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  1. 27 de oct. de 2011 · I've always felt Orson Welles' second feature, the memory-movie masterpiece "The Magnificent Ambersons," got a bad rap because: 1) it isn't "Citizen Kane"; and 2) it isn't the perfect creation Welles intended it to be because, as we all know, RKO re-cut and re-shot parts of it, including the last two scenes (which are so not Welles they don't really affect you much; they're like background ...

  2. There are three alternate versions to The Magnificent Ambersons; none exist anymore: the original version, Orson Welles' first cut, is the only one that has any type of record that exists. It was 132 minutes long. It included an extended ball sequence, an extended sequence of Jack and George in the kitchen, a completely different ending, as ...

  3. 24 de ene. de 2014 · Orson Welles's film The Magnificent Ambersons has the greatest end credits of all time.

    • 1 min
    • 6.5K
    • Pet infestation gaming [GD]
  4. 5 de dic. de 2013 · Had its original ending been kept, 'The Magnificent Ambersons' would prove Orson Welles one of Hollywood’s masters of tragedy, if not the greatest.

  5. The Magnificent Ambersons: Directed by Orson Welles, Fred Fleck, Robert Wise. With Joseph Cotten, Dolores Costello, Anne Baxter, Tim Holt. The spoiled young heir to the decaying Amberson fortune comes between his widowed mother and the man she has always loved.

    • 2 min
    • 147
  6. Since both films well pre-date the preservationist era of film-as-art-and-heritage—Greed was released in 1925, The Magnificent Ambersons in 1942—they have suffered the further indignity of being unreconstructible; studios back in those days didn’t hang on to excised footage for the sake of future director’s cuts on DVD, so the reels upon reels of nitrate film trimmed from the original ...

  7. Plot Summary. The Magnificent Ambersons is a 1918 novel written by Booth Tarkington, which won the 1919 Pulitzer Prize for Fiction. It is the second novel of his trilogy called Growth. The story is set mainly in a fictionalized version of Indianapolis and was greatly inspired by the neighborhood of Woodruff Place.