Simon of the Desert


45m 1965
Simon of the Desert

Brief Synopsis

A religious sage fights temptation from Satan himself.

Film Details

Also Known As
San Simeon del desierto, Simeon del desierto, Simòn del desierto
Genre
Comedy
Fantasy
Foreign
Release Date
Jan 1965
Premiere Information
New York opening: 11 Feb 1969
Production Company
Gustavo Alatriste
Distribution Company
Altura Films International; Fleetwood Films
Country
Mexico

Technical Specs

Duration
45m

Synopsis

Simon, a bearded ascetic, has withdrawn from the world in order to commune with God from atop a pillar in the desert. After 6 years, 6 months, and 6 days of prayer and physical deprivation, he is rewarded with a taller pillar by a powerful and wealthy family. Simon dismisses the solicitude of his mother, who lives in a shack in the desert to be near him, declares himself unworthy of the honor of the priesthood which his bishop wants to bestow upon him, and mounts his new pillar to continue his prayers in penance for all humanity. By prayer he restores the severed hands of a thief who has been unable to work as a result of his punishment, but the miracle is accepted with total indifference. Existing on a small number of lettuce leaves brought to him by an order of priests who see to his care, Simon steadfastly refuses to succumb to the world's evils. He sends an adolescent lay brother away from the order because the youth's pleasure in the priest's life is not of a spiritual nature; converses with a superstitious dwarf shepherd who enjoys his goats sexually; and confronts a demonically possessed priest who places rich foods in Simon's food sack and accuses him of hypocrisy in his asceticism. Simon must also withstand assaults from his own personal devil. She appears to him as an innocent girl wearing a sailor dress and bares her thighs and breasts. Simon defends himself by prayer, and she is transformed into a hideous, naked hag. Later she appears with a flock of lambs as the "good shepherd," exhorting Simon to leave his column and surfeit himself on worldly pleasures. Simon again banishes her and vows to stand on one leg in penance for his weakness. Another priest, Daniel, climbs a ladder to tell Simon of the ongoing wars engendered by ownership, and when Simon fails to comprehend the meaning of "thine and mine," Daniel declares that his sanctity is irrelevant to man. The Devil at last removes Simon from his pillar to a noisy discotheque in New York City. Simon remains detached in the midst of a frantic, swirling horde. The Devil informs him that his pillar is now occupied by another and that he must remain here until the end.

Film Details

Also Known As
San Simeon del desierto, Simeon del desierto, Simòn del desierto
Genre
Comedy
Fantasy
Foreign
Release Date
Jan 1965
Premiere Information
New York opening: 11 Feb 1969
Production Company
Gustavo Alatriste
Distribution Company
Altura Films International; Fleetwood Films
Country
Mexico

Technical Specs

Duration
45m

Articles

Simon of the Desert


Simon of the Desert (1965) marks the end of Luis Bunuel's fruitful Mexican period, the last of the 20 pictures he made there. His next film, Belle de Jour (1967), found him back in Europe, where over the following decade he would create his most widely seen and internationally acclaimed films. But even with its brief running time of only 43 minutes, Simon of the Desert has gained a reputation as one of the director's most accomplished works. It is also one of his most characteristic, with its combination of profoundly serious themes and wickedly funny satire and its examination of dogma, heresy and the stifling hypocrisy of the Church. These ideas run deeply through Bunuel's Mexican period, in such films as Nazarin (1959) and Viridiana (1961), and echo forward throughout his later productions, most notably the French-made La Voie Lactee/The Milky Way (1969).

On his return to Mexico after shooting The Diary of a Chambermaid (1964) in France, Bunuel set to work on a scenario based on the story of 5th-century Syrian saint Simeon Stylites, who spent 37 years of his life perched atop a pillar as a show of his devotion to God. This self-sacrificing gesture was also intended as a rejection of worldly concerns (many similar cases of pole-perching "stylites" were recorded from the 5th to the 14th centuries throughout the Middle East and Eastern Europe). Bunuel got the idea from The Golden Legend, a 13th-century biography of saints that the Spanish poet Federico Garcia Lorca had recommended to him years before.

