Film Review
Cinema has often been likened to a dream experience but in his first
film Luis Buñuel delivers precisely that, a baffling succession
of stark and surreal images that resolutely defies a rational
interpretation.
Even the title,
Un
chien andalou, is an enigma and appears not to have the
slightest connection with what the film shows. In collaboration with
Salvador Dalí, one of the greatest of the Surrealist painters,
Buñuel constructs a unique piece of film art that is as mesmeric
as it is shocking, brilliantly bizarre and inexplicably
enthralling. It is a film that was conceived as a full-frontal
assault on the sterile bourgeois conventions that its creators detested
and has become a kind of torch bearer for the independent filmmaker
ever since. Oh, and it is definitely not one for the squeamish.
Buñuel first had the idea for
Un
chien andalou when he was working as an assistant to Jean
Epstein on
La Chute de la maison Usher
(1928). After an acrimonious falling out with Epstein,
Buñuel persuaded Salvador Dalí to collaborate with him on
a script for his first film, which was to be financed by his
mother. The starting point were dreams that Buñuel and
Dalí had recently experienced and which gave the film its two
most striking surreal images: one in which a man cuts open a woman's
eyeball with a razor, the other depicting ants emerging from a hole in
a man's hand. For many years, Buñuel had been an ardent
follower of Sigmund Freud and Freud's psychoanalytical theories would
be the strongest influence on this and many of his subsequent
films. An awareness of Buñuel's profound interest in
Freudian psychology is key to any deep understanding of his oeuvre.
One particular work of Freud that Buñuel references frequently
in
Un chien andalou is his
1919 essay
The Uncanny, which
explores the idea of something that is both unfamiliar and foreign at
the same time and which, as a consequence, causes a 'cognitive
dissonance' in the observer, an uncontrollable impulse to reject rather
than rationalise. The severed hand that crops up early in the
film exemplifies this concept; only because it is detached from the
body does the hand acquire a quality of strangeness that fills us with
revulsion. The slitting of the human eyeball at the start of the
film is a more viscerally shocking example; even when the trick is
explained to us (the eyeball being sliced is in fact that of a dead
calf) we still cannot prevent our stomachs from performing double
somersaults as we watch the sequence. What the film shows us is
how narrow and selective our view of normality is - a minute speck of
dust compared with what we can imagine. All it takes to
transgress our accepted norms is an unfamiliar juxtaposition of two
banal things or ideas. In a darkly comical vein,
Un chien andalou reminds us how
parochial and change-averse we are - creatures of habit with a built-in
propensity for rejecting new ways of thinking.
Buñuel's loathing for bourgeois conformity runs through much of
his work but it is most evident in his first film's most amusing
sequence, where the main male character (Pierre Batcheff) is seen
dragging a piano laden with decomposing donkeys and Catholic priests;
on his back, he carries two stone tablets which are clearly intended to
depict the Ten Commandments. The burden which prevents the
character from reaching the object of his desire (the woman he so
obviously wants to have his wicked way with) represents those things
that most inhibit intellectual freedom and prevent an artist from being
able to express himself fully: a Christian doctrine mummified by its
empty mystification and a bourgeois culture that has become a
desiccated relic, both devoid of true meaning and relevance to the
present era.
Buñuel may have been an agent provocateur (with enough bugbears
to keep a lesser man in therapy for at least ten life-times), but he had the
good sense to know
that by making this film he was venturing into dangerous
territory. Legend has it that he was prepared for a full-scale riot at its
first screening in Paris. In fact, the film was an immediate hit
and instead of brickbats
Buñuel was showered with warm words of praise. Hailed a
masterpiece by
some,
Un chien andalou ran
for eight months in Paris and gained Buñuel and Dalí
instant admission
into the Surrealist movement. It also led its creators to receive a
commission to make a similar film from the prominent society patrons
Charles and Marie-Laure de Noailles. That film was to be
L'Age
d'Or
(1930), an altogether more scandalous work which did create a stir,
mostly on account of its more provocative use of Christian imagery.
Buñuel's appearance in the film, in the opening sequence, is
significant, and perhaps more so than he himself realised.
(Dalí also appears in the film, as one of the priests being
dragged across the floor by Pierre Batcheff.) As the man who
casually slices a woman's eye with a razor, Buñuel establishes
himself, at the start of his long and distinguished career, as the
fearless iconoclast. The clinically executed act of mutilation is
highly symbolic. Buñuel wants us to see more than
conventional cinema art will permit us, and by slashing an eyeball he
opens our eyes to new vistas, new forms of expression and
understanding. Buñuel could well be the first filmmaker to
realise just how potent and influential an art form cinema is.
The most important and accessible artistic medium of the 20th century,
it has shaped and altered human thought more than any other; perhaps no
other invention in history has had such an effect on our perception of
the world and each other. In a sequence that has come to be
regarded as the most shocking ever committed to celluloid,
Buñuel shows us just how powerful cinema can be, and with good
reason. This is the art form that most effectively blurs the
distinction between reality and imagination - the closest we can get to
experiencing a conscious dream, a dream fashioned not by our own minds
but by someone else, whose motives we cannot even guess at.
It is easy to see why Buñuel was so concerned by the reaction
Un chien andalou might
receive. Yet what makes it so daring is not its intentionally
shocking imagery but its total negation of the traditional narrative
format. The scenes that make up the film are linked thematically
rather than chronologically - one image melts naturally into another,
and then another, mirroring the construction of a dream by the
subconscious mind. The association of images is the only logic
the film possesses; otherwise, it is a seemingly random series of
events, some banal, others disturbingly bizarre, respecting neither
time nor space. Retaining the same setting and characters, the
film jumps forwards and then back in time, but the passage of time has
no meaning. A man shoots (a copy of) himself in his apartment and
ends up dead in a field, sixteen years before he was introduced to us; the woman
who had her eye
slit (eight years ago) opens the door to the apartment to escape the
same man and finds herself on a beach. What
holds the film together is the ghostly, fractured logic of a
dream.
Un chien andalou
may be a film that is hard to explain in rational terms but it
possesses a strange coherence and a profundity that only great
works of literature and music are capable of reaching. Has
there ever been a piece of cinema which evokes so eloquently, and
yet so concisely, the neuroses and desires to which we are all prey?
Beware the Andalusian dog - its bite is worse than its bark.
© James Travers 2013
The above content is owned by filmsdefrance.com and must not be copied.
Next Luis Buñuel film:
L'Âge d'or (1930)