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IMDbPro

El

Original title: Él
  • 1953
  • Approved
  • 1h 22m
IMDb RATING
7.9/10
7K
YOUR RATING
Arturo de Córdova and Delia Garcés in El (1953)
DramaRomance

A husband's suave exterior unravels after his marriage, and he unleashes his paranoid and volatile temper on his wife, which escalates to more dangerous and unpredictable tantrums.A husband's suave exterior unravels after his marriage, and he unleashes his paranoid and volatile temper on his wife, which escalates to more dangerous and unpredictable tantrums.A husband's suave exterior unravels after his marriage, and he unleashes his paranoid and volatile temper on his wife, which escalates to more dangerous and unpredictable tantrums.

  • Director
    • Luis Buñuel
  • Writers
    • Luis Buñuel
    • Luis Alcoriza
    • Mercedes Pinto
  • Stars
    • Arturo de Córdova
    • Delia Garcés
    • Aurora Walker
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    7.9/10
    7K
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Luis Buñuel
    • Writers
      • Luis Buñuel
      • Luis Alcoriza
      • Mercedes Pinto
    • Stars
      • Arturo de Córdova
      • Delia Garcés
      • Aurora Walker
    • 33User reviews
    • 25Critic reviews
    • 80Metascore
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • See production info at IMDbPro
    • Awards
      • 1 nomination total

    Photos14

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    Top cast40

    Edit
    Arturo de Córdova
    Arturo de Córdova
    • Francisco Galván de Montemayor
    Delia Garcés
    Delia Garcés
    • Gloria Vilalta
    Aurora Walker
    • Doña Esperanza Vilalta
    Carlos Martínez Baena
    • Padre Velasco
    Manuel Dondé
    Manuel Dondé
    • Pablo
    Rafael Banquells
    Rafael Banquells
    • Ricardo Luján
    Fernando Casanova
    Fernando Casanova
    • Lic. Beltrán
    José Pidal
    • Padre prior
    Roberto Meyer
    • Licenciado
    Luis Beristáin
    Luis Beristáin
    • Raúl Conde
    Agripina Anaya
    • Mujer iglesia
    • (uncredited)
    Salvador Arriola
    • Hombre iglesia
    • (uncredited)
    León Barroso
    • Camarero
    • (uncredited)
    Antonio Bravo
    • Invitado fiesta
    • (uncredited)
    Manuel Casanueva
    • Invitado fiesta
    • (uncredited)
    Jorge Chesterking
    • Invitado fiesta
    • (uncredited)
    Carmen Dorronsoro de Roces
    • Pianista en cena
    • (uncredited)
    Enedina Díaz de León
    • Anciana iglesia
    • (uncredited)
    • Director
      • Luis Buñuel
    • Writers
      • Luis Buñuel
      • Luis Alcoriza
      • Mercedes Pinto
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews33

    7.96.9K
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    10

    Featured reviews

    9MartinTeller

    El (1953)

    One of Bunuel's best films, and certainly the finest of his lesser-known work. An intense, gripping study of a man who goes from merely asshole to outright insane, perhaps driven just a bit by his fondness for feet (the film's alternate title is "This Strange Passion"). In a powerhouse performance by Arturo de Cordova, Francisco is jealous, irrational, impulsive, self-centered, paranoid, delusional, megalomaniacal, misanthropic and sadistic. Bunuel leaves it up to the viewer to imagine what he's doing to Julia as we hear her tormented screams echo through the mansion... or what he has in mind when he sneaks into her room with a rope, a razor blade and a pair of scissors. Bunuel isn't known for flashy cinematography, but he always knows exactly where to place the camera, and the film's visual style gets more and more noir-ish as Francisco descends deeper into his obsessive madness. There's a subversive quality and almost a black comedy to it, like a Wyler melodrama with a perverted twist. The film begins and ends in a church, a symbol of sexual repression and false ideals, and the brilliant final shot suggests how much it feeds into Francisco's psychosis.
    10rudronriver

    The Discreet Charm of the Jealousy.

