Wednesday, November 19, 2008

Luis Buñuel

Second paper due in my Film History course
Original due date: November 4th, 2008
Pictures added for blogging purposes

Luis Buñuel's career as a filmmaker spanned several countries and five decades. Economically, he was a competent filmmaker producing films minimally, cheaply and efficiently. Bypassing technical inhibitions, he created simple films completely laden with social and political satire pushing the points of controversy and pioneering substance and metaphorical attributes to the art of cinema. Undoubtedly and deservedly, his influence among parallel and future filmmakers stretches as remote as his home country and as timeless as he was timely. Like many working in cinema, Luis Buñuel’s upbringing dictated to a large extent as to what his films would entail. A thorough understanding of his background is necessary to fully grasp the auteurist qualities that distinguish him among other auteurs of the time.

Luis Buñuel was born in Calanda, Spain in 1990 to a young mother aged only 18 years. His father was thirty years older than his mother; an interest addressed in several of his films. Buñuel grew up in a strict and disciplined Jesuit faith shedding his religion at the young age of 16 after repeatedly being reprimanded and removed from the establishment. He has been quoted saying “Thank God I’m an atheist” defending his affirmed life-long atheism. The institution of religion takes center stage, and sometimes not so evident, in several of his films. He also has a love of animals and nature which was briefly demonstrated in his early 20’s when he was a vegetarian.

As a young boy, it was immediately apparent Buñuel had a gift for thought and was successful academically. He studied at the University of Madrid starting in engineering to his father’s request, but soon realized he had a passion for the arts which led him to befriend other famous Spanish artists such as painter Salvador Dalí and poet Federico García Lorca. In a lifelong national struggle for placement, Buñuel first moved to Paris and, eventually, he and Dalí collaborated to create two surrealist films, Un Chien Andalou (1929) and L'Âge d'or (1930). The father of cinematic surrealism then entered the filmmaking world. A more detailed understanding of Buñuel’s life draws confirmation that his rebellious, radical lifestyle is evidence as a form of counterculture and subversion, heavily present in his works. “…he was always a heretic who resisted and he was also a powerful shifter whose meaning changed according to which particular hegemonic system he was trying to subvert” (Kinder, 3).

Viridiana (1961) was released in Buñuel’s native Spain with a good 30 years of filmmaking behind it. Having been long exiled in Spain, Generalissimo Francisco Franco invited Buñuel back to shoot Viridiana which was written and intended to be produced in Mexico entirely without supervision. Accepting the invitation, Buñuel returned to Spain and as noted by Robert G. Havard, “Shooting began…and, as is customary with Buñuel, progress was swift” (69). The quick production yielded a Cannes Film Festival release where it won the prestigious Palme d'Or but it went without controversy.

Viridiana was a sly, subtle attack at the institution of religion and received a ban in Spain for 16 years. Although heavily labeled as blasphemous, Buñuel fails to acknowledge that he intended this message saying “I didn’t deliberately set out to be blasphemous, but then Pope John XXIII is a better judge of such things than I am." The scenes like the dog behind the cart and the hidden knife in the crucifix were simply things he found in Spain.

The film itself moves along rather rapidly and employs jump cuts to highlight points of humor. Sayings like “everyone will have some work to do” are intercut with shocked and disgusted beggar’s faces. The beggars serve as a rambunctious ensemble insulting each other and resisting Viridiana’s guidance. The comical demeanor and opposition of the religious convention eventually end up in violence as demonstrated by the hidden blade in the crucifix. “The cross containing blades…suggests that the religious dogma which drives Viridiana’s ministry can easily become a dangerous weapon” (Higginbotham, 113).

Viridiana fears losing her Catholic values and decides to care for beggars in an effort to change the world around her despite her callous brother. "You can't save everyone," he tells her after purchasing an abused dog from an oblivious owner which is proceeded by another equally abused dog. With this, Buñuel states that an instinct to do good is inevitably in vain and calamity certainly overwhelms. In one notorious scene, the rampant beggars indulge in a feast accompanied by Handel's "Messiah" and parody Da Vinci’s “The Last Supper.” After destroying the dining hall, the beggars attempt to rape the hospitable Viridiana and, ultimately, a wager is needed to remedy the situation. This further emphasizes Buñuel’s belief in the futility and cynicism of the institution of religion by creating an absolute mess from an attempted good deed, even mocking a sacred event. “This film has been sufficiently dissected for there to be no further need to explain the evidence showing us that Buñuel is no longer anticlerical-he is an atheist …, he will mine the very foundations and not merely the secondary aspects of that most holy and bourgeois society that oppresses humankind” (Kyrou, 74).