In Bunuel's story, Simon is deeply religious and pious to a fault; his faults are soon revealed to be egotistic pride and self-delusion. He sits atop his pillar to get closer to God, occasionally ministering to the devotees who come to see him in the desert and performing miracles that go relatively unnoticed outside his immediate circle. For example, his restoration of a poor peasant's hands who has been unable to provide for his family after having them chopped off for a theft; when the man gets his hands restored, the first thing he does is slap his annoying daughter.

A wealthy man, seeking to buy favor with heaven, builds Simon an even higher and more elegantly designed pillar, but once placed on top of it, farther removed from earth and therefore given to more solitary introspection, the saint finds himself struggling with temptation from the Devil, played by Mexican actress Silvia Pinal, the star of Bunuel's Viridiana. In a surprisingly abrupt ending, the Devil whisks Simon off his perch and drags him to a modern-day New York discotheque, where the saint looks just like the other beatnik clubbers.

Although he originally conceived the story to be twice its final length, Bunuel was forced by financial circumstances to make the abrupt and unexpected conclusion. Before the money ran out, Bunuel was planning to show Simon on an even taller column, roughly 60 feet high and near the sea, where the Church hierarchy would come to see him. But after 18 days of filming, he suddenly found himself having to come up with an ending, and decided to take him off his column. "We had already seen that for much too long," Bunuel later told Beatriz Reyes Nevares for her book on Mexican directors. "I was interested in seeing Simon's reaction when he returns to the world. But the end result was dubious."

Bunuel's opinion notwithstanding, the sudden twist to the ending and the film's brief running time do little to blunt its meaning or power. Within this film, the great Surrealist filmmaker was also able to further explore his fascination with dreamlike states, and all the absurdity, desire and frustration inherent in them.

"Dreams are the first cinema invented by mankind, and they have a greater wealth of possibilities than cinema itself," Bunuel explained to Reyes Nevares. "Not even the richest producer could finance the superproduction of certain dreams."

Bunuel and Simon of the Desert won the FIPRESCI Prize (bestowed by the International Federation of Film Critics) and a Special Jury Award at the Venice Film Festival in 1965. The director and the film were also nominated for the festival's top Golden Lion Award.

Director: Luis Bunuel
Producer: Gustavo Alatriste
Screenplay: Luis Bunuel, Julio Alejandro
Cinematography: Gabriel Figueroa
Editing: Carlos Savage
Original Music: Raul Lavista
Cast: Claudio Brook (Simon), Silvia Pinal (Devil), Hortensia Santovena (Mother), Jesus Fernandez Martinez (Rabadan), Enrique Alvarez Felix (Brother Matias).
BW-43m.