    As his most technically accomplished Mexican-period movie, and almost a mainstream one, this film can be an enjoyable first introduction into Buñuel's obsessions: the same ones that ruled the surrealistic movement. The underground psychological streams in the mind are finely expressed in this story of a pathological jealous and his victim. In his Mexican exile, Buñuel was forced to make "nourishing movies", that were the most conventional ones in his filmography, but he managed to smuggle his surrealistic ideals into all of them (even he could make the absolutely surrealistic "The Exterminating Angel").

    Based on an autobiographic novel by Spanish fellow countrywoman Mercedes Pinto, this film is the vehicle for displaying many marvelous surreal moments. It can also be viewed as a brilliant clinical recreation of paranoid distress, but Buñuel recognized that the protagonist, Francisco Galván, although insane, had many of his own obsessions: his view of love as an absolute imperative, the violent impulses, the fetishism for female feet…The story shifts from one point of view to another, which is the only way to understand the "two stories" in psychotic disorders.

    Part of the story and many of the ideas were used later by Hitchcock for his masterpiece "Vertigo (From among the dead)". It is difficult to say plagiarism when talking about cinema, but this would be one occasion for it. It is not coincidence that both directors share a taste for the expressive properties of objects (not only as Macguffin); as two reluctantly catholic directors, objects usually act as "sacraments" for their narrative. In "El" the church and its symbols are the background for the repression and the blooming of instincts; other Buñuel's stories may be more connected with religion than this one, but "El" shows a life absolutely permeated by the relationship of primary impulses ("eros" and "thanatos") with spiritual transcend ency. With churches as the setting of the key moments of the story (desire, love encounter, the urge for murder, disappointment), church is at the beginning and the ending of this story narrated by the man who said "Thank God, I'm an atheist".

    Although was filmed in three weeks, in the midst of the limitations of Mexican film industry, the movie is close to perfection in formal terms. In contrast with his previous movies, in which a still camera was predominant, in this one the camera movements are constant. The performances and the choice of cast is the most accurate of the Buñuel's Mexican-period.
    9craigjclark

    A treat from Bunuel's Mexican period

    Made in 1952, between "Robinson Crusoe" and "Wuthering Heights," this may not be one of Bunuel's major films, but it contains several of his key themes and recurring images, starting with the ceremonial washing and kissing of feet. The film also goes into the politics of submission and domination, the effects of long-term sexual repression, and -- of course -- sewing.

    Bunuel understood obsession and was able to convey it on screen like no other director. As irrational as his characters can get (and Francisco gets plenty irrational in this film), Bunuel knows that we all have our hangups which seem normal to us, no matter how grotesque they may look to an outside viewer. (There's a reason why the alternate title for this film is "This Strange Passion.")
    Bunuel1976

    EL (1952)/THE CRIMINAL LIFE OF ARCHIBALDO DE LA CRUZ (1955) - Films Sans Frontieres DVD Review

    Following your advice, I recently 'relented' to buying from Alapage the two Luis Bunuel Double-Feature discs released in France by Film Sans Frontieres. After watching them in their entirety, I cannot believe that I, who consider Bunuel my all-time favorite director and one of the true masters of the medium, have waited this long to acquire these DVDs. Actually while Alapage listed these DVDs at EUR25.73 on their site, they only cost me EUR21.51 each (excluding EUR12 shipping charges). So, if there is still anybody who has not purchased them yet, now may be the time to do so!

    Since I had never watched EL (1952) before, it was the first one to go through my DVD player. It was a chilling parable of an insanely jealous middle-aged man played with acute intensity by Arturo De Cordova. It afforded Bunuel ample opportunity to make practical use of overt Freudian symbolism without lending the film a heavy-handed air of pretentiousness. While there are some critics who consider it as merely 'an engaging, minor work', I regard it as being among Bunuel's finest; arguably, with this film, Bunuel reached the culmination of his work in Mexico, but it also looks forward to similar sequences and themes he would tackle later on in his career, especially TRISTANA (1970) and, his last film, THAT OBSCURE OBJECT OF DESIRE (1977).

