| Plot Synopsis |
by Jonathan Crow |
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. |
| Similar Works |
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Ballet Mécanique
(1924, Fernand Léger)
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The Exterminating Angel
(1962, Luis Buñuel)
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L'Age d'Or
(1930, Luis Buñuel)
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Meshes of the Afternoon
(1943, Maya Deren)
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The Testament of Orpheus
(1960, Jean Cocteau)
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Eraserhead
(1977, David Lynch)
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Split
(1990, Chris Shaw)
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El Topo
(1971, Alejandro Jodorowsky)
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Pi
(1998, Darren Aronofsky)
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Industrial Symphony No. 1: The Dream of the Broken Hearted
(1990, David Lynch)
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| Other Related Works |
| Is featured in: |
Henry & June
(1990, Philip Kaufman)
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