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Cinema Paradiso [VHS]
 
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Cinema Paradiso [VHS] (1990)

Starring: Philippe Noiret, Enzo Cannavale Director: Giuseppe Tornatore Rating: R (Restricted) Format: VHS Tape
4.6 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (321 customer reviews)

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Product Details


Editorial Reviews

Amazon.com essential video

Giuseppe Tornatore's beautiful 1988 film about a little boy's love affair with the movies deservedly won an Oscar for Best Foreign Film and a Special Jury Prize at Cannes. Philippe Noiret plays a grizzled old projectionist who takes pride in his presentation of screen dreams for a town still recovering from World War II. When a child (Jacques Perrin) demonstrates fascination not only for movies but also for the process of showing them to an audience, a lifelong friendship is struck. This isn't just one of those films for people who are already in love with the cinema. But if you are one of those folks, the emotional resonance between the action in Tornatore's world and the images on Noiret's screen will seem all the greater--and the finale all the more powerful. --Tom Keogh


Amazon.com

Cinema Paradiso's complex, interwoven tales of wartime Italy, a boy's coming of age, and the history of cinema can be viewed in their entirety on the Director's Cut included in this Deluxe Edition. Director Giuseppe Tornatore's additional 50 minutes of footage provides closure for the saga's detailing Alfredo's death, and Salvatore Di Vita's lost relationship with his teenage love, Elena. Most of the 50 minutes serves as a continuation of the story, rather than as previously deleted scenes. The original, already celebrated Cinema Paradiso follows Toto (Jacques Perrin), a Sicilian boy who persuades the town projectionist, Alfredo (Philippe Noiret), to teach him how to show films. Spanning nearly 50 years, the film craftily draws parallels between Toto's life and those lives he sees on screen. As Toto matures into Salvatore, a successful Italian filmmaker, the Cinema Paradiso ages as well. Salvatore's return home for Alfredo's funeral is also a goodbye to his Paradiso, demolished to become a parking lot. The film's heightened sense of nostalgia subtly mirrors our humanistic love of movies, making it a tribute to cinema as an artistic genre. The Director's Cut can be fulfilling if one felt unsatisfied by the more ambiguous ending of the theatrical release, but it also feels slightly overwrought. Two documentaries in this package feature fans and critics praising Cinema Paradiso, proving its endurance as a classic. However, as Salvatore discovers over the course of the film, there is no need to improve a masterpiece. --Trinie Dalton

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Customer Reviews

321 Reviews
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Average Customer Review
4.6 out of 5 stars (321 customer reviews)
 
 
 
 
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Most Helpful Customer Reviews

 
385 of 391 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars What's Different about the New Version, March 9, 2004
By --corinne-- (North Georgia) - See all my reviews
Cinema Paradiso is one of my favorite movies. I finally found the new version available for rent through Netflix when I couldn't find it in any Blockbuster.
For those who have already seen Cinema Paradiso it needs no introduction. For everybody else, it won the Academy Award for Foreign Language Film in 1989 and features one of the most nostalgic treatments of the role of movies in people's lives. Ennio Morricone's theme song has also been recycled in countless commercials and movie montages and trailers.
What's good about the Director's Cut or "New Version" DVD is that one can view the director's cut with added scenes on one DVD side and the originally released version on the other.
For those of us who wanted some kind of closure to Toto and Elena's relationship, the Director's Cut has it-- there's about an hour more of footage of their relationship. The new version also more footage of Toto's military service and his adulthood. The added scenes somewhat mute the focus of the movie, so I could see why they were originally cut out. But, at the same time, the added scenes fill in the blanks that originally made a lot of us think, "Hey-- What about...?" And although Toto's childhood scenes are, as far as I can tell, unchanged from the original version, we also find out more about Alfredo.
After finishing the New Version I appreciated the original version better. I highly recommend the new version not because it makes Cinema Paradiso more of a masterpiece, but because it adds more characterization to what, arguably, is a masterpiece. The added scenes can be a bit superfluous, but they show how important editorial decisions are to shaping the structure and momentum of a movie.
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119 of 128 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Begs the question: When is a movie too long?, February 24, 2003
I became aware of the existence of over 50 minutes of additional scenes in this film in the past two years. The original, pruned version received the Academy Award for Best Foreign Language Film in 1990. I have owned the video for a decade. Then, last summer, the "new version" was shown in limited release, and a DVD was promised. With the addition of the deleted scenes, an entirely different film is created. Owning this DVD is owning a brand new version of the film's events.

