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The Theme Of Citizen Kane

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Identity is an essential part of all our lives. Our actions determine our identity, and in turn, our identity structures our actions. One’s desire to seek a self-identity is an essential for the alignment of his or her pursuit of happiness. However, when such desire to fulfill one’s standards grows too strong, one might neglect other parts of his or her life. This neglect could lead to graver consequences, such as one’s sensations of failure and even his own downfall. In movie Citizen Kane, the director Orson Welles presents a complex and pessimistic theme of a spiritually-failed man, Charles Foster Kane, through discovering his life story from several perspective by different characters, to tell a tragic epic story of a “rags-to-riches” child …show more content…

Thompson learns that Kane’s childhood began in poverty in Colorado. His mother sends Kane away, at age of 8, to live with Walter Parks Thatcher, a successful banker, so that he can have a better life and may be better educated. This involuntarily abrupt separation keeps him growing into the petulant, insatiable, and aggressive adolescent he is today. Growing up, Kane never develops any emotionally attachment to Parks Thatcher and he disregards Thatcher’s any attempts at discipline and …show more content…

For citizen Kane, the most important assets of his life are not the political ambitions, successful newspaper business, nor his relationships with the significant others. Judging by his last word, “Rosebud,” the most important piece of his life is memory from his childhood. Although his life is changed for what appears to be better, from a materialistic viewpoint, it actually leaves him vulnerable and alone. Kane’s life is ultimately destructed by his lust to fulfill the American dream of fame, power and wealth. The inevitable struggle of Kane is reflective of the struggle of many must confront in this materialistic world, as one on his or her quest to find the true meaning of

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