    EL was beautifully abetted by another of his low-budget Mexican films, the great black comedy THE CRIMINAL LIFE OF ARCHIBALDO DE LA CRUZ (1955). Again, critical reception was a bit muted in some circles, dismissing it as 'just a throwaway oddity' typical of Bunuel's films of the period. However, it is much more than that: it is certainly very funny if you can accept its macabre sense of humor. It allowed Bunuel to create some of the most memorable images in all of his films, especially the celebrated dummy incineration scene, which could have been "inspired" by a similar scene in Michael Curtiz's marvelous MYSTERY OF THE WAX MUSEUM (1933) which Bunuel must have seen while working at Warner Bros. in the Thirties. A similar instance of this eclectic approach on Bunuel's part can be found in the "walking hand" sequence in his THE EXTERMINATING ANGEL (1962) - one of my favorite Bunuels - which harks back to an identical premise in Robert Florey's THE BEAST WITH FIVE FINGERS (1946), another Warner Bros. horror melodrama. For me, one of the enduring assets of THE CRIMINAL LIFE OF ARCHIBALDO DE LA CRUZ is the charm and great beauty that was Miroslava Stern (who played the part of Lavinia and was the model for the ill-fated dummy). Tragically, she would take her own life a mere two weeks after the film's release with her body, ironically enough, ending up cremated!

    Both the print utilized and the transfer for both films were adequate enough, and perfectly acceptable under the circumstances. However, EL's overall visual and aural qualities where distinctly superior to those of ARCHIBALDO which suffered from excessive specks and slight audio dropouts at times, but were never so alarming as to dispel from one's viewing pleasure of the film.
    9christopher-underwood

    Probably best watched after Archibaldo....

    Although slightly more melodramatic, I feel this does have the edge over the later, 'Criminal Life of Archibaldo de La Cruz', which covers similar territory with more humour. A gripping and frightening tale of obsession that has a surprisingly large amount of echoes of Hitchcock's later, 'Vertigo' and seemingly that director took the bell tower sequence in its entirety. Still, who cares, great films remain great films, even when their inspiration may be revealed. The ending is low key but we are left in little doubt as to the state of mind of our hero/villain. Great performances help what might have seemed a preposterous tale, ring only too true. Probably best watched after Archibaldo, then the impact will be all the more great.

    Best Emmys Moments

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    Related interests

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    Drama
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    Romance

    Storyline

    Edit

    Did you know

    Edit
    • Trivia
      In making the film, Buñuel added personal memories of his sister Conchita's paranoid husband who once mistakenly thought he saw Buñuel making vulgar faces at him on the street and went home to get his gun. He was stopped when Buñuel's family finally convinced him that Buñuel was living in Zaragoza at the time.
    • Quotes

      Francisco Galván de Montemayor: Now tell me truth: what do you dislike about me?

      Gloria Vilalta: There's nothing l dislike about you.

      Francisco Galván de Montemayor: There must be something, nobody's perfect.

      Gloria Vilalta: Well, there's one thing: sometimes you're a bit unfair.

      Francisco Galván de Montemayor: Nonsense! I don't have that fault. Few men possess so keen a sense of justice as l.

    • Connections
      Featured in Regarding Buñuel (2000)

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    Details

    Edit
    • Release date
      • July 9, 1953 (Mexico)
    • Country of origin
      • Mexico
    • Language
      • Spanish
    • Also known as
      • This Strange Passion
    • Filming locations
      • Estudios Tepeyac, Mexico City, Distrito Federal, Mexico(Studio)
    • Production company
      • Producciones Tepeyac
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Box office

    Edit
    • Gross US & Canada
      • $19,359
    • Opening weekend US & Canada
      • $7,892
      • Mar 16, 2025
    • Gross worldwide
      • $19,359
    See detailed box office info on IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      • 1h 22m(82 min)
    • Color
      • Black and White
    • Aspect ratio
      • 1.37 : 1

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