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Director Guiseppe Tornatore's bittersweet, Oscar-winning film focuses on the effect that cinema had on the inhabitants of a small Sicilian village during World War Two. After receiving news of the death of his old friend Alfredo, a famous movie director returns to his home village after spending 30 years away. In flashback, he recalls his fatherless childhood, his fascination with the films he saw at the local cinema, and his adventures with Alfredo, the cinema's projectionist. This director's cut features an extra 50 minutes of footage. Review: Mostly good Blu-ray transfer of one of my favorite films - Cinema Paradiso is one of my all-time favorite films. It tells the story of a successful Italian movie executive who looks back on his early life growing up in post-World War II Italy. We see him as a mischievous altar boy with a love for movies, and then as a teenager who falls in love with the new girl in town. Guiding him along the way is Alfredo, the grizzled projectionist at the movie theater, who becomes a father figure to him. This is a sentimental movie, but it is not cheesy. There is both love and heartache. A love for movies oozes from every pore of this film. In fact, it may be the best movie ever made about movies. The final sequence is one of the best scenes ever filmed--it brings me to tears every time. Cinema Paradiso is currently rated #73 on the IMDB Top 250. It won the 1990 Academy Award for Best Foreign Film, as well as a slew of other awards. The quality of the Blu-ray transfer is mostly good. Most daytime scenes are richly detailed. There are a couple shots, however, that are very poor in quality. They looked like VHS. Thankfully, they were brief. Nighttime and indoor scenes vary in quality. Some are sharp, while others are grainy (although never to the point of being gritty). The sound varies as well. The dialogue at the beginning of the movie sounds like it was being uttered in a tin can. But this was soon corrected. Thankfully, the moving score by legendary composer Ennio Morricone comes through well. My old DVD version had both subtitles and a dubbed version that was actually pretty good. This Blu-ray edition has only subtitles, however; the dubbed version is missing. Nor does it have any special features other than the original theatrical trailer. Thankfully, this disc did not include the director's cut, which I hate. It adds about 30 minutes of material that wraps up the love interest portion of the film, but there is a reason that it was cut from the US theatrical release. It turns Cinema Paradiso into a different movie, and that is not a good thing. Parental Advisory: This movie is rated PG for a few instances of sexuality, mostly implied. There are a couple of very brief scenes that show upper female nudity (they are clips of old black-and-white movies) and one scene that shows bare buttocks. There is some mild violence. In a couple of scenes, a mother slaps her child repeatedly. There is also a scene where a teacher is punishing a student for poor performance in the classroom. A scene involving a fire might be intense for younger children. I highly recommend Cinema Paradiso. It is one of the best films ever made. It is a "must see." If you are considering an upgrade from DVD, the improved video clarity makes it worth it. But the loss of some of the special features, particular the dubbed version, is a bummer. Review: A masterpiece to be treasured - This movie is such a treasure and I have owned it over the years in a number of different formats. For those who love sentimentality, you are in for a delight as a successful movie director returns home after many year’s absence. Through interactions with his little, old mother, his fellow citizens of the little town and various sentimental items his mother has kept, he is transported back to his youth. Tornatore has captured a beautiful age where community and family were everything and life was simple but lovely too. He takes us back to a time we all look back on with an attachment and fond memories. Maestro Morricone’s score will capture your heart and have you in tears, especially the tracks the great violinist Stefan Grapelli plays on. Listen to those songs and you will realise you are listening to a maestro. The ending of the theatrical release is a real tear jerker and one of the most beautiful endings in cinematic history. It’s worth watching this movie if just for the ending alone. Cinema Paradiso is a terrific tribute to the movie industry and especially the Italian film industry. It is one of those movies you will watch a few times over the years and enjoy each time as much as the first time. Hopefully, your children and grandchildren will experience it too.
