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Topic: Cinema Paradiso Special Edition Vs Standard Version
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Martin Brooks
Jedi Master Film Handler
Posts: 900
From: Forest Hills, NY, USA
Registered: May 2002
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posted 07-13-2003 10:04 PM
The DVD that I have has the original version on one side and the new extended version on the other.
Personally, I think the original version is a bit more magical. The new version adds some harsh realities that take away from the romanticism of the original. There are three things in the new version that bother me: the explicit scenes of Toto losing his virginity to the town prostitute (although it explains the look he gives her when he watches them destruct the cinema), Alfredo not telling Toto that Elena came by as she promised (makes Alfredo a bad guy of sorts), and all of the added scenes that practically turn Toto into a stalker. But at least they didn't make Toto the father of Elena's daughter, which would have reduced the plot to that of a made-for-TV film.
In both versions, the film ends with him watching the montage of kissing scenes in the theatre. IMHO, this works better in the original, because it represents his lost love, than in the new version, where his relationship has been resolved. Then (in the original), the credits roll, and there's a very short scene of him seeing a woman who looks like his girlfriend (as an adult.) It's up to the audience to decide whether they get together again or not (and punishment for those who leave before the credits.) I thought that worked much better because the audience can decide for itself what happens and each audience member will probabl decide what happens based upon their own view of romance and life.
So while Harvey Weinstein was originally heavily criticized for cutting this film from the director's original intention, IMHO, he did exactly the right thing.
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William Hooper
Phenomenal Film Handler
Posts: 1879
From: Mobile, AL USA
Registered: Jun 99
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posted 10-04-2004 03:27 AM
Cinema Paradiso didn't need additional sex scenes for this crowd. If it just had a couple of extended, explicit shots of RP-40 running on the screen or of an RTA on the projector, it would be cinema technician porn. Add one of those 1970s porno movie soundtracks of guitar, bass & Hammond organ, & folks here would be ashamed to admit that they watched it.
quote: Soon I'll be watching Kenneth Branagh's Hamlet --------------------------------------------------------------------------------
I have so say thats not something I'd ever want watch
Ugh, Branagh's Hamlet, ugh! Turgid, glacial, pompous, self-obsessed with both its Shakespeareyness & 70mm-ness! And Branagh can't help when he gets blown off the screen by actors doing what they're supposed to & making it real & entertaining, like the gravediggers & Heston as the tragedian. And I don't even particularly like Billy Crystal or Charlton Heston, but they were running the game right!
I like Shakespeare, but I can't think of a Shakespeare movie off the top of my head that was even acceptable as a piece of popular entertainment, with the exception of the recent "Titus" with Anthony Hopkins & the Warner "Midsummer Night's Dream" with Cagney, Mickey Rooney, Joe E. Brown, etc.
They can't even get Macbeth right. It's the shortest, fastest play, & the play is basically a 90 mile an hour, hold onto your hair & behind horror movie. But if they make a movie of Shakespeare, they've always got to make it some damn ponderous thing like the Pope slogging his way through a mudhole.
They played it differently when they had to put butts in the seats & it was popular entertainment, not pretentious & ponderous "culture". Who'd pay to see that Shakespeare movie sludge, much less come back?
There's a great article on the evolution of the degraded state of Shakespearian presentation in the US at http://xroads.virginia.edu/~DRBR/levine.html
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Paul Mayer
Oh get out of it Melvin, before it pulls you under!
Posts: 3836
From: Albuquerque, NM
Registered: Feb 2000
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posted 12-06-2004 01:03 PM
quote: William Hooper I like Shakespeare, but I can't think of a Shakespeare movie off the top of my head that was even acceptable as a piece of popular entertainment, with the exception of the recent "Titus" with Anthony Hopkins & the Warner "Midsummer Night's Dream" with Cagney, Mickey Rooney, Joe E. Brown, etc.
At the time I thought Zefirrelli's 1968 Romeo & Juliet did a pretty good job as both good Shakespeare and popular entertainment, to say nothing of Kurosawa's various takes on the Bard. But then again I'd nominate Rosencrantz & Guildenstern are Dead.
Haven't seen the latest long cut of Cinema Paradiso yet, and perhaps I never will after reading people's comments here. It sounds like the longer version makes the film more literal and less magical. Which is my take on director's cuts in general--they usually serve someone's ego at the expense of better storytelling. Editors exist for good reason. I'll take a magical story well told any day.
I saw a screening of Cinema Paradiso at the Warner Grand in San Pedro, CA a couple of years ago. Projection quality at the Grand was pretty hit-or-miss in those days, mostly miss. At that screening in front of a packed house of about 2000, the film stopped. Of course a cry of dismay went up in unison from the crowd, followed shortly thereafter by a lone Italian-sounding voice shouting from the balcony, "Alfredo!" The crowd lost it in laughter and applause. I think it was the best audience reaction to a film stoppage I've ever seen. [ 12-07-2004, 01:32 AM: Message edited by: Paul Mayer ]
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