Mr. Arkadin (1955)
Orson Welles’s “Mr. Arkadin”
Thematic Elements:
Mr. Arkadin is essentially just a story of a powerful man trying to cover up his dark past and obscure how he was able to come into his wealth and power. Perhaps Orson is suggesting that the war criminals of the second world war have largely profited off of their sinister actions and are using their newfound wealth to cover up their immoral origins. The investigator meets various people involved with Arkadin’s sex ring only to paint a very hazy picture of the real Mr. Arkadin. This is very similar to the structure of Welles’s Citizen Kane. Welles’s is saying that one can not truly know these powerful people and these powerful people will do anything to keep it that way.
Camerawork:
Welles uses his typical Wellesian canted angles and deep focus with disorienting cuts which seem to push the viewer further and further away as the investigator gets closer and closer to the truth.
Best Shot:
The best shots in the film are the scenes in which the investigator is talking with Arkadin’s daughter as they stroll through town. Arkadin’s mansion is constantly overlooking them in every shot, as if to suggest that this man is so powerful that you cannot escape his reach and his power is always foreboding over the citizens lower than him.
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