| Customer Reviews | 4.6 out of 5 stars 3,663 Reviews |
| Format | Director's Cut, NTSC |
| Language | Italian |
| Number Of Discs | 1 |
| Runtime | 1 hour and 20 minutes |
D**D
Mostly good Blu-ray transfer of one of my favorite films
Cinema Paradiso is one of my all-time favorite films. It tells the story of a successful Italian movie executive who looks back on his early life growing up in post-World War II Italy. We see him as a mischievous altar boy with a love for movies, and then as a teenager who falls in love with the new girl in town. Guiding him along the way is Alfredo, the grizzled projectionist at the movie theater, who becomes a father figure to him. This is a sentimental movie, but it is not cheesy. There is both love and heartache. A love for movies oozes from every pore of this film. In fact, it may be the best movie ever made about movies. The final sequence is one of the best scenes ever filmed--it brings me to tears every time. Cinema Paradiso is currently rated #73 on the IMDB Top 250. It won the 1990 Academy Award for Best Foreign Film, as well as a slew of other awards. The quality of the Blu-ray transfer is mostly good. Most daytime scenes are richly detailed. There are a couple shots, however, that are very poor in quality. They looked like VHS. Thankfully, they were brief. Nighttime and indoor scenes vary in quality. Some are sharp, while others are grainy (although never to the point of being gritty). The sound varies as well. The dialogue at the beginning of the movie sounds like it was being uttered in a tin can. But this was soon corrected. Thankfully, the moving score by legendary composer Ennio Morricone comes through well. My old DVD version had both subtitles and a dubbed version that was actually pretty good. This Blu-ray edition has only subtitles, however; the dubbed version is missing. Nor does it have any special features other than the original theatrical trailer. Thankfully, this disc did not include the director's cut, which I hate. It adds about 30 minutes of material that wraps up the love interest portion of the film, but there is a reason that it was cut from the US theatrical release. It turns Cinema Paradiso into a different movie, and that is not a good thing. Parental Advisory: This movie is rated PG for a few instances of sexuality, mostly implied. There are a couple of very brief scenes that show upper female nudity (they are clips of old black-and-white movies) and one scene that shows bare buttocks. There is some mild violence. In a couple of scenes, a mother slaps her child repeatedly. There is also a scene where a teacher is punishing a student for poor performance in the classroom. A scene involving a fire might be intense for younger children. I highly recommend Cinema Paradiso. It is one of the best films ever made. It is a "must see." If you are considering an upgrade from DVD, the improved video clarity makes it worth it. But the loss of some of the special features, particular the dubbed version, is a bummer.
M**K
A masterpiece to be treasured
This movie is such a treasure and I have owned it over the years in a number of different formats. For those who love sentimentality, you are in for a delight as a successful movie director returns home after many year’s absence. Through interactions with his little, old mother, his fellow citizens of the little town and various sentimental items his mother has kept, he is transported back to his youth. Tornatore has captured a beautiful age where community and family were everything and life was simple but lovely too. He takes us back to a time we all look back on with an attachment and fond memories. Maestro Morricone’s score will capture your heart and have you in tears, especially the tracks the great violinist Stefan Grapelli plays on. Listen to those songs and you will realise you are listening to a maestro. The ending of the theatrical release is a real tear jerker and one of the most beautiful endings in cinematic history. It’s worth watching this movie if just for the ending alone. Cinema Paradiso is a terrific tribute to the movie industry and especially the Italian film industry. It is one of those movies you will watch a few times over the years and enjoy each time as much as the first time. Hopefully, your children and grandchildren will experience it too.
A**G
A beautiful masterpiece that grabs your heart
Once in a while, a film comes along and dazzles audiences with its smooth viewability, if that is a word, brilliant acting, and well crafted plotline. In the case of Cinema Paradiso, we see these elements combined with a stunningly soothing musical score, excellent cinematography, and a combination of comedic, romantic, and dramatic moments. This film starts in the present, presenting us with the main character, Toto, as an old man, well into his fifties, returning to his hometown to hear his lifetime friend and mentor Alfredo has died. What follows for the duration of the film allows us to see his childhood, his adolescence, and the way he fights through tumultuous times of love, disaster, and peril. Along the way, we are able to see his constant love for the movies and slowly evolving romance with the beautiful Elena. The romantic moments in this movie are especially touching, as are the scenes in which we see Toto struggle to win Elena's love. What makes this film a truly brilliant one is the way everything wraps itself up in the end. We are able to see the people from his youth aged into the present, and the film ends on a perfect close. There are no loose ends to be tied up, and I admit that I became a little teary eyed throughout the last 20 minutes. The scenes of Alfredo's funeral and the destruction of the Paradiso are very sad, and will make you think of good times long forgotten, save but in your heart. I recommend this movie to anyone. I am a college student, and I have loved this movie since the first time I saw it on an airplane when I was 8...admittedly, I can understand and appreciate it much more with age. It is a perfect date movie, and also makes for a nice way to spend an evening with a friend or even by yourself. Buy it today. I guarantee you'll love the story and music.
