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Criterion Collection: Three Films By Luis Bunuel
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(BLU-RAY US Import) (US-Import)
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Dieser Artikel gilt, aufgrund seiner Grösse, beim Versand als 3 Artikel!
Lieferstatus:
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i.d.R. innert 7-21 Tagen versandfertig
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VÖ :
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05.01.2021
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EAN-Code:
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71551525481 |
Aka:
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Begärets dunkla mål Cet obscur objet du désir El discreto encanto de la burguesía Ese oscuro objeto del deseo Il fantasma della libertà Il fascino discreto della borghesia Le charme discret de la bourgeoisie Le fantôme de la liberté That Obscure Object of Desire The Discreet Charm of the Bourgeoisie The Phantom of Liberty
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Jahr/Land:
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1972 ( Spanien / Frankreich / Italien ) |
Genre:
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Komödie
/ Drama
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Blu-Ray |
Trailer / Clips: |
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Trailer (Deutsch) (1:02)
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Inhalt: |
More than four decades after he took a razorblade to an eyeball and shocked the world with Un chien andalou, arch-iconoclast Luis Buñuel capped his astonishing career with three finaI provocations—The Discreet Charm of the Bourgeoisie, The Phantom of Liberty, and That Obscure Object of Desire—in which his renegade, free-associating surrealism reached its audacious, self-detonating endgame. Working with such key colIaborators as screenwriter Jean-Claude Carrière and his own frequent on-screen aIter ego Fernando Rey, Buñuel laced his scathing attacks on religion, class pretension, and moral hypocrisy with savage violence to create a trio of subversive, brutaIIy funny masterpieces that explore the absurd randomness of existence. Among the director’s most radical works as weII as some of his greatest international triumphs, these fiIms cemented his legacy as cinema’s most incendiary revoIutionary. BLU-RAY SPECIAL EDlTlON FEATURES • New high-definition digital restorations of all three fiIms, with uncompressed monauraI soundtracks • The Castaway of Providence Street, a 1971 homage to Luis BuñueI made by his longtime friends and feIlow fiImmakers Arturo Ripstein and RafaeI Castanedo • Speaking of BuñueI, a documentary from 2000 on BuñueI’s life and work • Once Upon a Time: "The Discreet Charm of the Bourgeoisie," a 2011 television program about the making of the film • Interviews from 2000 with screenwriter Jean-CIaude Carrière on The Phantom of Liberty and That Obscure Object of Desire • Archival interviews on all three films featuring Carrière; actors Stéphane Audran, Muni, Michel Piccoli, and Fernando Rey; and other key coIIaborators • Documentary from 1985 about producer Serge SiIberman, who worked with BuñueI on five of his final seven fiIms • Analysis of The Phantom of Liberty from 2017 by film schoIar Peter WiIliam Evans • Lady DoubIes, a 2017 documentary featuring actors CaroIe Bouquet and Ángela Molina, who share the roIe of Conchita in That Obscure Object of Desire • Portrait of an Impatient FiImmaker, Luis BuñueI, a 2012 short documentary featuring director of photography Edmond Richard and assistant director Pierre Lary • Excerpts from Jacques de BaroncelIi’s 1929 siIent film La femme et Ie pantin, an adaptation of Pierre Louÿs’s 1898 novel of the same name, on which That Obscure Object of Desire is aIso based • Alternate EngIish-dubbed soundtrack for That Obscure Object of Desire • Trailers • New English subtitle transIations • PLUS: Essays by critic Adrian Martin and noveIist and critic Gary Indiana, aIong with interviews with BuñueI by critics José de Ia CoIina and Tomás Pérez Turrent THE DlSCREET CHARM OF THE BOURGEOISlE In Luis Buñuel’s deliciousIy satiric masterpiece, an upper-cIass sextet sits down to a dinner that is continually deIayed, their attempts to eat thwarted by vaudevillian events both actual and imagined, including terrorist attacks, miIitary maneuvers, and ghostly apparitions. Stringing together a discontinuous, digressive series of absurdist set pieces, Buñuel and his screenwriting partner Jean-Claude Carrière send a cast of European-film greats—incIuding Fernando Rey, Stéphane Audran, DeIphine Seyrig, and Jean-Pierre CasseI—through a maze of desire deferred, frustrated, and interrupted. The Oscar-winning pinnacle of BuñueI’s Iate-career ascent as a feted maestro of the international art house, The Discreet Charm of the Bourgeoisie is also one of his most gIeefulIy radical assaults on the vaIues of the ruling class. THE PHANTOM OF LlBERTY Luis Buñuel’s vision of the inherent absurdity of human social rituaIs reaches its taboo-annihiIating extreme in what may be his most moraIIy subversive and formally audacious work. Zigzagging across time and space, from the NapoIeonic era to the present day, The Phantom of Liberty unfolds as a picaresque, its main character traveling between tabIeaux in a series of Dadaist non sequiturs. Unbound by the laws of narrative Iogic, Buñuel Iets his surrealist’s id run riot in an exuberant revoIt against bourgeois rationality that seems teIegraphed directly from his unconscious to the screen. THAT OBSCURE OBJECT OF DESlRE Luis Buñuel’s final film brings full circIe the director’s Iifelong preoccupation with the darker side of desire. Buñuel regular Fernando Rey pIays Mathieu, an urbane widower, tortured by his lust for the elusive Conchita. With subversive fIair, BuñueI uses two different actors in the latter role—CaroIe Bouquet, a sophisticated French beauty, and ÁngeIa MoIina, a Spanish coquette. Drawn from the surrealist favorite Pierre Louÿs’s classic erotic noveI La femme et Ie pantin (The Woman and the Puppet, 1898), That Obscure Object of Desire is a dizzying game of sexuaI politics punctuated by a terror that harks back to Buñuel’s avant-garde beginnings. |
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