Initially, the film was considered too long, and massive scenes were cut, removing any and all references to whatever happened to Salvatore's great love, Lina. The original version of the film focused mainly on the young boy, fatherless in post-WWII Sicily, bonding with the childless cinema projectionist, Alfredo. The young Toto grows into the teen-aged Salvatore, who falls in love with the beautiful and unattainable Lina. They are parted. That is the last we see. Salvatore returns to his village many years later to attend the funeral of Alfredo, and the film is told nearly entirely in flashback.

In this version, Salvatore is reunited with his lost love when he returns for the funeral. To think that this entire plot was removed from the film initially is almost unthinkable. There are other parts of the film that could have been edited to keep these additional scenes in. I don't know what the producers, directors or the studio were thinking when they edited a huge part of the movie out.

Well, now the film is complete. Whereas the original version focused mainly on the relationship of Toto and Alfredo, we now see a conclusion to Toto and Lina as well. And, we understand the ending of the film in an entirely, much less sentimental light. Salvatore has spent the bulk of his life mourning his lost love, not returning to his village, and not knowing of Alfredo's hand in the matter. He is facing life-changing decisions, and must ultimately dip into a pool of acceptance and forgiveness. Without the addition of these scenes, the point is lost.

This was an excellent film to begin with, now it is nearly perfect. It is bittersweet and touching, and all the more realistic with the deleted scenes returned. If you own the original version, you must own this version. You will see this film in a completely different light.

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32 of 32 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars A story of hope and love perfectly done - Bravo!, August 17, 1999
By A Customer
This review is from: Cinema Paradiso [VHS] (VHS Tape)
I must have watched this film 25 times and i know I'll watch it 25 more. I can't wait to watch it with my newborn daughter when she is old enough to understand. The message of hope and love is so strong in this film. When I visited the small Sicilian town of my father's ancestors I saw the same hope and love amongst its people. In a place that is in such dire straits by our standards I saw loveing people who truly cared about one another, whose love went so far beyond the materialistic. This movie portrays this so well. ALl that we see and hear, Alfredo is perfect what a father he would make and did make to young Toto. Toto's mother's resilience in contacting him. The scene at the end when Toto is seeing all the people he new from his youth, older and still in the same situation yet still happy and hopeful, and when our homeless friend walks through and states "La piazza mia." who can say they didn't cry but with a smile on their faces. A true masterpiece, I think I'll go and watch it right now. It truly is Paradiso.
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Most Recent Customer Reviews

5.0 out of 5 stars A Classic!
One of the great movies of all times! Everyone should have a copy, and view it once every couple of years.
Published 22 days ago by Sunshine

5.0 out of 5 stars A very human,romantic&magical movie
I love this movie, nostalgic, romantic ,moving.Its an Oscar winner for best picture in a foreign language in 1990. Read more
Published 1 month ago by Ilmi Castro

5.0 out of 5 stars Cinema Paridiso
This fabulous film I saw in a theater and wanted to own it. I do not mind the subtitles.
Published 1 month ago by Carol Schlotterbeck

5.0 out of 5 stars Cinema Paradiso
Amazing foreign film, I loved it, and I actually bought it for a good friend of mine as a birthday gift.
Published 1 month ago by Matt

5.0 out of 5 stars Cinema Paradiso
The package came in great condition as promised with all the items described. We couldn't be any happier.
Published 3 months ago by Eric A. Toral

5.0 out of 5 stars What a surprise!!!!
Cinema Paradiso is one of my favorite movies. I can't even count how many times I have seen it. I was unaware of the existence of the Directors Cut until recently. Read more
Published 4 months ago by Ladd A. Boris

5.0 out of 5 stars A perfect movie
World War II has just ended and life in the Sicilian village of Giancaldo centers around the Cinema Paradiso where townsfolk gather to see the exciting and glamorous world... Read more
Published 5 months ago by Kona

5.0 out of 5 stars A Movie About Loss and Recovery--The Writing is as Superb as the Camerawork
There is too much in this film. It is medieval or baroque in its symbolism and relentlessly postmodern in its conclusions. Read more
Published 6 months ago by P. Costello

5.0 out of 5 stars ...and twenty stars more--what a work of genius !!!
Cinema Paradiso is one of those rare motion pictures that says something remarkably meaningful and it truly succeeds by any measure. Read more
Published 8 months ago by Matthew G. Sherwin

5.0 out of 5 stars Fantastic movie
I love this movie. I met the director at the Academy of the Motion Pictures during the foreign movies symposiom. Read more
Published 8 months ago by Karine Armen

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