A**O
A Beautiful and Tear-Jerking Masterpiece
I had first seen the movie streaming on Amazon Prime, and it was the theatrical cut of the film. My goodness, is every second of this movie a wonderful sight to behold. The friendship between Alfredo and Toto is one that'll have your heart feeling full, and the interactions between the townsfolk they live around really make you feel like you've been part of their community for years; it all feels so genuine, so lived in. Ennio Morricone's score will stay in your head long after the film is over, particularly the piece that plays during the ending, which is one of the best endings I have ever seen in cinema history. Make sure to have a tissue box because you WILL cry at some point. The Arrow Video restoration is gorgeous and worth every penny. I do recommend the theatrical cut over the director's cut. It's a fantastic film.
M**E
Best Movie For Those Who Love Films
I've always enjoyed foreign films. But, my all time 'favorite' is a movie which I watch over and over, and I'm sure when you see this movie you will come to love it as much as I do. Yet, for those of you who might be new to foreign films, CINEMA PARADISO is the movie to watch! How appropriate then that this movie is for those who of us who love going to the movies. CINEMA PARADISO opens when the main character, a famous Italian filmmaker, Salvadore, learns that his mentor and beloved friend, Alfredo has died. From the beginning, this emotional story is a 'tear jerker'. The movie unfolds as Salvadore recalls his childhood growing up a small Italian town, and he begins to remember how he came to love the movies, and how going to the movies was the center of life for himself and the people who lived there post World War II. But more, CINEMA PARADISO tugs at our hearts as we are brought along to watch Salvadore grow up. We will witness his fascination with the movies, his mischiefs with the town priest, and his childhood antics. Most enjoyable, we will watch how mesmerized young Salvadore ['Toto'] becomes with the projection booth at the town's only cinema. Even more powerful is the bond which grows between young Toto and the amiable 'father figure', theater projectionist, Alfredo. Viewers will laugh, cry, and rejoice with these two characters. And, we will witness how young Salvadore/Toto is transformed from a bothersome yet curious child to a handsome and successful filmmaker. Most of all we will be with him during the most important moments in his life: when he rescues Alfredo, when he films his first movie, and ... when he falls in love!! I recommend that you rent the original American release. Later, rent or purchase the DVD, which has the both the original and the full version with the directors cuts included. CINEMA PARADISO is MUST for all movie fans. I'm confident that you will surely enjoy it.
B**G
Great choice
Great movie. I would like to watch it again. Rented this movie with a good price in Amazon prime.
P**A
PLEASE watch the original version FIRST.
Okay, this is important, really important: 1. If you possess a romantic bone in your body and you haven't seen Cinema Paradiso, you absolutely need to. It is, for many of us, one of the most beautifully romantic films ever made. A love story - and also a love letter to the magic of movies - it possesses a romantic grandeur which encompasses in its great sweep of a tale love, joy, pathos, the exhilaration of youth, and a good deal of melancholic nostalgia. You'll laugh, you'll cry... and you'll absolutely fall in love with the last scene, which is one of the most wonderful endings to a film ever. BUT 2. If you *haven't* seen the film before, PLEASE watch the original version first. Trust me on this... first impressions are really important, and if you watch the "new" 3-hour version first you'll never be able to enjoy the original as you would have if you'd been new to the story. Why do I say this? Two reasons. First, the new version adds 51 minutes, mostly towards the end, and in doing so takes what was a pretty much perfect film and transmutes it into something that is diluted and at times more mundane. Second and more significantly, the additional footage "explains" what actually happened between Salvatore (the central character) and the love of his life, a girl named Elena who in the original version disappears after her parents (who disapprove of the romance) leave the area. Why is this bad? Well, some will argue that it's not... but for me, the "true" story (the one you didn't get in the original version), by dispelling the mystery, significantly weakens the romance. A girl who disappears and leaves her lover forever wondering and cherishing her memory is poignant but crushingly romantic in its perpetual mystery; a film that reunites the two characters in middle age and reveals a sad twist to their story is - again, for me at least - a lot less magical. The additional parts in the new version come across rather like a sequel to the original that demystifies and drags down the brilliance of the original story. As i said, others may disagree, and if you're one of those people who loves this new version and what it reveals, more power to you. But if you've never seen Cinema Paradiso, see the original first, and immerse yourself in this gloriously romantic film, which also features one of the most beautiful of soundtracks (by Ennio Morricone). Then, if you want, see the longer version and decide for yourself. You'll certainly have some lingering questions answered, but you may well find yourself wishing that you hadn't.
