Luis Buñuel


Director
Luis Buñuel

About

Birth Place
Calanda, Teruel, ES
Born
February 22, 1900
Died
July 29, 1983

Biography

One of the founders of surrealist cinema, Luis Bunuel enjoyed a career as diverse and contradictory as his films: he was a master of both silent and sound cinema, of documentaries as well as features; his greatest work was produced in the two decades after his 60th year, a time when most directors have either retired or gone into decline; and although frequently characterized as a surrea...

Family & Companions

Jeanne Rucar
Wife
Olympic gymnast. Born c. 1910; married in 1934.

Bibliography

"An Unspeakable Betrayal: Selected Writings of Luis Bunuel"
University of California Press (2000)
"My Last Sigh"
Luis Bunuel and Jean-Claude Carriere (1982)

Biography

One of the founders of surrealist cinema, Luis Bunuel enjoyed a career as diverse and contradictory as his films: he was a master of both silent and sound cinema, of documentaries as well as features; his greatest work was produced in the two decades after his 60th year, a time when most directors have either retired or gone into decline; and although frequently characterized as a surrealist, many of his films were dramas and farces in the realist or neo-realist mode. Yet despite all the innovations and permutations of his work, Bunuel remained suprisingly consistent and limited in the targets of his social satire: the Catholic Church, bourgeois culture, and Fascism. As he once commented, "Religious education and Surrealism have marked me for life."

Bunuel described his childhood in Calanda, a village in the Spanish province of Aragon, as having "slipped by in an almost medieval atmosphere." Between the ages of six and fifteen he attended Jesuit school, where a strict educational program, unchanged since the 18th century, instilled in him a lifelong rebellion against religion.

In 1917 Bunuel enrolled in the University of Madrid and soon became involved in the political and literary penas, or clubs, that met in the city's cafes. His friends included several of Spain's future great artists and writers, including Salvador Dali, Federico Garcia Lorca and Rafael Albertini. Within a few years the avant-garde movement had reached the penas and spawned its Spanish variants, "creacionismo" and "ultraismo." Although influenced by these, Bunuel was often critical of the Spanish avant-garde for its allegiance to traditional forms.

In 1925 Bunuel left Madrid for Paris, with no clear idea of what he would do. When he saw Fritz Lang's "Destiny" (1921), however, he realized where his vocation lay. He approached the renowned French director, Jean Epstein, who hired him as an assistant. Bunuel began to learn the techniques of filmmaking but was fired when he refused to work with Epstein's own mentor, Abel Gance, whose films he did not like. In a prophetic statement, Epstein warned Bunuel about his "surrealistic tendencies."

In 1928, with financial support from his mother, Bunuel collaborated with Dali on "Un Chien Andalou," a "surrealist weapon" designed to shock the bourgeois as well as criticize the avant-garde. As in his earlier book of poems, "Un Perro Andaluz," Bunuel rejected the avant-garde's emphasis on form, or camera "tricks," over content. Instead, his influences were commercial neo-realism, horror films and American comedies.

Bunuel's three early films established him as a master of surrealist cinema, whose goal was to treat all human experience--dreams, madness or "normal" waking states--on the same level. The critical success in some quarters of the strange and provocative "L'Age d'or" (1930) secured Bunuel a contract with MGM, which he turned down after a visit to Hollywood in 1930. His next film, "Las Hurdes: Tierra Sin Pan" (1932) was a documentary financed with money won in a lottery and shot with a camera borrowed from Yves Allegret. Ostensibly an objective study of a remote, impoverished region in western Spain, the film constituted such a militant critique of both church and state that it was banned in Spain. The stage had been set, however, for Bunuel's later work, in which realism--with its pre-established mass appeal--provided an accessible context for his surreal aesthetic and moral code.

After "Las Hurdes," Bunuel would not direct another film until 1947. Although still critical of commercial cinema, he spent the next 14 years within the industry, learning all aspects of film production. From 1933 to 1935 he dubbed dialogue for Paramount in Paris and then Warner Bros. in Spain; between 1935 and the outbreak of the Spanish Civil War in 1936 he produced popular musical comedies in Spain; during the Civil War he served the Republican government, compiling newsreel material into a documentary about the war, "Espana leal en armas" (1937). In 1938, while he was in Hollywood supervising two other documentaries, the Fascists assumed power at home. Unable to return to Spain, Bunuel went to work for the Museum of Modern Art in New York, re-editing and dubbing documentaries for distribution in Latin America. He was forced to resign in 1942, however, because of his suspected Communist background--a suspicion which he later claimed had been aroused by Dali. In order to survive, Bunuel narrated documentaries for the Army Corps of Engineers until 1944, when Warner Bros. hired him to produce Spanish versions of their films.

