Cinema Paradiso: The Montage of Kisses
1 2016-03-16T16:16:02-07:00 David Morton dfca9607d58e41ad7ddf3cd7d968adc9105e011f 8770 1 The famous ending scene from Italian masterpiece "Cinema Paradiso" plain 2016-03-16T16:16:02-07:00 YouTube 2011-06-08T20:14:47.000Z PjtJkBUVFVY HeNeedsAKidney David Morton dfca9607d58e41ad7ddf3cd7d968adc9105e011fThis page is referenced by:
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The Montage of Kisses
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Photomontage as an Effective Punchline
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"Why do we use montage at all?"
In his landmark book, The Film Sense (1942) Soviet filmmaker Sergei Eisenstein raises this fundamental question in an effort to define the nature of cinema. In taking the "leftist" position on the theory of montage, Eisenstein argues that one property of montage that consistently and continually astonished filmmakers is its ability to take "two film pieces of any kind, placed together, inevitably combine into a new concept, a new quality, arising out of that juxtaposition" (4). The use of cinema's juxtaposition and dependence on its audience to make a series of inferential leaps is a concept which is fundamentally interwoven into the DNA of the movies.
In Douglas Kahn's John Heartfield: Art and Mass Media, Kahn argues, “Film has montage in its very innards. The projector runs just fast enough so images cannot be seen as they butt up against each other and just slow enough that the images are not superseded" (113).
To take this concept a step further, one of the most intriguing free-form applications of montage can be found in the use of "idea editing." In The Camera and I (1969), filmmaker Joris Ivens describes how he often would juxtapose footage from commercial newsreels and make numerous unseen connections between various news events. (i.e. the parallels between Japanese atrocities in Manchuria and the injustice of the practice of lynchings in the United States). He goes on to explain that his method comprised of assembling previously miscellaneous material and cut it "together into a new unity" (Kahn, 114). Although Eisenstein, Heartfield, and Ivens each set out to apply this aspect of montage to convey a powerful political message, the concept of idea editing in narrative cinema can be used simply to provide audiences with a strong emotional resonance and if the filmmaker wishes, recontexualize the initial message of their films. As Hungarian author György Lukács explains, "A good photomontage has the same effect as a good joke” (Kahn, 109)."A Good Joke"
Although audiences are certainly capable of deriving their own intuitive connections in order to comprehend the context of a montage in narrative cinema, moviegoers also heavily rely on context clues provided to them by the filmmaker in order to understand the film's overall message. What is most compelling in regards to the use of context clues in a feature film is that the audience will ultimately rely on different scenes and sequences from throughout the duration of a film to help them reconcile the sight and sound that is unfolding on the screen in front of them.
Among one of the most creative uses of idea editing through the use of photomontage in narrative cinema can be found in the final scene of Giuseppe Tornatore's Academy Award winning film, Cinema Paradiso (1988). The film tells the life story of a fictional filmmaker named Salvatore Di Vita who returns to his hometown of Giancaldo in Sicily for the first time after 30 years. He returns to attend the funeral of the former projectionist of the "Cinema Paradiso" who also served as a surrogate father and mentor to the aspiring young filmmaker. At the end of Salvatore's visit he is given a gift by Alredo's widow, a unmarked film reel. When he returns home, Salvatore plays the reel which contains a long montage of romantic ("pornographic") amorous screen kisses ordered spliced, excised, and censored out of numerous films (i.e., His Girl Friday, The Gold Rush, The Outlaw, The Son of the Sheik, The Adventures of Robin Hood, etc.) by the village priest Father Adelfio when he was a boy. He is moved to tears by the sequence and in the final frame and laughs.
For the purpose of this experiment, take a moment to view the ending sequence to Cinema Paradiso below. Here you will be able to witness both the effectiveness of Tornatore's use of parallel editing so to assess Salvatore's emotional response to the images he is witnessing. Also take a moment to assess the filmmaker's choice of films in the montage sequence and their unifying theme of appearing "amorous" or "pornographic."Montage of Kisses
The "Montage of Kisses at the end of Cinema Paradiso is an example of a photomontage joke as described by Lukács, which took decades (in the time of the movie) to arrive at its punchline. So what is the nature of the joke played on Salvatore? The answer to this question can be found in a series of context clues offered throughout the film. Yet depending on which of the context clues you personally connect to, your overall interpretation of the film's final scene may drastically vary. To complicate matters further, several extended and additional scenes introduced in Tornatore's 2002 Director's Cut version of Cinema Paradiso, entirely transforms the meaning of the film's closing scene and as a result the entire movie.
