10 Failed Movies That Only Found Their Audience On TV

By Ian Watson /

1. Citizen Kane (1941)

When RKO became one of the first studios to sell its library of films to television, viewers were able to evaluate Orson Welles€™s debut feature without the furore that marked its initial release. Even before it reached cinemas, the story of a William Randolph Hearst-like publisher attracted the ire of Hearst himself, who used his influence to smear Welles, calling him a Communist and attempting to suppress his picture. Depending upon who you believe, Radio City Music Hall€™s managers refused to host the premiere while several other theatre owners, fearing a lawsuit from the publisher, declined to screen the film, prompting Welles to threaten RKO with legal proceedings of his own. Promoted as a love story, the picture played to mostly empty houses, losing the studio hundreds of thousands of dollars. Citizen Kane€™s status as €œThe Greatest Film Ever Made€ grew after it gained popularity on television, where it caught the attention of critic Andrew Sarris, who called it €œthe work that influenced the cinema more profoundly than any American film since Birth Of A Nation.€ Propelled by similarly laudatory reviews from Pauline Kael and David Thomson, Kane topped Sight & Sound€™s top ten list for the first time in 1962, a position it held until 2012 when it was dethroned by Hitchcock€™s Vertigo. Which other classic movies weren't treated as such until they got on TV? Share any missed down in the comments.