Un Chien Andalou by Salvador Dali & Luis Buñuel: L’Age D’Or by Luis Buñuel

Speaking with Addison (my new 20 year old intern) this morning, forced me examine my own relationship to the worlds of theatre, design, fashion, advertising, sculpture, painting and film. It made me realize how much they relate to surrealism and in particular the two films we watched Monday night. I started to talk about how I feel this surrealistic film fits into the larger world of art. This brought to mind to the early films of Cocteau, then Man Ray, the surreal world of Edward James (who supported Dali for awhile).  I began to fit numerous slices into the art pie. The provocative, mysterious paintings of Magritte were declared to “mean nothing” and the scandalous found scultures of Duchamp shocking the world with his bicycle wheel and the urinal then the work of the “La Lannes” in France. Claude’s jewelry and sculpture incorporating mouths, breasts, and cabbage headed figures.  Francios with his purple life size Hippopotamus bathtubs (Mrs. Duchamp owned one) and his fountain that features a huge head with water coming out of its eyes like tears. Now, I’m thinking of the controversial photographer Guy Bourdin whom I met in the mid 70’s.  His art had a strong connection to Bunuels early films. As I began to fit pieces together more elements start to collide… Even my good friend Richard Elfman’s film “The Forbidden Zone” shot in Venice, CA thirty-five years ago , and his surreal dinner parties that I documented owe a debt to Bunuel. As I spoke with Addison this morning, I looked at some of the many connections I was weaving into our conversation and although the impact of this film on her may not really be felt for years to come,  these two films caused more mental activity within me than any others we have viewed.

-Tom

Jean Cocteau

Man Ray                                                                                         Magritte

Portrait of Edward James by Magritte           Edward James

Marcel Duchamp

Claude Lalanne

Francois Lalanne

Guy Bourdin

The Forbidden Zone by Richard Elfman

"The Discreet Charm of the Bourgeoisie" By Luis Buñuel

My Dinner with Andre By Louis Malle

The film depicts a conversation of two acquaintances in a chic restaurant in New York City. Based mostly on conversation, the film’s dialog covers such things asexperimental theatre, the nature of theatre, and the nature of life. The dialogue contrasts Shawn’s modest, down-to-earth humanism with Gregory’s extravagant New Agefantasies.

Gregory is the focus of the first hour of the film as he describes some of his experiences since he gave up his career as a theatre director in 1975. These include working with his friend Jerzy Grotowski and a group of Polish actors in a forest in Poland, his visit to Findhorn in Scotland and his trip to the Sahara to try and create a play based on The Little Prince. Perhaps Gregory’s most dramatic experience was working with a small group of people on piece of performance art on Long Island which resulted in Gregory being (briefly) buried on Halloween night.

The rest of the film is a conversation as Shawn tries to argue that living life as Gregory has done for the past five years is simply not possible for the vast majority of people. In response, Gregory suggests that what passes for normal life in New York in the late 1970s is more akin to living in a dream than it is to real life. The movie ends without a clear resolution to the conflict in worldviews articulated by the two men.

Atlantic City by Louis Malle

Au Revoir Les Enfants by Louis Malle

Ascenseur pour l’echafaud by Louis Malle

Damage by Louis Malle

Murmur of the Heart by Louis Malle

Last Year at Marienbad by Alain Resnais

Hiroshima Mon Amour by Alain Resnais