Citizen Kane trailer

http://dbpedia.org/resource/Citizen_Kane_trailer an entity of type: Thing

The Citizen Kane trailer is a four-minute, self-contained, "making of" promotional featurette by Orson Welles and the Mercury Theatre, released in 1940 to promote the film Citizen Kane. Unlike other standard theatrical trailers of the era, it did not feature any footage of the actual film itself, but was a wholly original pseudo-documentary piece. It is considered by numerous film scholars such as Simon Callow, Joseph McBride and Jonathan Rosenbaum to be a standalone short film, rather than a conventional "trailer", and to represent an important stage in the development of Welles's directorial style. rdf:langString
rdf:langString Citizen Kane trailer
rdf:langString Citizen Kane
rdf:langString Citizen Kane
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rdf:langString Paul Stewart
rdf:langString Ray Collins
rdf:langString Everett Sloane
rdf:langString Agnes Moorehead
rdf:langString Joseph Cotten
rdf:langString Ruth Warrick
rdf:langString George Coulouris
rdf:langString Dorothy Comingore
rdf:langString Ending title card
rdf:langString Erskine Sanford
rdf:langString United States
rdf:langString vertical
rdf:langString Citizen Kane-Agnes Moorehead2.JPG
rdf:langString Citizen Kane-Dorothy Comingore.JPG
rdf:langString Citizen Kane-Erskine Sanford2.JPG
rdf:langString Citizen Kane-Everett Sloane.JPG
rdf:langString Citizen Kane-Jo Cotten.jpg
rdf:langString Citizen Kane-Paul Stewart.JPG
rdf:langString Citizen Kane-Ray Collins.JPG
rdf:langString Citizen-Kane-Coulouris.jpg
rdf:langString Citizen-Kane-Warrick.jpg
rdf:langString English
rdf:langString Orson Welles
rdf:langString Orson Welles
xsd:integer 1940
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rdf:langString Orson Welles
rdf:langString The Citizen Kane trailer is a four-minute, self-contained, "making of" promotional featurette by Orson Welles and the Mercury Theatre, released in 1940 to promote the film Citizen Kane. Unlike other standard theatrical trailers of the era, it did not feature any footage of the actual film itself, but was a wholly original pseudo-documentary piece. It is considered by numerous film scholars such as Simon Callow, Joseph McBride and Jonathan Rosenbaum to be a standalone short film, rather than a conventional "trailer", and to represent an important stage in the development of Welles's directorial style.
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xsd:nonNegativeInteger 12343
xsd:double 240.0

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