In 1946 Bunuel moved to Mexico, where many of Spain's intellectuals and artists had emigrated after the Civil War. He would live there for the rest of his life, becoming a citizen in 1949 and directing 20 films by 1964. This period is often described as an "apprenticeship" in which Bunuel was forced to shoot low-budget commercial films in between a handful of surreal "classics." Indeed, Bunuel's supposed indifference to style--his minimal use of non-diegetic music, close-ups or camera movement--is often judged to be largely the result of the limited resources available to him. Yet his Mexican films can more accurately be seen as a refinement of the often unobstrusive aesthetic style that had been evident since "Un Chien Andalou." As Bunuel himself insisted, "I never made a single scene that compromised my convictions or my personal morality."

Bunuel's third Mexican film, "Los Olvidados" (1950), brought him to international attention once again. Although hailed as a surrealist film, it owes much to postwar neorealism in its unsentimental depiction of Mexico's slum children. As in his other Mexican films before "Nazarin" (1958), dream sequences and surreal images are introduced at strategic moments into an otherwise realist narrative. (Contributing to the relative neglect of these films has been their unavailability outside Mexico, and perhaps their proletarian and "ethnic" focus.)

In 1955 Bunuel began to direct international--and more openly political--co-productions in Europe. In 1961 he was invited to Spain to film "Viridiana." The completed film was a direct assault on Spanish Catholicism and Fascism and was banned by its unwitting patron; a "succes de scandale," it won the Palm d'Or at Cannes and secured long overdue international acclaim for its director. After "Viridiana," Bunuel worked mostly in France. The growth of his new international (and consequently educated and middle-class) audience coincided with his return to a surrealist aesthetic. "The Exterminating Angel" (1962), "The Discreet Charm of the Bourgeoisie" (1972) and "The Phantom of Liberty" (1974) depict a bourgeoisie trapped within their own conventions, if not--in the first film's metaphorical conceit--their own homes. "Belle de jour" (1967), "Tristana" (1970) and "That Obscure Object of Desire" (1977) explore sexual obsessions and preoccupations. "The Milky Way" (1969) launches a frontal assault on the Church, in a summation of Bunuel's lifelong contempt for that institution.

In 1980, Bunuel collaborated with Jean-Claude Carriere, his screenwriter since "Diary of a Chambermaid" (1963), on his autobiography, "My Last Sigh" (France 1982; USA 1983).

Filmography

 

Director (Feature Film)

Republic of Sin (1988)
Director
That Obscure Object of Desire (1977)
Director
The Phantom of Liberty (1974)
Director
Discreet Charm of the Bourgeoisie (1972)
Director
Tristana (1970)
Director
The Milky Way (1969)
Director
Belle de jour (1968)
Director
The Exterminating Angel (1967)
Director
Simon of the Desert (1965)
Director
Diary of a Chambermaid (1965)
Director
Nazarin (1962)
Director
The Criminal Life of Archibaldo de la Cruz (1962)
Director
Viridiana (1962)
Director
The Young One (1961)
Director
Un Chien Andalou (1960)
Director
That is the Dawn (1956)
Director
The River of Death (1955)
Director
The Criminal Life of Archibaldo de La Cruz (1955)
Director
Adventures of Robinson Crusoe (1954)
Director
Illusion Travels by Streetcar (1954)
Director
Wuthering Heights (1953)
Director
El (1953)
Director
El Bruto (1952)
Director
Subida Al Cielo (1952)
Director
Mexican Bus Ride (1952)
Director
A Woman Without Love (1951)
Director
The Devil and the Flesh (1951)
Director
La Hija del Engano (1951)
Director
El Gran Calavera (1949)
Director
The Great Madcap (1949)
Director
Gran Casino (1947)
Director
Las Hurdes (1932)
Director
L'Age d'Or (1930)
Director

Assistant Direction (Feature Film)

Siren of the Tropics (1929)
Assistant Director
The Fall of the House of Usher (1928)
Assistant Director
Mauprat (1926)
Assistant Director

Cast (Feature Film)

Regarding Bunuel (2000)
The Bunuel Paradox (1997)
Himself
Un Chien Andalou (1960)
Man With Razor
Centinela alerta! (1936)
Mauprat (1926)

