|
Cinema Paradiso (1988, It./Fr.)
(aka Nuovo Cinema Paradiso)
In writer/director Giuseppe Tornatore's sentimental
homage to the movies, and a look back to boyhood, that won the Oscar
for Best Foreign Language Film:
- the image of young Salvatore "Toto" Di
Vita (Salvatore Cascio as child) peeking through a curtain during
the projection of Verso La Vita (1936) in Cinema Paradiso,
as the village priest Father Adelfio (Leopoldo Trieste) watched
- and rang a bell (to alert the projectionist Alfredo (Philippe
Noiret)) every time there was an image or scene that needed to
be censored and deleted
- the reprimand scene when young "Toto" was
disciplined by his mother Maria (Pupella Maggio) for lying about
the family's fifty lire of milk money: ("It got stolen")
- and instead spending it at the theatre: ("You spent it at
the movies...Movies, always movies!"); the young boy was saved
from a beating by Alfredo, who covered up for him and claimed that
the boy lost the money in the theatre (after being admitted for free)
- the scene of teenaged projectionist Salvatore (nicknamed
Toto) (Marco Leonardi as teenager) of the local Cinema Paradiso movie
theatre being advised by his loving, blinded mentor/surrogate father
Alfredo to leave the small Sicilian town of Giancaldo (and go to
Rome), and to never return or look back: ("Get out of here.
This land is cursed. Living here day after day. you think it's the
center of the world. You believe nothing will ever change. Then you
leave for a year or two. When you come back, everything's changed,
the thread's broken. What you came to find isn't there. What was
yours is gone. You have to go away for a long time, many years before
you can come back and find your people. The land where you were born.
But not now, it's not possible. Right now, you're more blind than
I was....Life isn't like in the movies. Life is much harder. Get
out of here! Go back to Rome. You're young and the world is yours.
And I'm old. I don't want to hear you talk anymore. I want to hear
others talking about you.")
- further words of advice from Alfredo to Salvatore
at the train station ready to depart the town: ("Don't come
back. Don't think about us. Don't look back. Don't write. Don't give
in to nostalgia. Forget us all. If you do and you come back, don't
come see me. I won't let you in my house. Understand?"). Toto
then thanked Alfredo: ("Thank you. For everything you've done
for me.") Alfredo's last words were: ("Whatever you end
up doing, love it. The way you loved the projection booth when you
were a little squirt")
- the euphoric scene of middle-aged, prominent Italian
film director Salvatore Di Vita (Jacques Perrin) returning to his
childhood, small-town Sicilian home of Giancaldo after 30 years to
revisit the condemned Cinema Paradiso theatre in the town
square (where he was a projectionist through his teenaged years),
when it was destroyed to make way for a city parking lot
- Salvatore's recalling of a short romance with a rich
banker's pretty daughter, a blonde, blue-eyed classmate named Elena
Mendola (Agnese Nano) - when he was keeping vigil outside her window
for 100 nights, and then Elena's miraculous appearance after he had
given up hope, when she came to him in the projectionist booth and
kissed him lovingly - making him forget his responsibilities when
the film reel ran out causing patrons to complain: ("The movie's
over. Turn the lights on")
- Elena's and Salvatore's reunion during a hot summer
night when he was lying on his back and looking at the sky during
the outdoor screening of Ulysses (1954) starring Kirk Douglas,
imagining a Hollywood romance and kiss with Elena (one similar to
all the scenes excised by the priest from the projected reels). He
asked himself: ("When will this rotten summer end? In a film,
it'd already be over. Fade-out: cut to storm. Wouldn't that be great?")
The skies suddenly opened up with pouring rain as Elena appeared
out of nowhere above him and began hungrily kissing him. Astonished,
he asked: "Elena -- But when?" She told him: "Today.
You can't imagine the excuses I made up to come here."
- 30 years later in town to attend the funeral of his
kind-hearted mentor/surrogate father Alfredo, his widow presented
Salvatore with a gift of one last reel of film, which he took back
with him to Rome and screened
Grown-Up Salvatore Viewing the Censored Snippets
Film Reel
|
|
|
|
- the viewing of the reel, with all of the excised
and censored kisses (presented in an amorous montage -
two stills shown above) that the village priest Father Adelfio
(Leopoldo Trieste) had ordered snipped from dozens of films shown
there during Toto's childhood - the images brought tears to his
eyes
|
Young Salvatore
"Toto" Di Vita
Reprimand of Young Toto by His Mother Maria
Advice to Salvatore (Toto) From Mentor/Surrogate Father
Alfredo
Romance with Elena
Kissing in Pouring Rain
|