by Rob Nixon
Simon Of The Desert

Simon of the Desert

Simon of the Desert (1965) marks the end of Luis Bunuel's fruitful Mexican period, the last of the 20 pictures he made there. His next film, Belle de Jour (1967), found him back in Europe, where over the following decade he would create his most widely seen and internationally acclaimed films. But even with its brief running time of only 43 minutes, Simon of the Desert has gained a reputation as one of the director's most accomplished works. It is also one of his most characteristic, with its combination of profoundly serious themes and wickedly funny satire and its examination of dogma, heresy and the stifling hypocrisy of the Church. These ideas run deeply through Bunuel's Mexican period, in such films as Nazarin (1959) and Viridiana (1961), and echo forward throughout his later productions, most notably the French-made La Voie Lactee/The Milky Way (1969). On his return to Mexico after shooting The Diary of a Chambermaid (1964) in France, Bunuel set to work on a scenario based on the story of 5th-century Syrian saint Simeon Stylites, who spent 37 years of his life perched atop a pillar as a show of his devotion to God. This self-sacrificing gesture was also intended as a rejection of worldly concerns (many similar cases of pole-perching "stylites" were recorded from the 5th to the 14th centuries throughout the Middle East and Eastern Europe). Bunuel got the idea from The Golden Legend, a 13th-century biography of saints that the Spanish poet Federico Garcia Lorca had recommended to him years before. In Bunuel's story, Simon is deeply religious and pious to a fault; his faults are soon revealed to be egotistic pride and self-delusion. He sits atop his pillar to get closer to God, occasionally ministering to the devotees who come to see him in the desert and performing miracles that go relatively unnoticed outside his immediate circle. For example, his restoration of a poor peasant's hands who has been unable to provide for his family after having them chopped off for a theft; when the man gets his hands restored, the first thing he does is slap his annoying daughter. A wealthy man, seeking to buy favor with heaven, builds Simon an even higher and more elegantly designed pillar, but once placed on top of it, farther removed from earth and therefore given to more solitary introspection, the saint finds himself struggling with temptation from the Devil, played by Mexican actress Silvia Pinal, the star of Bunuel's Viridiana. In a surprisingly abrupt ending, the Devil whisks Simon off his perch and drags him to a modern-day New York discotheque, where the saint looks just like the other beatnik clubbers. Although he originally conceived the story to be twice its final length, Bunuel was forced by financial circumstances to make the abrupt and unexpected conclusion. Before the money ran out, Bunuel was planning to show Simon on an even taller column, roughly 60 feet high and near the sea, where the Church hierarchy would come to see him. But after 18 days of filming, he suddenly found himself having to come up with an ending, and decided to take him off his column. "We had already seen that for much too long," Bunuel later told Beatriz Reyes Nevares for her book on Mexican directors. "I was interested in seeing Simon's reaction when he returns to the world. But the end result was dubious." Bunuel's opinion notwithstanding, the sudden twist to the ending and the film's brief running time do little to blunt its meaning or power. Within this film, the great Surrealist filmmaker was also able to further explore his fascination with dreamlike states, and all the absurdity, desire and frustration inherent in them. "Dreams are the first cinema invented by mankind, and they have a greater wealth of possibilities than cinema itself," Bunuel explained to Reyes Nevares. "Not even the richest producer could finance the superproduction of certain dreams." Bunuel and Simon of the Desert won the FIPRESCI Prize (bestowed by the International Federation of Film Critics) and a Special Jury Award at the Venice Film Festival in 1965. The director and the film were also nominated for the festival's top Golden Lion Award. Director: Luis Bunuel Producer: Gustavo Alatriste Screenplay: Luis Bunuel, Julio Alejandro Cinematography: Gabriel Figueroa Editing: Carlos Savage Original Music: Raul Lavista Cast: Claudio Brook (Simon), Silvia Pinal (Devil), Hortensia Santovena (Mother), Jesus Fernandez Martinez (Rabadan), Enrique Alvarez Felix (Brother Matias). BW-43m. by Rob Nixon

Simon of the Desert - Luis Bunuel's 1965 Mexican feature SIMON OF THE DESERT


In 1965's Simon of the Desert, Luis Buñuel distills his fascination with religion into a wickedly funny look at piety and temptation. Producer Gustavo Alatriste had given the expatriate Spanish director full freedom on his previous two pictures, the award winning and politically controversial Viridiana and the resolutely surreal The Exterminating Angel. Alatriste's one condition was that Buñuel provide starring roles for his wife, Mexican actress Silvia Pinal.

In a dusty desert, the saintly Simon (Claudio Brook) stands atop a stone pillar, seeking to purify his soul by physically removing himself from worldly things. Various monks attend to Simon, who is too humble to accept holy orders. Simon's first pillar is only about ten feet tall. A grateful merchant cured by Simon's prayers builds him a 25-footer, placing the bearded ascetic like a landmark under the clear skies. But the high perch cannot protect Simon from the temptations of Satan.

