• Name: Luis Buñuel
  • Date of Birth: February 22, 1900
  • Place of Birth: Calanda, Teruel, Aragón, Spain
Mini-bio: 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. Up... read moreon 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 look at the squalor, poverty, and ignorance inherent in Spain's peasant villages, Buñuel signed on at Paramount Paris in 1933, overseeing the dubbing of Hollywood pictures. He moved on to an executive producer's post at Madrid's Filmfono Studios, where, during the Spanish Civil War, he began work on a Hollywood-financed pro-Loyalist film that was abandoned when Franco emerged victorious. Broke and persona non grata in his own country, Buñuel came to New York, where, from 1939 through 1942, he worked at the Museum of Modern Art. His plans to assemble an epic anti-Nazi documentary from the museum's reserve of newsreel footage never came to fruition, though he did manage to complete a 1940 March of Time piece on the Vatican. In 1947, he moved to Mexico, where his first directorial effort was Gran Casino (aka En el viejo Tampico ). Buñuel regained the international attention he'd lost in 1930 with Los Olvidados, a purely "commercial" film which nonetheless contained elements of his old anti-Catholicism. With 1952's El, Buñuel was able to fulfill his long-held ambition to make a film about utter, irredeemable madness, something he'd been denied back in 1946 when he was removed from the production staff of Warner Bros.' Beast With Five Fingers (1946). One of the few Buñuel films of the 1950s to be marketed to the Hollywood mainstream was Robinson Crusoe (1954), which would remain the most iconoclastic version of Daniel Defoe's novel until director Jack Gold's Man Friday (1976). After several years in Mexico, Buñuel returned to Spain in 1960 to make Viridiana. When the Spanish government censors took a good long look at the film's parodic "Last Supper" scene (with beggars, thieves, and morons in place of the disciples), Buñuel once more found his work banned in his native land. Apparently undeterred, the director went on to make such remarkable works as Exterminating Angel (1962), Belle de Jour (1966), and The Discreet Charm of the Bourgeoisie (1972), each film distinguished by Buñuel's elegant decadence, his ceaseless search for beauty within ugliness and vice versa, and his utter hatred for all things religious and "Establishment." The censorial climate in the U.S. had relaxed enough by 1972 to allow The Discreet Charm of the Bourgeoisie to win the Best Foreign-Language Film Oscar. Buñuel's final film was That Obscure Object of Desire (1977), the most unusual adaptation of Pierre Louys' oft-filmed novel La Femme et le Pantin. In Buñuel's version the female protagonist was played by two actresses simultaneously and dubbed by a third one. Buñuel died in 1983 in Mexico City. In 1995, he became the center of attention once more with the reissue of Belle de Jour, his 1966 elegant exercise in sexual obsession, ~ Hal Erickson, Rovi
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flixster.actor.pane.162671815 - flixsterLuis Buñuel mini-bio:
Luis Buñuel Portolés (22 February 1900 – 29 July 1983) was a Spanish-born filmmaker who worked mainly in France and Mexico, but also in his native Spain and in the United States. He is considered one of Spain's finest directors, and one of the most important directors in the history of cinema

Buñuel's films were famous for their surreal imagery; they include scenes in which chickens populate nightmares, women grow beards, and aspiring saints are desired by luscious women. Even in the many movies he made for hire (rather than for his own creative reasons), such as Susana and The Great Madcap, he usually added his trademark of disturbing and surreal images. Running through his own films is a backbone of surrealism; Buñuel's world is one in which an entire dinner party suddenly finds themselves inexplicably unable to leave the room and go home, a bad dream hands a man a letter which he brings to the doctor the next day, and where the devil, if unable to tempt a saint with a pretty girl, will fly him to a disco. An example of a more Dada influence can be found in Cet obscur objet du désir, when Mathieu closes his eyes and has his valet spin him around and direct him to a map on the wall.

Buñuel never explained or promoted his work. On one occasion, when his son was interviewed about The Exterminating Angel, Buñuel instructed him to give facetious answers; for example, when asked about the presence of a bear in the socialites' house, Buñuel fils claimed it was because his father liked bears. Similarly, the several repeated scenes in the film were explained as having been put there to increase the running time.

Buñuel's style of directing was extremely economical. He shot films in a few weeks, never deviating from his script and shooting in order as much as possible to minimize editing time. He told actors as little as possible, and limited his directions mostly to physical movements ("move to the right", "walk down the hall and go through that door", etc.). He often refused to answer actors' questions and was known to simply turn off his hearing aid on the set; though they found it difficult at the time, many actors who worked with him acknowledged later that his approach made for fresh and excellent performances.

Buñuel preferred scenes which could simply be pieced together end-to-end in the editing room, resulting in long, mobile, wide shots which followed the action of the scene. Examples are especially present in his French films. For example, at the restaurant / ski resort in Belle de jour, the characters Séverin, Pierre, and Henri are conversing at a table. Buñuel cuts away from their conversation to two young women who walk down a few steps and proceed through the restaurant, passing behind Séverin, Pierre, and Henri, at which point the camera stops and the young women walk out of frame. Henri then comments on the women and the conversation at the table progresses from there.

Buñuel disliked non-diegetic music, and avoided it in his films, though traditional drums from Calanda sound in most of his films. The films of his French era were not scored and some (Belle de jour, Diary of a Chambermaid) contain absolutely no music whatsoever. Belle de Jour does, however, feature (potentially) non-diegetic sound effects, believed by some to be clues as to whether or not the current scene is a dream.

VITAL STATS

Luis Buñuel Information:
Eye color:
Height: 5' 9½" (1.77 m)
Nickname(s):
Notable feature(s): His films often include an animal in a scene, where they seem out of place. Insects.
Education:
Family: He married Jeanne Rucar in a town hall in Paris in 1934 and they remained married throughout his life. His sons are Rafael and Juan Luis Buñuel. Diego Buñuel, filmmaker and host of the National Geographic Channel's Don't Tell my Mother I am in... series, is his grandson. He's the father-in-law of filmmaker Joyce Buñuel.
Resides in:
Religious affiliations: Although he was famously a lifelong atheist, he reportedly experienced a religious conversion at the end of his life.
Political affiliation: Communist
Personal interests/hobbies:
Charities/Causes:
Other: He was praised by Alfred Hitchcock as the best director ever.



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  • In his first two films, Un Chien Andalou and L'Age d'Or, surrealist director Luis Bunuel closely collaborated with this celebrated artist.  Answer »
  • Who directed the film Le Cien Andalou (The Andalusian Dog)  Answer »
  • This french actress has worked for all these directors : Luis Bunuel (Spain), Marco Ferreri, Mauro Bolognini, Dino Risi (Italie), Robert Aldrich, Tony Scott (USA),Manoel de Oliveira (Portugal, Lars von Trier (Danemark.  Answer »

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