Select the next page to begin your exploration into how context clues can redefine your interpretation of a film and its meaning. On this site you will navigate through several pivotal scenes from Cinema Paradiso in an effort to grasp the significance of the film's famous ending both to its central character as well as its viewing audience.References
Eisenstein, Sergei. The Film Sense. Trans. Jay Leyda. New York: Harcourt, Brace and Co. 1942.
Kahn, Douglas. John Heartfield: Art and Mass Media. New York: Tanam Press, 1985.
A special thanks to Robert Yahnke, Professor of Film at the University of Minnesota for permission to include excerpts of his notes on the film. You can also access Dr. Yahnke's detailed summary of Cinema Paradiso here: Resources for Teaching Film: Cinema Paradiso
Another special thanks to Tim Dirks of the AMC Network for his outstanding research on discovering the contents of the kissing montage. A full list of Mr. Dirk's findings can be found here: The Censored Kisses and Scenes of Cinema Paradiso
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Cinema Paradiso Redux
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"A Film Improved by Butchering?"
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The Return to Giancaldo
So now let's return to the scene discussed on the first page. From the context now provided we can achieve a better grasp of what must have gone through Salvatore's head at the time the montage was screened: Father Adelfio's harsh censorship of "amorous scenes" shown at the Cinema Paradiso, the memory of his failed relationship with Elena, and Alfredo's wish that he never return to Giancaldo. On the surface it can be argued that the film's last scene is the final fulfillment of Alfredo's promise to give the young Toto the extracted film reels if he promised to stay away. The reels are his reward for following Alfredo's advice and going on to fulfill his dream to become a filmmaker.The Price of Fame and Success
From this surface-level reading of the film, audiences can perceive the film as a wistful love letter to the movies and a stirring bildungsroman which subscribes to Auguste Comte's study on the "Development of Human Intelligence." It can be argued that the three stages of Salvatore's life featured in the film can also be connected to Comte's three stages of positive development.- Theological or Fictitious: The wide-eyed young Toto is shown at the beginning of the film as an undisciplined street urchin. He has an unstable home life and his mother is still in morning over the disappearance of this father during the Second World War. The only place where a young person in Toto's position could find structure at this point is through the church. Yet it is shown that even at a young age the absurd rigidity of Father Adelfio causes Toto reject the church and instead immerse himself in the fictitious world of the cinema.
- Metaphysical or Abstract: As a teenager Salvatore falls in love with Elena. His indoctrination into the movies has filled him with a sense of romanticism and he builds a series of abstract connections between his budding relationship and the films he has watched. This can be seen in the sequence where during the screening of Ulysses he summons the rain and attempts to manipulate the world around him as if were a movie set.
- The Scientific or Positive: Now in his late 40s, the older Salvatore has abandoned his romanticism and has become a highly successful filmmaker known for his pragmatism. At this stage however, although Salvatore has now transitioned from avid consumer of films to the role of producer, his sense of awe and wonder is seemingly abandoned. Moreover, he has lived out a string of failed relationships that never could carry the same spark as his summer romance with Elena.
Nuovo Cinema Paradiso
In the 25th Anniversary Edition of Cinema Paradiso, Tornatore presents audiences with a 173 minute extended edition of his film. With close to an hour of additional footage, primarily involving scenes surrounding the older Salvatore's return to Giancaldo. While some fans of Cinema Paradiso hail the extended version as superior to its predecessor, others such as Gerardo Valero of Rogerebert.com argues "that the butchering of Director Tornatore's original 1988 vision saved his film from utter mediocrity, and it took it an all together higher level." The purpose of this project is not to consider which version of Cinema Paradiso is superior to the other, but instead is an attempt to demonstrate the multiple ways in which context in editing can ultimately shift a film's meaning to its intended audience. Here we will summarize several of the the most notable changes made between the original and re-release.- Salvatore loses his virginity to the theater prositute shortly before he meets Elena. So later in the film when he blames his clumsiness as a result of it being his "first time," becomes a lie and diminishes the innocence of their relationship.
- When Salvatore returns to Giancaldo he runs into a young girl who who looks like Elena (played by the same actress) and by following her he encounters the now older Elena.
- The older version of Elena is effectively competing with her younger version, who in fact is her daughter. She is unable to awake the same passion in Salvatore as their earlier romance. In an attempt to keep the spark alive the two have sex in the front seat of a parked car. The experience leaves Salvatore feeling more empty than before.
- Yet most significant at all, especially in interpreting the film's final scene: Salvatore learns that it was Alfredo who deliberately kept Salvatore and Elena and not her father. He had done this for the same reason he told Salvatore to not return to Giancaldo, that both Elena and the town would ultimately hold him back from fulfilling his dreams.
In the comments below, feel free to add thoughts and responses into the contrasts between the two versions of the film:- Does the meaning of Cinema Paradiso's ending change with these added insights?
- Can you think of other films where the Director's Cut changed your interpretation of a movie's ending?