Bun˜uel's Simon is a disciple of Saint Simeon Stylites, an historical Syrian ascetic; holy men lecturing from atop pillars were apparently not a rare thing in ancient times. Buñuel doesn't mock the scriptures or deny Simon's sincerity, but instead illustrates the pious Simon's defenselessness in our corrupt world. Rituals and politics preoccupy the local monks; when Simon performs authentic miracles, one grumbles that the spiritual nonsense is getting out of hand. In an argument over the doctrinal terms anastasis and hypostasis, one monk asks, "What on earth is the apocatastasis?", and his colleague hasn't a clue. Simon sends away a carefree young monk who skips along instead of walks. Another monk distracts Simon by telling him that his faith is irrelevant, because humanity is too selfish and materialistic to appreciate it.

The general public is even more distracting. Simon's mother lives in a tent at the bottom of the pillar, forcing him to stand looking the other way to concentrate on his prayers. A dwarf goatherd (who appears to be too familiar with his goats) persists in giving Simon unwanted bread and milk, taking his mind off his fasting. A crowd gathers in hopes of seeing a miracle, but is unimpressed when Simon succeeds. Among them is a handless thief who begs to be cured so that he can feed his family. Although Simon's prayers indeed make the man whole again, he's neither grateful nor enlightened. The thief's first act is to slap one of his daughters.

Simon seeks hardship and self-denial, and finds peace only in solitude. Unfortunately, the devil (Silvia Pinal) tempts him, appearing in different forms, mostly female. We first see Satan as a beautiful water bearer (with demonic hands) who breaks the holy concentration of some monks. Satan then manifests himself as a little girl in a sailor suit, taunting Simon with a perverse song and showing him her "innocent" legs and breasts.

Simon stands firm, but the devil returns disguised as God, with golden locks and a beard. After dealing with possessed monks and the devil's taunting tongue, Simon seems fated to become a combination tormented martyr and burlesque straight man. The irony is that the devil, having lived by God's side, is hard proof that God exists. "As for God's son," says Satan, "I could tell you a few things about him."

For his final appearance, the devil arrives in a coffin that moves by itself, reminding us of a scene in Murnau's silent Nosferatu. This time "she" infers that Simon will be transported from his tower to some kind of Hell, and that he has no choice in the matter.

[Spoiler] In the controversial ending, Buñuel whisks Simon fifteen centuries into the future, to a Manhattan discothèque hopping with guitar music and dancers. Wearing a turtleneck and a neatly trimmed beard, Simon stares dejectedly while the devil continues to give him grief. She tells Simon that the song is called "Radioactive Flesh" and he must listen to it until "the end" -- of time? The focus of much critical analysis, the abrupt conclusion is simply Buñuel's cosmic joke on the banality of sin. It also expresses the director's personal hatred of rock 'n' roll music, which he considered an abomination. Just the same, Buñuel's disco scene is considerably better than anything in contemporary Hollywood pictures!

At only 45 minutes, the show is neither a short subject nor a full feature, and its exhibition opportunities have been limited. The producer's money ran out before Buñuel could film a number of scenes, leaving Simon of the Desert an almost pure surreal statement. Gabriel Figueroa's stark cinematography avoids pictorial effects but uses a gliding camera crane to animate what is basically a static situation. Star Claudio Brook acted both in Mexico and Hollywood, appearing in several Buñuel pictures as well as later surreal exotica like Juan López Moctezuma's The Mansion of Madness. Silvia Pinal was a Mexican star before Buñuel but became internationally known through his movies.

The Criterion Collection's disc of Simon of the Desert is a nearly perfect transfer of a fine B&W element that shows only a hint of a scratch on the very first scene. It's a far cry from the dim 16mm copies once screened in film classes. Although the main titles would seem balanced for 1.66:1, the full frame presentation is not objectionable.

