Un cinéaste se souvient de son enfance : son immense amour pour les images au cinéma de son village natal, et sa profonde amitié avec le projectionniste.Un cinéaste se souvient de son enfance : son immense amour pour les images au cinéma de son village natal, et sa profonde amitié avec le projectionniste.Un cinéaste se souvient de son enfance : son immense amour pour les images au cinéma de son village natal, et sa profonde amitié avec le projectionniste.
- Récompensé par 1 Oscar
- 25 victoires et 33 nominations au total
Histoire
Le saviez-vous
- AnecdotesBy the end of 1956, Italy had 17,000 movie theaters, the most in Europe.
- GaffesWhen Toto is young, the films that Alfredo gave him catch fire. They burn and ruin the only picture that his mother had of his father. When Toto is a grown up, this "burnt" picture is hanged on the wall totally unharmed.
- Citations
Alfredo: Living here day by day, you think it's the center of the world. You believe nothing will ever change. Then you leave: a year, two years. 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 now, no. It's not possible. Right now you're blinder than I am.
Salvatore: Who said that? Gary Cooper? James Stewart? Henry Fonda? Eh?
Alfredo: No, Toto. Nobody said it. This time it's all me. Life isn't like in the movies. Life... is much harder.
- Versions alternativesOriginally presented at the EuropaCinema Festival in a 173-minute edition. It was there released in Italy at 155 minutes; after a very poor box office performance, the film was pulled out of circulation and shortened to 124 minutes. After it won the Special Jury Prize at the 1989 Cannes festival and the Best Foreign Film Oscar, it was re-released in Italy on video first in its initial 155 minutes cut and then in the original 173-minutes director's cut.
- ConnexionsEdited into Lo schermo a tre punte (1995)
- Bandes originalesNuovo Cinema Paradiso (Titoli)
Written by Ennio Morricone
Most of the new footage involved the main's character's romance while he was a young man. The story then is continued years later when that character comes back to his hometown for a funeral and runs into the woman he was in love with but never was able to get for his own. It turns out to be a somewhat tragic love story.
The first part of the film, with Salvatore Cascio as "Toto" a young boy is a love story about two people sharing their love of movies: the kid and an adult "Alfredo" (Phillpe Noiret) who runs the local movie theater. Their love of film bonds them for life.
The word "love" is used repeatedly in this review because that's the dominant theme: the love people had for others and for the world of film, something all of us on this website share.
The second and third parts of the film are the above-mentioned love story of Toto (Marco Leonardi as an adolescent and then Jacques Perrin as an adult) and "Elena" (Agnese Nano/ Brigitte Fossey). The first third of this director;s cut edition is much livelier and interesting, frankly, than the last two-thirds. Although not boring, it does drag in a few spots but the longer version is better in the long run because it makes the whole story much more meaningful.
It's very nicely filmed and you get a real feel for the Italian people and their little town. The director of the movie, Giuseppe Tornatore, went on to make other great visual films, two of which I also like: Malena and The Star Maker.....but Cinema Paradiso, I believe, is considered his "masterpiece."
- ccthemovieman-1
- 20 mars 2006
- Permalien
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Détails
- Date de sortie
- Pays d’origine
- Sites officiels
- Langue
- Aussi connu sous le nom de
- Le Cinema Paradis
- Lieux de tournage
- Cefalù, Palerme, Sicile, Italie(film screening in the port, Elena's house at Via Umberto I°, 3)
- Sociétés de production
- Voir plus de crédits d'entreprise sur IMDbPro
Box-office
- Budget
- 5 000 000 $US (estimé)
- Montant brut aux États-Unis et au Canada
- 12 397 210 $US
- Week-end de sortie aux États-Unis et au Canada
- 16 552 $US
- 4 févr. 1990
- Montant brut mondial
- 13 020 497 $US