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Who is Luis Buñuel

Luis Buñuel was born in Spain in 1900. He studied first with Jesuits before enrolling in the University of Madrid, majoring in science. At the University, he met Salvador Dalí and Federico García Lorca. Inspired by Fritz Lang's film Destiny, Buñuel went to Paris to study film during the 1920s amidst a flourish of avant-garde experimentation. There, he became an assistant to the experimental filmmaker Jean Epstein, and in 1928 collaborated with some friends, including Salvador Dalí on Un Chien Andalou, which became a surrealist classic. It provoked a scandal, but Buñuel went on to film L'Age d'Or in 1930, creating another scandal. L'Age d'Or would also be the last time Salvador Dalí would collaborate with Buñuel as he fought with Buñuel over the film's anti-Catholicism. After L'Age d'Or, Buñuel further pursued his interests in anti-clericalism when he turned his attention to making a documentary called Land Without Bread (1932). Studying the contrast between the poverty, disease, and death of the Spanish people and the lush, jewel-filled world of the Spanish Catholic Church. Buñuel went on to work for the foreign branches of major Hollywood studios, dubbing for Paramount in Paris and supervising co-productions for Warner Brothers in Spain. He produced several more Spanish pictures before leaving Spain for the United States during the Spanish Civil War.

 

While in the United States, he was director of documentaries at the Museum of Modern Art in New York. He also found himself working for major Hollywood studios again as well as the U. S. government, supervising Spanish-language versions of films for MGM, making documentaries for the U. S. Army, and dubbing for Warner Brothers. Buñuel began to direct films again after a creative hiatus of almost 15 years when he went to Mexico.

 

In association with producer Óscar Dancigers, Buñuel made a series of films, including Los Olvidados (1950), El (1952), and The Criminal Life of Archibaldo de la Cruz (1955). The best of these films brought Buñuel once more to international acclaim. It was with his Mexican films that Buñuel began to fully develop his unique mix of surrealist humor and social melancholy, combining a documentary sense with surrealist qualities into a loose, discontinuous form of narrative that his films would continue to follow as his career progressed. With his Mexican films, he paid especially close attention to the details of average Mexican life. Buñuel would continue to make films in Mexico, most notably Nazarin (1958), even after leaving the continent.


Buñuel returned to France in 1955 to begin three co-productions that placed him in the center of cinematic art. His first opportunity to work and live in Spain came when he made Viridiana in 1961. Though his script was initially approved, the film was banned upon release due to its anticlerical images, notably Buñuel's famous parodical shot of Leonardo Da Vinci's painting, The Last Supper. Nevertheless, the film achieved international recognition. Controversy and problems with either distribution or censorship continued to appear throughout his career, as in his French film Belle de Jour (1967), which would later go out of distribution for many years until Martin Scorsese re-released it in 1996. Despite the complications, Buñuel continued to be one of the most creative and productive of all film directors.

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