Criterion producer Kim Hendrickson has gathered excellent extras to accompany the brief feature. Still proud of her association with the famous director, Silvia Pinal reminisces about the filming in a new interview. She admits that, in her role as Satan, she indeed kicked that tiny lamb. The fat insert booklet holds an insightful essay by Michael Wood and an interview with Luis Buñuel from the 1970s.

The hour-long 1997 documentary A Mexican Buñuel is an excellent examination of the director's rich middle career in Mexico. Filmmaker Emilio Maillé visits the field that Buñuel rented for Simon of the Desert and finds one of the original pillars still in place. Rare film clips accompany interviews with actors, screenwriters, producers and Buñuel's wife. We're also shown an unused alternate "happy" ending for Los Olvidados that would have seen service had the film not won awards overseas. Buñuel is one of those artists who becomes more interesting as we study him. This documentary reveals new surprises about the director and his fascinating films.

For more information about Simon of the Desert, visit The Criterion Collection. To order Simon of the Desert, go to TCM Shopping.

by Glenn Erickson

Simon of the Desert - Luis Bunuel's 1965 Mexican feature SIMON OF THE DESERT

In 1965's Simon of the Desert, Luis Buñuel distills his fascination with religion into a wickedly funny look at piety and temptation. Producer Gustavo Alatriste had given the expatriate Spanish director full freedom on his previous two pictures, the award winning and politically controversial Viridiana and the resolutely surreal The Exterminating Angel. Alatriste's one condition was that Buñuel provide starring roles for his wife, Mexican actress Silvia Pinal. In a dusty desert, the saintly Simon (Claudio Brook) stands atop a stone pillar, seeking to purify his soul by physically removing himself from worldly things. Various monks attend to Simon, who is too humble to accept holy orders. Simon's first pillar is only about ten feet tall. A grateful merchant cured by Simon's prayers builds him a 25-footer, placing the bearded ascetic like a landmark under the clear skies. But the high perch cannot protect Simon from the temptations of Satan. Bun˜uel's Simon is a disciple of Saint Simeon Stylites, an historical Syrian ascetic; holy men lecturing from atop pillars were apparently not a rare thing in ancient times. Buñuel doesn't mock the scriptures or deny Simon's sincerity, but instead illustrates the pious Simon's defenselessness in our corrupt world. Rituals and politics preoccupy the local monks; when Simon performs authentic miracles, one grumbles that the spiritual nonsense is getting out of hand. In an argument over the doctrinal terms anastasis and hypostasis, one monk asks, "What on earth is the apocatastasis?", and his colleague hasn't a clue. Simon sends away a carefree young monk who skips along instead of walks. Another monk distracts Simon by telling him that his faith is irrelevant, because humanity is too selfish and materialistic to appreciate it. The general public is even more distracting. Simon's mother lives in a tent at the bottom of the pillar, forcing him to stand looking the other way to concentrate on his prayers. A dwarf goatherd (who appears to be too familiar with his goats) persists in giving Simon unwanted bread and milk, taking his mind off his fasting. A crowd gathers in hopes of seeing a miracle, but is unimpressed when Simon succeeds. Among them is a handless thief who begs to be cured so that he can feed his family. Although Simon's prayers indeed make the man whole again, he's neither grateful nor enlightened. The thief's first act is to slap one of his daughters. Simon seeks hardship and self-denial, and finds peace only in solitude. Unfortunately, the devil (Silvia Pinal) tempts him, appearing in different forms, mostly female. We first see Satan as a beautiful water bearer (with demonic hands) who breaks the holy concentration of some monks. Satan then manifests himself as a little girl in a sailor suit, taunting Simon with a perverse song and showing him her "innocent" legs and breasts. Simon stands firm, but the devil returns disguised as God, with golden locks and a beard. After dealing with possessed monks and the devil's taunting tongue, Simon seems fated to become a combination tormented martyr and burlesque straight man. The irony is that the devil, having lived by God's side, is hard proof that God exists. "As for God's