book
NEW
BOOKS
Luis Bunuel
“I am still an atheist, thank God.” Luis Bunuel
Cinema has been a fortunate art form. It had
the immense good fortune to seduce Orson Welles and Marcel Pagnol
away from theatre, Pasolini and Jean Cocteau away from poetry,
and Stanley Kubrick away from chess. It was a comparable stroke
of luck that Luis Bunuel, one of the most brilliant representatives
of the surrealist movement, chose to make films and was able
to make them with unflagging fidelity to his principles for fifty
years.
After an audacious Parisian showing of Un Chien Andalou in 1929
(Bunuel carried stones in his pockets in case he needed them
to fend off the audience), Bunuel’s subsequent career in Spain
(Las Hurdes), Hollywood and Mexico (Los Olvidados, Robinson Crusoe,
El, Nazarin) before returning to France (Diary of a Chambermaid,
Belle de jour, The Discreet Charm of the Bourgeoisie, That Obscure
Object of Desire), showed that the only subjects he cared to
make films about were the three that are never supposed to be
discussed in polite society: sex, religion, and politics.
This book was made with full access to Luis Bunuel’s archives.
The author: Bill Krohn is the author of Hitchcock at Work. He
also co-directed, -produced and -wrote It’s All True: Based on
an Unseen Film by Orson Welles. Bill Krohn has been the Los Angeles
correspondent for the legendary French film magazine Cahiers
du Cinema since 1978. He also reviews films for The Economist.
Editions:
English: 3-8228-3375-4 (December 2005)
French: 3-8228-3376-2 (December 2005)
German: 3-8228-3374-6 (December 2005)
Italian: 3-8228-4262-1 (February 2006)
Spanish: 3-8228-3377-0 (December 2005)