The Discreet Charm of the Bourgeoisie (1972) has a minimal plot. Six affluent characters living in Paris are attempting to dine together several different nights, but each night’s dinner is interrupted in a bizarre way. “Partly because of the minimalism of the plot, our attention is drawn to the way the story is told, the narrative discourse, which is rich and complex” (Kinder, 12). The narrative takes on a precise structure to convey the plot to the viewer. The film can be broken into three distinct acts each of equal length and parallel to the other. Speech drowned out by urban noise like a cocaine discussion and why prisoners should be released from jail, omitted information like the officer’s train dream and why the woman hates Jesus and oedipal subplots like the Lieutenant’s patricide and the Bishop’s revenge are all analogous scenes. Instead of a single linear narrative, Buñuel uses this paradigm to organize the serial action of the characters and twist the creative innovations hidden deeper than the syntactical constructs.

In Discreet Charm of the Bourgeoisie, Buñuel’s bourgeois characters have an air of narcissism which is demonstrated with technicalities and the dialogue exchanges. In one scene, four of the six main characters are guests in the remaining two’s home. They are casually waiting for their friends to return and partake in informal drinking. A discussion of a proper martini mixture is brought up and Mr. Thévenot proceeds to pompously narrate his recipe and recite appropriate mannerisms while drinking. Mr. Thévenot concludes the conversation stating that Don Rafael knows that you must only sip a dry martini and, then, invites the chauffer in to offer a drink. All in one continuous shot, which is important for the immediacy, the chauffer enters the house, swiftly downs the martini and is invited back out just in time for Mr. Thévenot to begin his degradation. “That was precisely the way not to drink a dry martini,” said Mr. Thévenot directly. The rapid consumption is highlighted by zooming in on the chauffer and singling him out as the others began judgment. They continue on to say, “He’s a commoner. He’s uneducated.” They are placing themselves above others boosting their own egos and self-image. The characters are products of a capitalistic, bureaucratic society and strive to reach the top only to look down on those below themselves.

That Obscure Object of Desire (1977) was Buñuel’s final film and in it he was able to employ all that he did technically. Like most of Buñuel’s films, the camera was merely used to document the action and was never the focus of any shot. He let the actors move through the space and he precisely follows the movement always setting up perfectly balanced two shots varying in angle and zoom depending on the flow of the conversation. This is an effective technique in that it draws more emphasis to the actors, dialogue and ideas hidden in them. “Buñuel’s technical mastery of his medium has become so flawless in Desire that the most disordered arrangements of time and place cause not a ripple in the flow of ideas the director wishes to convey” (Higginbotham, 190).

Sexual desire and political violence are central to That Obscure Object of Desire. The film’s opening immediately demonstrates the imbalance of power between Mathieu and Conchita. Mathieu’s servant finds a bloodied pillow and wet panties in a disordered room and Mathieu, reluctant to respond, simply writes off the ‘clues’ executing his power in an incident he obviously had lost power, the rape of Conchita. Through the film, this sexual struggle shifts to and from Mathieu depicting a female opposition representative of two forms; there are two actresses that play the role. Conchita says she loves Mathieu and gives herself to him yet she restricts sexual relations as in one scene Mathieu strives to remove a chastity belt of sorts. Mathieu cannot accept this and struggles to control the relationship.

Similar to the battle of sexual power, shifting of political power also controls the film. One critic says, “The political and the sexual are not so far apart for Buñuel, as arenas for power and repression” (Russell). Several times in the film, terrorist groups attack, shifting power from the established government, firing guns, detonating explosions and generally wreaking havoc in residential and commercial areas. On a more personal level, power shifting is demonstrated when terrorists rob Mathieu and his chauffer of their car. Even in the end of the film, when the two begin a petty argument, an explosion interrupts and ends the narrative that sees no end. It is fitting that an enigmatic political dispute ends the film and, thus, Buñuel’s career.

_____________________________________________________________________________________

Havard, Robert G. “Luis Buñuel: Objects and Phantoms,” Luis Buñuel: A Symposium. Margaret A. Rees, ed. Leeds: Trinity and All Saints’ College, 1983: 59-88.

Higginbotham, Virginia. Luis Buñuel. Boston: Twayne Publishers, 1979.

Kinder, Marsha. “The Nomadic Discourse of Luis Buñuel: A Rambling Overview,” Luis Bunuel’s The Discreet Charm of the Bourgeoisie. Marsha Kinder, ed. Cambridge: Cambridge UP, 1999: 1-27.