son," says Satan, "I could tell you a few things about him." For his final appearance, the devil arrives in a coffin that moves by itself, reminding us of a scene in Murnau's silent Nosferatu. This time "she" infers that Simon will be transported from his tower to some kind of Hell, and that he has no choice in the matter. [Spoiler] In the controversial ending, Buñuel whisks Simon fifteen centuries into the future, to a Manhattan discothèque hopping with guitar music and dancers. Wearing a turtleneck and a neatly trimmed beard, Simon stares dejectedly while the devil continues to give him grief. She tells Simon that the song is called "Radioactive Flesh" and he must listen to it until "the end" -- of time? The focus of much critical analysis, the abrupt conclusion is simply Buñuel's cosmic joke on the banality of sin. It also expresses the director's personal hatred of rock 'n' roll music, which he considered an abomination. Just the same, Buñuel's disco scene is considerably better than anything in contemporary Hollywood pictures! At only 45 minutes, the show is neither a short subject nor a full feature, and its exhibition opportunities have been limited. The producer's money ran out before Buñuel could film a number of scenes, leaving Simon of the Desert an almost pure surreal statement. Gabriel Figueroa's stark cinematography avoids pictorial effects but uses a gliding camera crane to animate what is basically a static situation. Star Claudio Brook acted both in Mexico and Hollywood, appearing in several Buñuel pictures as well as later surreal exotica like Juan López Moctezuma's The Mansion of Madness. Silvia Pinal was a Mexican star before Buñuel but became internationally known through his movies. The Criterion Collection's disc of Simon of the Desert is a nearly perfect transfer of a fine B&W element that shows only a hint of a scratch on the very first scene. It's a far cry from the dim 16mm copies once screened in film classes. Although the main titles would seem balanced for 1.66:1, the full frame presentation is not objectionable. Criterion producer Kim Hendrickson has gathered excellent extras to accompany the brief feature. Still proud of her association with the famous director, Silvia Pinal reminisces about the filming in a new interview. She admits that, in her role as Satan, she indeed kicked that tiny lamb. The fat insert booklet holds an insightful essay by Michael Wood and an interview with Luis Buñuel from the 1970s. The hour-long 1997 documentary A Mexican Buñuel is an excellent examination of the director's rich middle career in Mexico. Filmmaker Emilio Maillé visits the field that Buñuel rented for Simon of the Desert and finds one of the original pillars still in place. Rare film clips accompany interviews with actors, screenwriters, producers and Buñuel's wife. We're also shown an unused alternate "happy" ending for Los Olvidados that would have seen service had the film not won awards overseas. Buñuel is one of those artists who becomes more interesting as we study him. This documentary reveals new surprises about the director and his fascinating films. For more information about Simon of the Desert, visit The Criterion Collection. To order Simon of the Desert, go to TCM Shopping. by Glenn Erickson

Quotes

Trivia

Notes

Location scenes filmed in Mexico. Screened to the press in Mexico City in May 1965; running time: 42 min. Spanish title: Simón del desierto; also reviewed as Simeon del desierto and San Simeon del desierto.

Miscellaneous Notes

Winner of the Special Jury and International Critics Prizes at the 1965 Venice Film Festival.

Released in United States 1965

Released in United States 1966

Released in United States August 16, 1994

Released in United States December 21, 1990

Released in United States September 20, 1966

Shown at 1966 Montreal Film Festival.

Shown at 1966 Venice Film Festival.

Shown at New York Film Festival September 20, 1966.

Shown at Pacific Film Archive in Berkeley, CA December 21, 1990.

Released in United States September 20, 1966 (Shown at New York Film Festival September 20, 1966.)

Released in United States August 16, 1994 (Shown in New York City (Films Charas) August 16, 1994.)

Released in United States 1966 (Shown at 1966 Montreal Film Festival.)

Released in United States 1966 (Shown at 1966 Venice Film Festival.)

Released in United States December 21, 1990 (Shown at Pacific Film Archive in Berkeley, CA December 21, 1990.)

Released in United States 1965