An Andalusian Dog
Un chien andalou
France
1929
16 Min
Subtitled in English
569 Views
569 Views
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.
Sent off for a Jesuit education by his prosperous Spanish parents, Luis Buñuel went on to attend the University of Madrid, where he first became interested in the burgeoning European film industry. Upon graduating from Paris’ Academie du Cinema, his first movie job was as an assistant to French-based directors Jean Epstein and Mario Nalpas. In partnership with an old friend, Spanish painter/sculptor Salvador Dali, Buñuel put together the three-reel surrealist masterpiece Un Chien Andalou (1928), the film that features dead donkeys on a piano, a razor slashing an eyeball, and other deliberately shocking images that cineastes have either praised or damned for the past seven decades.
Buñuel’s first feature film, L’Age d’Or, was banned from public exhibition almost immediately from the moment of its 1930 premiere; its principal opponents were high-ranking members of the Catholic church, who condemned the film as savagely sacrilegious. After 1932’s Land Without Bread, an uncompromising… read more

wow this is totally different perspective in watching movie, i mean i have had seen surrealist movie, but i never seen quite like this before.,
at first i try to understand it, but later i realize… read review
I love this, it is so wonderfully weird. I can see why John Waters describes the dog feces scene in Pink Flamingos as influenced by surrealism – certainly, this would have been extremely shocking for… read review
Made in Paris at the height of the surrealist movement, Luis Bunuel and Salvador Dali’s 16-minute short film is sensational in the way its interconnected scenes and images of death and sex lead practically… read review