Kyrou, Ado. Luis Buñuel: An Introduction. New York: Simon and Schuster, 1963.

Russell, Dominique. “Luis Buñuel,” Senses of Cinema. March 2005. . October 28, 2008.

Wednesday, October 22, 2008

a new direction

Today I was thinking about the lack of effort put into this project. I have come to view a 'review' of a film as more of a burden than a pleasure and think that it is time to add another layer to The Movie Club for Kids Who Can't Read Good. I think we should make it a group collaborative effort. I propose, in addition to what we are already doing, we get together and all watch a film together and then discuss the film immediately after. This requires each of us to gather information before viewing the film to create the most knowledgeable and intelligent discussion. We have all gone in different directions and I know mine is aimed at film, but I think all of us would have great insight on each film and cause each other to defend and alter our own view of a film. It would be cool if we could each then contribute to a full synopsis of the film and, maybe I am going out on a limb here, post it on this site. Tell me your thoughts.

Monday, October 13, 2008

Kicking and Screaming (1995)

As a college student hoping to never enter the real world, Noah Baumbach’s directorial debut speaks directly to me. A Generation X comedy, Kicking and Screaming, follows the four postgraduate friends contemplating the next steps. Grover’s plans are pulled out from underneath him as his girlfriend decides to study in Prague, Otis finds himself incapable of flying to a Milwaukee grad school only one time zone away, Max cannot find anything better to do than crossword puzzles and sleeping with Skippy’s girlfriend and Skippy, completely lost, returns to school for another year but cannot bring himself to do any of the work. Chet, a tenth year permanent student, only imparts paraphrased wisdom upon the four lost postadolescents as a roaming camera smoothly captures the actors’ witty conversations; Baumbach has identified influence in the loose and experimental Jean Renoir. Lacking a strong narrative web, Kicking and Screaming relies more on the characters and subtleties which is evident in Criterion’s supervised release that includes a crossword puzzle of notable quotes from the film. The connective tissue of this film is the relationship between Grover and his girlfriend, Jane. Suitably, the film uses five strategically placed flashbacks instigated by black and white stills of Jane which prompts the action. The final scene, stylistically intact with the rest of the film, resolves the narrative beautifully as each enters the world, kicking and screaming.

8 - steven

Tuesday, October 7, 2008

Viridiana (1961)

Luis Buñuel’s Viridiana was a controversial, irreverent vision of a group of beggars exploiting a vacant manor owned by a virtuous, novice nun. Viridiana leaves her Catholic convent in order to visit with her remaining family member, her forlorn, fervent uncle played by Fernando Rey. After a failed seduction, drugging and rape, the dejected uncle hangs himself with his adopted maid’s daughter’s jump rope and the estate is inherited by a contemplative Viridiana. In fear of losing her Catholic values, Viridiana cares for beggars in an effort to change the world around her despite her callous brother. "You can't save everyone," he tells her after purchasing an abused dog from an oblivious owner which is proceeded by another equally abused dog. An instinct to do good is inevitable vain and calamity certainly overwhelms. In one notorious scene, the rampant beggars indulge in a feast accompanied by Handel's "Messiah" and reenact Da Vinci’s “The Last Supper.” After destroying the dining hall, the beggars attempt to rape the hospitable Viridiana and, ultimately, a wager is needed to remedy the situation. Long-exiled Buñuel creates a sly ‘fuck you’ to his native Spanish government and the Catholic Church. Although banned in Spain, Viridiana gained worldly recognition and went on to win the prestigious Palm d'Or at the Cannes Film Festival. Viridiana is not so much an attack on religion as an institution, but, rather, an indirect attack on its futile functionality in connecting repugnant souls.

10 - steven

Wednesday, September 24, 2008

Nick and Norah's Infinite Playlist (2008)

I think that Michael Cera is such a naturally comical actor and he asserted that in Nick and Norah's Infinite Playlist. Unfortunately, that's about the only thing I enjoyed in this film. And maybe some of the music. I was somehow led to believe that there would be some substance, depth, and charming quality to this film, but all I found was forced humor, over acting, and a heaping pile of ridiculous jokes targeting the easily amused and recreational film goers. Each scene tries to outwit the next with the same desperate joke one after another. Dim-witted, incompetent, or absent-minded characters, band mates and Tris, or the humor that comes along with this are not appealing to me in the least bit. Regrettably, this film is getting placed near the other worthless attempts at a comedy mixed with a sweet and magical meeting.

