Eine surrealistische Erzählung über die leidenschaftliche Liebe eines Mannes und einer Frau, deren Versuche jedoch, diese Leidenschaft auch Wirklichkeit werden zu lassen, ständig von deren F... Alles lesenEine surrealistische Erzählung über die leidenschaftliche Liebe eines Mannes und einer Frau, deren Versuche jedoch, diese Leidenschaft auch Wirklichkeit werden zu lassen, ständig von deren Familien, der Kirche und einer bourgeoisen Gesellschaft vereitelt werden.Eine surrealistische Erzählung über die leidenschaftliche Liebe eines Mannes und einer Frau, deren Versuche jedoch, diese Leidenschaft auch Wirklichkeit werden zu lassen, ständig von deren Familien, der Kirche und einer bourgeoisen Gesellschaft vereitelt werden.
- Marquise of X
- (as Mme Noizet)
- Marquis of X
- (as Ibanez)
- Bandit
- (Nicht genannt)
- Passer-by in the Street
- (Nicht genannt)
- Guest at the Marquis of X's Concert
- (Nicht genannt)
- Bandit
- (Nicht genannt)
- Lame Bandit
- (Nicht genannt)
- Guest at the Marquis of X's Concert
- (Nicht genannt)
- Guest at the Marquis of X's Concert
- (Nicht genannt)
- Bandit
- (Nicht genannt)
Handlung
WUSSTEST DU SCHON:
- WissenswertesLuis Buñuel and Salvador Dalí had effectively fallen out by the time the film went into production to the extent that Dali refused to have anything to do with the actual making of the film. On the first day of shooting, Buñuel chased Dalí off the set with a hammer.
- Zitate
Young Girl: I have waited for a long time. What joy to have our children murdered!
- Alternative VersionenThis film was published in Italy in an DVD anthology entitled "Un Chien Andalou", distributed by DNA Srl. The film has been re-edited with the contribution of the film history scholar Riccardo Cusin . This version is also available in streaming on some platforms.
- SoundtracksAve Verum Corpus K. 618
Written by Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart
As one of the previous reviewer already noted, it was not Buñuel's intention for this film to be looked at as something entirely serious; though there are certainly serious ideas being expressed. Instead, you could approach it as something radical, like rock n' roll or punk music, with the idea of a cinema of revolution and defiance that goes against all accepted conventions of what cinema is and what cinema should attain to; as well as commenting on the nature of society - with all its bourgeois values and the (then) prevalent idea of religious hypocrisy - in a way that would inspire thought and provoke a reaction. You might not enjoy it as much as a more conventional film that offers a plot and a theme and characters you can believe in - and all presented in a way that is comfortable and safe - but the experience, for me at least, is as a hundred times more rewarding than the latest Marvel adaptation or exercise in Hollywood nostalgia. Look at the current films at the top of the US box-office and it becomes clear that films like L'Âge d'Or (1930) and the proceeding Un Chien Andalou (1929) have become part of the minority. Nonetheless, when we view this film within the context of something like Kung-Fu Panda (2008), You Don't Mess With Zohan (2008), Indiana Jones and the Kingdom of the Crystal Skull (2008) and Sex and the City (2008) - all currently top of the American box office - we can see the extent of how facile and meaningless much of contemporary cinema has become.
It has never been my belief that a film requires a story or a character that we attach our own thoughts and feelings to, but rather, can survive simply as a platform for creative thought and artistic expression. The true power of cinema is in the sense that it is the only real art form that combines elements from every single separate art-form that you can possibly think of; from performance art, to photography, editing and design and of course, the various literary traditions that gave us the ideas of narrative and character. So, with L'Âge d'Or, we are presented with a mad jumble of images all flowing dreamlike from one scene to the next - sometimes boring, sometimes fascinating - often without interpretation or any kind of greater context outside of the broader notions of surrealism for the sake of it. It's still seen as something radical - perhaps even dangerous - seventy-odd years after it was first released, but really, its classic cinema in the traditional sense; e.g. a collection of abstract but penetrating images intended to be viewed by as many people as possible at the same time to create a shared and sensory experience. In this sense, the film is almost beyond criticism, or at least, beyond the higher intellectual/interpretative level of criticism that it normally receives, with the film standing as an ode to cinema at its most simple and sublime. All notions of intellectualism, or pseudo-intellectualism, are therefore thrown out of the window as the film transfixes us with some stunningly imaginative images that flicker to life on the screen.
To seek answers from the film is missing the point, as there are no questions to be asked. The point of the film is not to entertain on the base levels of character, narrative and simple human emotions, but rather, to present us with something that we've never seen before. It's artist expression. If you have no interest in this then you'll have no interest in the film - which, although incredibly difficult and almost certainly not to all tastes, is still as close to the purest sense of cinema as you can possibly get. Some of the images are intended to shock, others to amuse and others to titillate and provoke thought, even when there seems to be nothing to really think about. Above all else, it is an experience, like all films, and one that is entirely visual and approachable on even the most immediate of levels. Don't think too much about it, or attempt to see something that isn't there. The point of surrealism was to go beyond such notions of the real and mundane to present something illogical, imaginative and devoid of rational thinking in order to find a new way of approaching the world. That's what this film represents.
- ThreeSadTigers
- 10. Juni 2008
- Permalink
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Details
- Erscheinungsdatum
- Herkunftsland
- Sprache
- Auch bekannt als
- The Golden Age
- Drehorte
- Cabo de Creus, Girona, Catalonia, Spanien(opening sequence - landscape)
- Produktionsfirma
- Weitere beteiligte Unternehmen bei IMDbPro anzeigen
Box Office
- Bruttoertrag in den USA und Kanada
- 32.712 $
- Eröffnungswochenende in den USA und in Kanada
- 7.940 $
- 1. Feb. 2004
- Weltweiter Bruttoertrag
- 32.712 $
- Laufzeit1 Stunde
- Farbe
- Seitenverhältnis
- 1.20 : 1