Writer (Feature Film)

Regarding Bunuel (2000)
From Autobiography ("My Last Breath")
La Novia de Medianoche (1997)
From Script
La Novia de Medianoche (1997)
Screenplay
Republic of Sin (1988)
Screenwriter
That Obscure Object of Desire (1977)
Screenwriter
That Obscure Object of Desire (1977)
Adaptation
That Obscure Object of Desire (1977)
Dialogue
The Phantom of Liberty (1974)
Screenplay
Le Moine (1973)
Screenwriter
Discreet Charm of the Bourgeoisie (1972)
Screenwriter
Tristana (1970)
Screenwriter
Tristana (1970)
Adaptation
The Milky Way (1969)
Screenwriter
Belle de jour (1968)
Screenwriter
The Exterminating Angel (1967)
Screenwriter
Diary of a Chambermaid (1965)
Screenwriter
Simon of the Desert (1965)
Screenwriter
Viridiana (1962)
Screenwriter
The Criminal Life of Archibaldo de la Cruz (1962)
Screenwriter
Nazarin (1962)
Screenwriter
The Young One (1961)
Screenwriter
Un Chien Andalou (1960)
Screenwriter
That is the Dawn (1956)
Screenplay
The River of Death (1955)
Screenwriter
The Criminal Life of Archibaldo de La Cruz (1955)
Screenwriter
Adventures of Robinson Crusoe (1954)
Screenwriter
El (1953)
Screenplay
Wuthering Heights (1953)
Screenplay
Subida Al Cielo (1952)
Screenplay
El Bruto (1952)
Screenwriter
Las Hurdes (1932)
Screenwriter
L'Age d'Or (1930)
Screenwriter

Producer (Feature Film)

Un Chien Andalou (1960)
Producer
Centinela alerta! (1936)
Executive Producer
Quien me quiere a mi? (1936)
Executive Producer
L'Age d'Or (1930)
Producer

Editing (Feature Film)

Un Chien Andalou (1960)
Editor
Espana leal en armas (1937)
Editor Supervisor
L'Age d'Or (1930)
Editor

Music (Feature Film)

The Milky Way (1969)
Music
Un Chien Andalou (1960)
Music
Espana leal en armas (1937)
Music Editor

Sound (Feature Film)

The Phantom of Liberty (1974)
Sound Effects

Film Production - Main (Feature Film)

Quien me quiere a mi? (1936)
Production Supervisor
Centinela alerta! (1936)
Production Supervisor

Misc. Crew (Feature Film)

The Man Who Envied Women (1986)
Other
Chance, History, Art... (1981)
Other

Life Events

1922

Began contributing to literary journals

1925

Went to Paris; invited by director Jean Epstein to be his assistant

1926

First film as assistant director "Mauprat"

1926

Film acting debut in "Carmen"

1927

Debut as playwright with Spanish "Hamlet"

1927

Stage directing debut (Amsterdam) with "El Retablo de Maese Pedro"

1929

First film as director and co-screenwriter (with Salvador Dali) "Un chien Andalou"

1930

Hired for six months by MGM after he made "L'Age d'Or" with the idea that he would be involved in making foreign-language versions of other MGM films

1931

Returned to France

1932

Hired by Paramount (Europe) as dubber

1935

Becomes executive producer for Filmofono Films in Madrid, supervising musicals and comedies

1936

Hired as cultural attache by Republican government (Paris), returned to Hollywood to supervise (ultimately unrealized) documentaries on Spanish Civil War

1942

Dismissed because of suspicion of Communist background

1944

Returned to Hollywood to produce Spanish versions of Warner Brothers films

1946

Moved to Mexico; made films there for next fifteen years

1950

"Los Olvidados" set record by winning 11 Ariel awards

1961

Invited by Spanish government to return; made "Viridiana"; film suppressed in Spain

