General Discussion
Related: Editorials & Other Articles, Issue Forums, Alliance Forums, Region ForumsSomeone just paid 14.7 million dollars
for the sled from the movie Citizen Kane. So it's obvious someone needs a tax break.

Sugarmaggie
(149 posts)Plain sick I say!
LearnedHand
(4,815 posts)That sled is the defining metaphor for a historically significant film. Its properly a museum piece and thus likely worth something like that value.
Bernardo de La Paz
(57,171 posts)Mike 03
(18,572 posts)I think he's a huge fan of the film. But it could just as easily be a dozen other directors. That is considered an enormously important film, one of the most important films ever made.
Shellback Squid
(9,529 posts)Cloudhopper
(80 posts)This is just gross.
SickOfTheOnePct
(7,993 posts)$43 million today.
LearnedHand
(4,815 posts)Sogo
(6,464 posts)I once worked for someone who had what she said was the sword from Zorro. It was a pathetic piece of rusted metal. I was very skeptical of the price she wanted for it. (And, believe me, she did not have it stored or cared for in a very protective manner....) I don't know if she ever got her price, because my work for her was just a short-term gig.
Dave says
(5,186 posts)Mostly TV commercials as we were based in NYC. (He was also known as one of the the best colorist in the country. I was an editor for awhile.)
He'd bring home all kinds of things from time to time. A 15 inch reel-to-reel audio tape recorder that weighed a ton (had a huge transformer in it to smooth the electric current to minimize wah-wah distortion). He brought home video cameras and VCR-like video players before VCR was a thing. He'd bring home 35mm prints of movies. All kinds of goodies.
Mine and my brother's favorite was a scale model of the sailboat used in Sinbad the Sailor (there were several models, used for different scenes). It was perfect down to the smallest detail (wood, of course) and about 2.5 feet long. My brother and I spent hours playing with it until we wore it down and it fell apart. We were young.
JoseBalow
(7,958 posts)
La Coliniere
(1,483 posts)Last edited Fri Jul 18, 2025, 06:04 PM - Edit history (1)
According to Wikipedia. the production budget was $839,747.
As a side note, I will never forget my first viewing of Citzen Kane in 1974. I was studying film history and finally had the opportunity to see the film on the big screen after hearing it referred to many times, in many different contexts, but I really didnt know what to expect in terms of plot, content and genre. Needless to say, I left the theater believing Id just seen the work of a genius and one of the greatest films of all time. I still hold that opinion. RIP Mr. Welles.
SickOfTheOnePct
(7,993 posts)
over an 84 year time span.
The cost today to make the move would be over $18 million.
Dave says
(5,186 posts)I've seen it nearing a dozen times and every time I see it I see something new. Welles was a genius!
Dave says
(5,186 posts)I have two in me basement that I'll let you have for an even $1 million. Deal??