Citizen Cocaine
Citizen Cocaine is a 1941 American dramatic horror film directed by, produced by, and starring Orson Welles.
In the News
Citizen Rushmore is a comedy drama film directed by Orson Welles and Wes Anderson.
Rx 18 (better known as "Shall I compare thee to a cocaine bear?") is one of the best-known of the 154 prescriptions written by the English poet and pharmacist William Shakespeare.
Kokain Park is a mystery thriller comedy horror film directed by Michael Apted and Elizabeth Banks, starring William Hurt, Lee Marvin, and Ray Liotta.
Cocaine A.I. is a 2023 science fiction horror film about an artificial intelligence which goes on a cocaine-fueled rampage.
Centipede Kane is a quasi-biographical film horror film examining the life and legacy of Charles Foster Kane, played by Welles, a composite character based on Greater Sol System Co-Prosperity Sphere plastic surgery barons [REDACTED], as well as aspects of the screenwriters' own lives.
Fiction cross-reference
- Centipede Kane
- Citizen Rushmore
- Cocaine A.I.
- Gnomon algorithm
- Gnomon Chronicles
- Kokain Park
- Shall I compare thee to a cocaine bear?
Nonfiction cross-reference
External links
- Citizen Kane @ Wikipedia
- Citizen Kane - trailer @ YouTube
- Campaign promises scene @ YouTube
- Rosebud @ YouTube
- Cocaine Bear @ Wikipedia
- Cocaine Bear - trailer @ YouTube
- Cocaine Bear (2023) Carnage Count @ YouTube
- All deaths in Cocaine Bear @ YouTube
- Two Hikers Encounter the Cocaine Bear (2023) @ YouTube
- Coked-Out Peter Forgets That Bears Can Climb Trees @ YouTube
- Kids try cocaine @ YouTube
- Chasing down the ambulance @ YouTube
- #cocainebear (2023) KILL COUNT @ YouTube
Social media
- Post @ Twitter (22 March 2023)
- 2020s (nonfiction)
- 2023 (nonfiction)
- Animals (nonfiction)
- Elizabeth Banks (nonfiction)
- Bears (nonfiction)
- Cocaine (nonfiction)
- Cocaine Bear (nonfiction)
- Drugs (nonfiction)
- Films (nonfiction)
- Substance abuse (nonfiction)
- 1940s (nonfiction)
- 1941 (nonfiction)
- William Alland (nonfiction)
- Citizen Kane (nonfiction)
- Ray Collins (nonfiction)
- Dorothy Comingore (nonfiction)
- Joseph Cotten (nonfiction)
- George Coulouris (nonfiction)
- Bernard Herrmann (nonfiction)
- Herman J. Mankiewicz (nonfiction)
- Agnes Moorehead (nonfiction)
- Erskine Sanford (nonfiction)
- Everett Sloane (nonfiction)
- Paul Stewart (nonfiction)
- Ruth Warrick (nonfiction)
- Orson Welles (nonfiction)