Videos

Movie Clip

Adventures Of Robinson Crusoe (1954) -- (Movie Clip) How True My Father's Prophesy Certain artful qualities seen in the opening, in Luis Bunuel's Mexican, made-for-export, wide-screen color adventure, Adventures Of Robinson Crusoe, 1954, starring Dan O'Herlihy.
Adventures Of Robinson Crusoe (1954) -- (Movie Clip) This Terrible Dream Now ill with fever, in his 11th marooned month, but still narrating, Dan O'Herlihy (title character) dreams of his father (also O'Herlihy), a freaky sequence from director Luis Bunuel's Adventures Of Robinson Crusoe, 1954.
Tristana (1970) -- (Movie Clip) God Rot His Soul Arresting opening from director Luis Bunuel, deaf kids including Saturno (Jesus Fernandez) playing soccer, his mother (Lola Gaos) and Catherine Deneuve (title character), who's the new ward of her boss Don Lope (Fernando Rey), visiting, on location in Toledo, from Tristana, 1970.
Viridiana (1962) -- (Movie Clip) You Should Bid Him Farewell Director Luis Bunuel’s opening, from the picture which the fascist government of his native Spain invited him home to make, introducing Silvia Pinal as the title character, a novitiate being instructed by her superior (Rosita Yarza), then meeting her uncle (Fernando Rey), in Viridiana, 1962.
Viridiana (1962) -- (Movie Clip) Who's There? Though not clear at the time, we’ll learn that Silvia Pinal (title character), visiting the uncle whom she barely knows, before she enters a convent, is sleepwalking, as he fiddles with the personal belongings of his late wife, whom she closely resembles, in Luis Bunuel’s Viridiana, 1962.
Viridiana (1962) -- (Movie Clip) She Has A Heart Of Gold We’ve just met Jorge (Francisco Rabal), illegitimate son of the late Don Jaime, who’s inherited half his estate, and girlfriend Lucia (Victoria Zinny), when they meet Silvia Pinal (title character), the niece and would-be nun who inherited the other half, with a group of vagrants she plans to support, in Luis Bunuel’s Viridiana, 1962.
Belle De Jour (1967) -- (Movie Clip) You Can Be Very Cruel A famous opening by director Luis Bunuel, using real time and sound to reveal both more and less than meets the eye, introducing young wife and husband Severine (Catherine Deneuve) and Pierre (Jean Sorel), from the celebrated Belle De Jour, 1967.
Belle De Jour (1967) -- (Movie Clip) You Should See A Specialist Director Luis Bunuel shooting on location in Alpes-Maritimes, France, Severine (Catherine Deneuve), troubled with sexual frustration and fantasies, with husband Pierre (Jean Sorel) and friend Renee (Macha Meril), joined by her creepy boyfriend Husson (Michel Piccoli), early in Belle De Jour, 1967.
Belle De Jour (1967) -- (Movie Clip) What's The Matter With You? Inexplicably seeking out a brothel at a Paris address provided to her by a scary friend, chaste housewife Severine (Catherine Deneuve) meets Madame Anais (Genevieve Page), with just a flash of fantasy from director Luis Bunuel, in Belle De Jour, 1967.
Belle De Jour (1967) -- (Movie Clip) Most Of Those Are Called Remorse After her first shift as a prostitute, Severine (Catherine Deneuve) escapes a date with husband Pierre (Jean Sorel), imagines him with friend Husson (Michel Piccoli), and tells Anais (Genevieve Page) she'd like more work, director Luis Bunuel making it seem normal, in Belle De Jour, 1967.
Simon Of The Desert (1965) -- (Movie Clip) Innocent Little Girl R-rated first appearance of Silvia Pinal, as "The Temptress," coming to the title character, a 6th century Syrian ascetic (Claudio Brook), in director Luis Bunuel's celebrated short feature Simon Of The Desert, 1965.
Simon Of The Desert (1965) -- (Movie Clip) Six Years Six Weeks And Six Days Opening of director Luis Bunuel's last film made in Mexico, based on the story of a 6th century Syrian saint, Claudio Brook on top of the pillar as the title character, in the short feature Simon Of The Desert, 1965, also starring Silvia Pinal.

Trailer

Family

Leonardo Bunuel
Father
Merchant. Married at age 42; died in 1923.
Maria Portoles
Mother
Married at age 17.
Leonardo Bunuel
Brother
Radiologist. Died in 1980.
Alfonso Bunuel
Brother
Born in 1915; died in 1961.
Alicia Bunuel
Sister
Died in 1977.
Margarita Bunuel
Sister
Maria Bunuel
Sister
Conchita Bunuel
Sister
The youngest.
Juan-Luis Bunuel
Son
Mother, Jeanne Rucar.
Rafael Bunuel
Son
Mother, Jeanne Rucar.

Companions

Jeanne Rucar
Wife
Olympic gymnast. Born c. 1910; married in 1934.

Bibliography

"An Unspeakable Betrayal: Selected Writings of Luis Bunuel"
University of California Press (2000)
"My Last Sigh"
Luis Bunuel and Jean-Claude Carriere (1982)