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Un Chien Andalou
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Directed by Luis Buñuel.
Fledging director Luis Buñuel and painter Salvador Dali create this ultimate surrealist film, which is essentially a barrage of striking and irrational images designed to shock and provoke. During the course of the film, we witness a close-up of a woman's eye being slashed open with a razor; a man dragging a piano, two bishops, and a pair of rotting asses across a room; ants swarming around a hole in a man's palm; and sundry severed limbs and gratuitous slayings. Though this was originally a silent film, Buñuel later added a recorded score consisting of Liebestod from Wagner's opera Tristan und Isolde and a number of popular tangos of the time. ~ Jonathan Crow, All Movie Guide
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Smooth_JSmooth_J What's a religion without mystery?
by Smooth_J in Smooth_J Blog
loved it.
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"I approached this film because of my recent interest in surrealist cinema, and it especially drew my attention because Bunuel was one of the founders of the genre. However, the film was not the abstract meditation on religion that I expected--instead, it is more like a 101 minute essay on the nature of religion and herecy, and yet somehow manages to remain entertaining. The majority of the film consists of either discussion or encounters through time displaying the various events in Christian herecy's history. Not knowing much about the history of herecy (like most other people, which was acknowledged by Bunuel and his co-writer Jean-Claude Carriere), the film was more like a history lesson for me at many of these parts, somewhat distracting from the more important details and satire of film. Even so, the more comprehensible events are so well-developed and staged that one can remain hooked on the film even through the seemingly meaningless religious jabberings; I do not say tha ... " [More]
SpoutBlogSpoutBlog Surreal Sex: L’Age d’Or
by SpoutBlog in SpoutBlog on spout.com
hasn't rated it.
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"Thanks to the Museum of Modern Art’s recent exhibit “Dali: Painting and Film” (through 9/15/08), which features over 130 of the artist’s paintings and drawings, scenes and films brilliantly juxtaposed side by side, I feel I now understand Salvador Dali for the very first time. Though erotic Freudian imagery, sexed up amoebas and disembodied cocks, may be what draws one into the Surrealist’s paintings, it’s his use of lighting and perspective that keeps you coming back for more. For Dali never was a painter at heart, but a man possessed by a cinematographer’s eye. Within the limits of the flattened canvas Dali’s mind was able to create – see into the future – that which modern day CGI allows for the screen. In fact, both showman and visionary, this master of the bizarre does not even make sense outside of filmmaking! A piece of the puzzle is missing when his paintings are seen alone and static, not in conversation with Bunuel or Hitchcock (or even Cocteau). Viewing Dali’s artwork ... " [More]
indieabby88indieabby88 Re:Top 5 weirdest movies
by indieabby88 in Top 5
hasn't rated it.
"[quote user="Smooth_J"] Surreal, absurd, disturbing, or just plain strange movies. I got this idea from a discussion on IMDB, and I believe some movie website or magazine released a list of the top 20 a while back. In terms of overall weirdness, here it goes: 1. Un Chien Andalou The old Bunuel-Dali collaboration. This had me at the part where the eye gets sliced with a razor-blade. It is quite possibly one of the most disturbing images I have ever seen, and it was made in 1929. It is almost unsettlingly bizarre. This easily takes the cake at a whopping 16 minutes. Watching this film makes you realize how warped the human mind can be, and it's amazing. It is where every David Lynch film is originated, and really where the surrealist genre was created. 2. Eraserhead Not much about this film can be explained that hasn't already been said a million times. It is adequate to say that never has anything like it ever been seen, and it began a long and illustrious career of night ... " [More]
Smooth_JSmooth_J Top 5 weirdest movies
by Smooth_J in Top 5
loved it.
"Surreal, absurd, disturbing, or just plain strange movies. I got this idea from a discussion on IMDB, and I believe some movie website or magazine released a list of the top 20 a while back. In terms of overall weirdness, here it goes: 1. Un Chien Andalou The old Bunuel-Dali collaboration. This had me at the part where the eye gets sliced with a razor-blade. It is quite possibly one of the most disturbing images I have ever seen, and it was made in 1929. It is almost unsettlingly bizarre. This easily takes the cake at a whopping 16 minutes. Watching this film makes you realize how warped the human mind can be, and it's amazing. It is where every David Lynch film is originated, and really where the surrealist genre was created. 2. Eraserhead Not much about this film can be explained that hasn't already been said a million times. It is adequate to say that never has anything like it ever been seen, and it began a long and illustrious career of nightmares and dreamscapes. 3 ... " [More]
Smooth_JSmooth_J Re:Criterion Predictions
by Smooth_J in Criterion Collection
loved it.