4/10 - steven

Tuesday, September 23, 2008

The Brown Bunny (2003)

For the most part, the first 70 minutes of Vincent Gallo's deeply personal film, The Brown Bunny, are about as boring to me as the life of a motorcycle racer traveling solo across the country. Often five (plus) minutes go by without a peep in an isolated country side containing just a bit of windswept hair. Bud Clay, played by Vincent Gallo, creates a suffocating atmosphere of loneliness and loss as he juggles his sexual tendencies between prostitutes and his lover. Gallo's pretensions are mostly concealed by a reflective, poignant, and emotional story, but this only reveals itself toward the dying minutes. The final scene tries to give retrospect and make up lost ground, but, unfortunately for Gallo, a BJ could not fully redeem this film. There isn't much more to say as there isn't much here.

6/10 - steven

Monday, September 15, 2008

Gummo (1997)

Harmony Korine's directorial debut can be characterized as a hyper realistic view of unrelated vignettes depicting a poor white-trash population recently struck by a tornado. In its wake, the tornado leaves a small populace acting on impulse often in a juvenile and immature way. Making up about half the film are aged montages paired with a detached narrator serenely speaking of suicide, homophobia, prostitution, sexual abuse, euthanasia, or one of the many other issues covered in this film. The other half loosely follows two boys on a quest to rid the town of feral cats profiting at a local butcher shop with the mutilated animal carcasses slung over their shoulder in a garbage bag. Other single scenes include a drunk man(Harmony Korine) hitting on a gay midget, a man prostituting his Down Syndrome sister, several drunk men wrestling with a chair, and two boys 'killing' another boy with bunny ears in a junk yard in which my favorite line is spoken with absolution by a 7 year old cowboy. "It smells like a pile of bullshit!" Gummo is a beautifully shot, idiosyncratic, bleak, and sometimes humorous examination of a community stuck in a spiral of all kinds of bullshit.

6.5/10 - steven

Wednesday, September 10, 2008

Kids (1995)

Kids follows a sexually active, substance-dependant teen, Telly, as he tries to deflower any and every virgin he meets. He submerses himself into this lifestyle with a group of equally aimless friends. Chloë Sevigny’s character, Jennie, is the extent of depth in this film. She mistakenly finds that she contracted HIV from Telly in her first sexual experience and spends the rest of the film reacting and attempting to prevent another demoralizing blow to a young woman. There is a lot of raw and shocking material that crosses new controversial boundaries and offers brutal visions of a life misled. Though an honorable attempt at an important issue, this film misses what it may have been aiming for. Harmony Korine’s script focuses too much on the excesses and not enough on the characters involved, thus leaving the film shallow, rather disturbing, and overall ineffective.

5/10 - steven

Tuesday, September 9, 2008

Good Will Hunting (1997)

This film was rather overwhelming to me. I didn’t know quite how to take it. I previously had some familiarity with Gus Van Sant and I knew it got some national recognition through the Academy Awards. Being the auteurist I am, I expected a Van Sant work I had seen before like his later films - Elephant, Gerry, and Paranoid Park. This made me rather skeptical at times and left me expecting something that I was not getting. Once I put this preconception aside, I found this to be a deep and profound film, not that other Van Sant works are shallow and superficial, because surely they are not. There were some very potent scenes. One that particularly stands out to me is Williams’ lengthy monologue in the park which is full of realization and vindication. The scripting of Damon and Affleck is full of intelligent ideas, powerful dialogue, and deep characters which converge to form an intellectual film about self-realization and abandonment. Although it was easily predictable, Good Will Hunting had a compelling impact on me.

9.5/10 - steven

Monday, September 8, 2008

Nói Albinói (2003)

Nói Albinói is a coming of age story set in an isolated fishing town in western Iceland. There is everything you would expect in a story like this – teenage love, defiance in education, intellectually gifted teenager, family problems, and death. Even though this is such an overused template, Dagur Kári finds a way to take this film a step further and single itself out there amongst the plethora of films similar to this. It just may be the fact that it’s a teen angst film set in a remote western Icelandic fiord that does this; nonetheless, it accomplishes a difficult task of removing itself from the mundane troubled-teen film genre. The lifeless little village where Nói resides has fleeting glimpses of a happier tomorrow, but only after disaster and utter obliteration of his family, friends, and town is he able to attain his View-Master’s promised tropical paradise. A story of rebellion, misdirection, and realization, Nói Albinói is one for the isolated and lonely at heart.

7.5/10 - steven