Difference between revisions of "Citizen Kane"
Wikisimpsons - The Simpsons Wiki
Simpsons88 (talk | contribs) m |
(→References to Citizen Kane in The Simpsons) |
||
Line 21: | Line 21: | ||
{{TB|017}} | {{TB|017}} | ||
{{TB|"[[Two Cars in Every Garage and Three Eyes on Every Fish]]"}} | {{TB|"[[Two Cars in Every Garage and Three Eyes on Every Fish]]"}} | ||
− | {{TB|The scene where Mr. Burns is trying to be elected as governor in front of a large black and white poster of his own face references a similar scene in the movie where Kane is trying to be elected president. Later, when Burns' election campaign begins to | + | {{TB|The scene where [[Mr. Burns]] is trying to be elected as governor in front of a large black and white poster of his own face references a similar scene in the movie where Kane is trying to be elected president. Later, when Burns' election campaign begins to plummet he shouts, "You can't do this to me. I'm Charles Montgomery Burns!" This is a parody of the line that Kane speaks when he fails in getting elected, "You can't do this to me. I'm Charles Foster Kane."}} |
{{TBT|[[File:Homer playing with paper.png|250px]]}} | {{TBT|[[File:Homer playing with paper.png|250px]]}} | ||
{{TRs|[[Season 4|4]]|3}} | {{TRs|[[Season 4|4]]|3}} | ||
{{TB|061}} | {{TB|061}} | ||
{{TB|"[[A Streetcar Named Marge]]"}} | {{TB|"[[A Streetcar Named Marge]]"}} | ||
− | {{TB|When Homer watches the musical rendition of "[[A Streetcar Named Desire]]" he becomes uninterested and begins amusing himself by playing with a piece of paper, similar to the way a bored Joseph Cotten does in the theater audience while watching the opera in which Kane's mistress performs.}} | + | {{TB|When [[Homer]] watches the musical rendition of "[[A Streetcar Named Desire]]" he becomes uninterested and begins amusing himself by playing with a piece of paper, similar to the way a bored Joseph Cotten does in the theater audience while watching the opera in which Kane's mistress performs.}} |
{{TBT|[[File:Smithers' dance act for Mr. Burns.png|250px]]}} | {{TBT|[[File:Smithers' dance act for Mr. Burns.png|250px]]}} | ||
{{TB|066}} | {{TB|066}} | ||
Line 59: | Line 59: | ||
{{TB|229}} | {{TB|229}} | ||
{{TB|"[[Guess Who's Coming to Criticize Dinner?]]"}} | {{TB|"[[Guess Who's Coming to Criticize Dinner?]]"}} | ||
− | {{TB|When the Simpsons were in the Mall they see a cane in a glass case and Lisa comments "Oh, look, there's the cane from ''Citizen Kane''", and then Homer, Marge and Bart give each other confused looks and walk off purposefully, leading Lisa to reprimand herself: "Wait a minute... there was no cane in ''Citizen Kane''".}} | + | {{TB|When the Simpsons were in the Mall they see a cane in a glass case and [[Lisa]] comments "Oh, look, there's the cane from ''Citizen Kane''", and then Homer, [[Marge]] and [[Bart]] give each other confused looks and walk off purposefully, leading Lisa to reprimand herself: "Wait a minute... there was no cane in ''Citizen Kane''".}} |
{{TBT|[[File:Wiggum with Orson Welles.png|250px]]}} | {{TBT|[[File:Wiggum with Orson Welles.png|250px]]}} | ||
{{TB|[[Season 18|18]]}} | {{TB|[[Season 18|18]]}} |
Revision as of 18:28, November 14, 2020
Citizen Kane is a 1941 film, directed by and starring Orson Welles. It was his debut movie and featured a lot of cinematic innovations, alongside a powerful story about the rise and fall of a newspaper tycoon, Charles Foster Kane. The film became a classic and is often called "the greatest film of all time" by film critics and therefore frequently referenced on The Simpsons. So much, in fact, that one of the writers claimed that it may be, alongside The Godfather, the most parodied film on the show.
References to Citizen Kane in The Simpsons
Episodes
|
Comics
|
External links