Designed as a Jewish synagogue by architect Alessandro Antonelli, the edifice never became a house of worship. Begun in 1863, the Mole Antonelliana was purchased by the city to convert the cathedral into a monument to national unity after the founding of the Kingdom of Italy in 1861. In 2000, the museum assumed residence.
Arriving in the early morning, we first rode the scenic, glass-encased lift to the viewing platform at the top, winding through the center of building in Disneyesque fashion while providing a birds-eye view of the exhibits inside the building on display. At the top of the Mole Antonelliana, the viewing platform offers a 360-degree panorama of the City of Torino and the nearby Alps.
The museum collection is among the most complete in the world, with over 7,000 film titles, 140,000 photographs, 150,000 posters and thousands of other film antiquities.
The Museo Nazionale Del Cinema guides the visitor along a route through various collections from the early experiments with moving images to the birth of cinema.
The extensive gallery features pre-cinematic developments and optical devices like the “magic lanterns” (below), an impressive review of film technologies over the years and stage costumes from early Italian movies.
The museum hosts several film festivals during the course of a year, the major and most prestigious of which is the Torino Film Festival.
Ten “chapels” attached to Temple Hall honor the great themes in cinema history: Love and Death, Cabria, Cinema in Torino, Animated Cinema, Experimental Cinema, Mirrors, The Absurd, Horror and Fantasy, True and False, and Big Bang, all with film sets, photographs, designs and sketches. Frequent showings of short films and animations occupy the small theatre located in the heart of of the museum in the center of the Mole Antonelliana.
Naturally, the exhibition focuses on one of the great film
directors of all time: native son, Federico Fellini. His style combines fantasy
with earthy images and sensibilities. Recognized as one of the most influential
filmmakers of all time, Fellini’s masterpiece is probably “8½,”
though my favorite is “La Dolce Vita” (The Good Life).
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