"[quote user="leeroy711"] I definately think (and hope) at some point they release Z. This is one that came finally made it to dvd in (I'm guessing) a very limited release. The only place you can find a copy is online and the asking price is usually around $35-45. There isn't much to speak of when in regards to special features. This is one of my favorite films and I'm reduced to finding it at the library everytime I want to watch it. I wouldn't mind paying the $30+ for it if it were criterion though. [/quote] I've been meaning to see that, but I really can't find it anywhere reasonably priced, so I really hope your right about a Criterion release. A couple of films that I feel definitely deserve and most likely will receive Criterion release because of currently crappy DVD releases are the Bunuel and Dali collaborations Un Chien Andalou and L'age d'Or. They're both amazing films, very influential, and Criterion's got a good collection of Bunuel released (have yet to see any of the ... " [More]
LawgersLawgers Scarred for Life - Salvador Dal ...
by Lawgers in Filmgaming
hasn't rated it.
"When I was 16 in 1979, I got to spend 4 months in Rotterdam for a summer. I was fascinated with Dali from a book I found in the library, and my exchange family took me to an exhibit. Un Chien Andalou started up, and two minutes in the sight of straight razor slicing through a human eyeball was burned onto my psyche for eternity. The nightmares began immediately. But, oddly enough, it was the last image that really terrified me--a placard that read: "In the spring...", then showed two lifeless torsos buried from the waist down in a bleak seascape. I think this robbed me of all joy for about a week. It's important to remember that this movie so shocked its audience that it caused a riot at its original screening, and inspired Frank Black to write "Debaser." While I've seen much, much worse since then, nothing could ever match the immediate scar this left on my personality, and a lifetime fascination with surrealism. " [More]
webswebs Re:movies on the net
by webs in webs movie club
hasn't rated it.
" " [More]
MullyMully Re:movies on the net
by Mully in webs movie club
hasn't rated it.
"Here's a great source for legally downloading public domain films for free : http://www.archive.org/details /movies You can find popular classic films such as His Girl Friday, King Solomon's Mines, The Mark of Zorro or Night of the Living Dead, curiosities such as Georges Méliès' Voyage dans la lune, Salvador Dali's Un Chien Andalou or Frank Capra's Why We Fight documentary series, silent classics like The Golem, The Cabinet of Dr. Caligari or D.W. Griffith's Abraham Lincoln and silent comedy such as Buster Keaton's Steamboat Bill, Jr.. Most movies can be downloaded in different file formats and the quality ranges from truly awful to more than decent. Enjoy ! " [More]
tinokievtinokiev Definition of Art and Entertain ...
by tinokiev in Asian Art Cinema
loved it.
"Once on film school I was suppose to give a presentation on " Un chien Andalu" by Luis Bunue, the topic of the presentation was "Made to shock ?". Some people argue that he made the movie just to shock people, and that it was that fact who made him famouse rather than the actual aestethics or imaginary behind the film. It was such a hard topic to discuss. On one side, like Dali, he put so many subtext on the art direction revealing aspects of his own psique, but in the other side, they were the new surrealist wave and in fact did wanted to shock people as well, for the sake of it, as an instrument of revolution I guess. The problem with art I pointed then, is that you can put an apple on an empty room, take a photograph, hang it of an art gallery and people will think "oh that is art", and everyone will find diferent meanings to it. But many people will think, that is just an apple, and it doesnt try to say anything. The ultimate truth about whatever something is art or not i thin ... " [More]
chesterfilmschesterfilms An Andalusian Dog
by chesterfilms in chesterfilms Blog
loved it.
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"Clocking in at 17 minutes, Un Chien Andalou is good place to start for anyone getting into Surrealist Film. Although Luis Buñuel & Salvador Dalí admit to the film having no meaning, there are countless interpretations available if you want to dig deep into the film. Un Chien Andalou contains one of the most horrific shots in cinema history, the much parodied slicing of the eye. Buñuel's latter films (although always surreal) become much more story driven, and are always quick to attack the bourgeoisie. " [More]
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Review by All Movie Guide
All Movie Guide
loved it.
Un chien andalou is a landmark of early avant-garde cinema. Impatient with the polite cinematic surrealism of artists like Man Ray, Luis Buñuel and Salvador Dali wanted to stir things up and create "a despairing, passionate call to murder." Indeed, the images in Chien horrify even today, most notably the notorious eye-slashing scene near the beginning of the film. Many of the images seem to spring directly from Sigmund Freud's writings on sexual anxiety, such as breasts that mysteriously turn into a buttocks or a disembodied limb discovered by an androgyne, while others remain willfully obscure. Though the plot as such ostensibly concerns two quarrelling lovers, Buñuel and Dali gleefully destroyed all temporal and spatial continuity and systematically dismembered all forms of linear narrative and thought. Instead, meaning is created through visual associations, giving the film a thoroughly nightmarish quality. Chien went on to influence generations of filmmakers, from Maya Deren's masterpiece Meshes of the Afternoon (1943) to David Lynch's dark classic Eraserhead (1977), and it established the career of Buñuel, one of cinema's maverick filmmakers. ~ Jonathan Crow, All Movie Guide
 

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