-Sequences
  • Is a discussion of macro- and micro-sequences of
    events relevant to the movie?
  • Or are they merely true but trivial?

30
Events Causality
  • How is causality indicated in the film?
  • Causality may be affected by the reliability of
    narration.
  • Or a more fundamental issue is there really
    causality in the film, and not merely a
    succession of images.

31
Events Analepses Duration
  • Flashbacks analepses how complicated is their
    construction in the film?
  • Duration
  • a) acceleration,
  • b) deceleration,
  • c) ellipsis
  • d) descriptive pause and
  • e) scene.

32
Events Acceleration
  • Looking specifically at acceleration see how
    Kanes deteriorating marriage to his first wife
    is related to us.
  • Whose flashback is involved here? Is the
    character reliable?
  • Are the reasons for Kanes unsatisfactory
    marriage made crystal-clear to us?

33
Events Plot
  • Plot How are the events combined to form the
    plot?
  • Frequency Since the film involves the story
    being told (or discoursed) from various
    perspectives, is there repetition of events in
    the plot?
  • How are suspense and surprise created in the plot?

34
The Narrator / Point-of-View I
  • The question, Is the narrator necessary for
    cinematic narratives?, is perhaps not clearly
    foregrounded in this film. Why is this so?
  • The claim that the narrator is not the author is
    perhaps further complicated by the fact that
    there are autobiographical elements in Citizen
    Kane.

35
The Narrator / Point-of-View II
  • How closely related is the film to first-person
    narratives?
  • The so-called objective point-of-view is
    derived from the conception of narrative
    perspective in terms of the camera eye. How
    objective is point-of-view in the film?
  • How reliable are the narrators and the camera eye
    in the film?

36
The Narrator / Point-of-View III
  • How is suspense or surprise created by what the
    camera reveals / does not reveal to us?
  • What kind of logic is involved in
  • the camera revealing / not revealing certain
    scenes to us?
  • camera angles / movements?

37
The Narrator / Point-of-View IV
  • Differences between camera-eye and voice-over
    narration.
  • What are the instances in the film where there is
    a disjunction between what the camera-eye sees
    and what the voice-over narrator is capable of
    seeing or knowing?
  • Does the disjunction create problems with the
    realism or credibility of the narrative?

38
The Schema
  • What schemas are involved in our response to
    Citizen Kane? Which schemas are
  • cinematic
  • non-cinematic, eg. based on print narratives?
  • Does our ability or inability to appreciate the
    film have a schematic basis?
  • for example, our schemas of what a film should be
    are different from those prevalent when the film
    was made.

39
The Symbol Rosebud
  • Rosebud as a symbol? Of what?
  • Are there any other symbols in the movie?

40
The Symbol Xanadu
In Xanadu did Kubla Khan A stately
pleasure-dome decree Where Alph, the sacred
river, ran Through caverns measureless to man
Down to a sunless sea. So twice five miles of
fertile ground With walls and towers were
girdled round And here were gardens bright with
sinuous rills Where blossomed many an
incense-bearing tree And here were forests
ancient as the hills, Enfolding sunny spots of
greenery.
Significance of Coleridges poem Kubla Khan
(first two stanzas on the right)
41
The Symbol The Real Xanadu
  • Xanadu is of course based on the Hearst estate
    his castle at San Simeon, California. We are
    looking at another definition of symbol here.

42
Music
  • How is music used in Citizen Kane?
  • Use of a leitmotif?

43
The Problem of Authorship
  • Writer
  • Director
  • Cinematographer
  • Camera-eye
  • Actors
  • Producer

44
End of Presentation
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