A**O
I love this movie.
Loved much of it. Firstly because the the young boy hung onto the old man (his mentor) to learn how to run the theatre. Secondly because the young boy found the love of his life in his teenage years the boy and girl was inseparable and destined to live their lives together. After she had to move with her family back to Sicily their lives were destroyed as her father wanted.. However she left a message with the old man telling him that she would meet her love before her family moved her back to Sicily. If that message got back to her lover theit lives would have been perfect. Instead the old man never told his young apprentice about the letter she left for him. This left the two lovers alone living their lives apart in misery..Thirty years later their paths crossed and she told him how she was waiting for him. That angered him that his old friend a mentor would let him dangle in the wing for much of his life.
D**R
Correspond exactement à ma demande
Correspond exactement à ma demande
L**)
Due versioni del film. (edizione 25th anniversary)
Questo è un film che ho visto per la prima volta piuttosto tardi rispetto alla sua uscita al cinema. Ma l'ho amato sin da subito. Diversi anni fa ho acquistato le due diverse versioni su DVD distribuito Dolmen, quella da due ore (Alfredo e Salvatore in bicicletta) e la director's cut (Salvatore vicino ad un lume). Specialmente quest'ultima ha diversi problemi di qualità d'immagine nelle edizioni italiane. Speravo proprio in una riedizione in alta definizione, cosa che è avvenuta finalmente anche in Italia, ma solo per la versione più famosa, quella rimontata (e accorciata) che ha vinto l'Oscar. Da appassionato non posso accettare una simile situazione, dunque una volta saputo dell'esistenza di questa edizione pubblicata in Inghilterra per il venticinquennale del film, e che su due dischi Blu-Ray include entrambe le versioni, rimasterizzate dopo un attento restauro a 2k, non ho esitato ad acquistarla. Ho subito guardato la versione estesa, la mia preferita, e sono rimasto colpito dalla nitidezza dell'immagine rispetto ai DVD in mio possesso. Certe scene sono afflitte da una spessa grana, per enfatizzare i diversi piani dell'immagine, ma questo non ha rovinato il piacere della visione. Questo fatto della grana è chiarito nelle note di copertina riguardanti il restauro effettuato. Nota di merito il fatto che non vi siano evidenti segni di usura della copia usata per il trasferimento. L'immagine è pressochè sempre pulita, priva di pelucchi, bruciature, segni (tranne ovviamente negli spezzoni dei filmati d'epoca) e qualsiasi altro difetto dovuto all'usura. Una visione piacevolissima. L'audio (solo in italiano) è in due versioni: semplice stereo a 2 canali oppure in 5.1, i sottotitoli (in inglese) possono essere disattivati. Oltre ai due dischi vi è un libretto di 32 pagine, in inglese, con aneddoti, informazioni, posters e foto di scena. Cosa che nelle edizioni Blu-Ray italiane ormai non esiste più, e dove c'è un libretto questo non è altro che pieno zeppo di pubblicità. Se amate questo film, QUESTA è l'edizione che fa per voi.
P**E
Classic
Seen it before and it is a wonderful movie.
E**4
Buena película
Qué película tan bonita
C**J
Taschentuch-Kino
Wunderbarer Film!
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