Written by students who passed Immediately available after payment Read online or as PDF Wrong document? Swap it for free 4.6 TrustPilot
logo-home
Essay

Essay discussing how Bunuel's surrealist films rejected conventional Hollywood conventions.

Rating
-
Sold
-
Pages
1
Grade
A
Uploaded on
04-01-2022
Written in
2018/2019

Essay discussing how Bunuel's surrealist films rejected conventional Hollywood conventions. Un Chien Andalou and L'Age D'Or. Salavador Dali. Surrealism. Experimental films. OCR Film History Section B. A Level Film Studies.

Institution
OCR

Content preview

Bunuel rejected the conventional Hollywood narrative contemporary audience were
accustomed to. Instead, he created a complex, indefinable illustration of the subconscious.
Audiences feebly attempt to draw meaning from sequence, where there is none to find,
creating an ambiguity in the narrative that is both unsettling and liberating.

One way in which narrative ambiguity is created is through Bunuel’s use of title cards that
give the illusion of a coherent succession of events. In Un Chien Andalou, the title card ’16
years ago’ appears, followed by a shot in the same place with the same people. This disrupts
the viewers’ belief of time and space. Another intertitle in Un Chien Andalou reads ‘in the
spring’. The spring often connotes ideas of rebirth and loveliness, however, Bunuel follows
this with a grotesque image of death and dismemberment as the couple is buried and
tortured. These title cards give the illusion of a story but instead; they confuse the viewers’
sense of special awareness. Bunuel does something similar in L’Age D’Or. He begins the film
with an extended sequence of scorpions, with intertitles that give accurate information
about the images seen. Anyone whose familiar with Bunuel’s work would see that this is
unlike Bunuel to make rational sense, however, as the film goes on, you realise just how out
of place the sequence was in relation to the rest of the ‘narrative’. Creating an ambiguity of
whether this is a documentary or fiction.

The sound in L’Age D’Or also proposes a false sense of relation. The cowbells continue to
sound after the cow on the bed sequence ends. This suggests that the cow is nearby but it is
never shown. The film continues but still the sound is heard, the sound appears to link a shot
of the man and the woman despite being in separate locations and backgrounds, this gives a
false link, almost alike to the Kuleshov effect in which two consecutive shots forge a relation
in the viewers’ mind, despite there being no link. This effect is actually seen in Un Chien
Andalou, with the woman and the eye being stretched open, next is a shot of a cloud slicing
the moon (a supposed graphic match), then, an extreme close up of an eye of a calf appears.
Never explicitly in the link made but Bunuel appears to suggest a relationship in this
sequence that just isn’t there. These 3 shots in sequence appear to tell a story, however the
woman appears unharmed ‘later’ on and the shots had no relation. These random shots are
then ambiguous and do not form a narrative unlike what our mind has forced us to think.

Editing is used by Bunuel to create an ambiguity of narrative. He leads the audience on by
using intertitles that indicate a time and space but actual it’s the same, similarly, sound and
sequencing suggests correlations that don’t actually exist. This leaves the story ambiguous,
as in whether you want to interpret a link or not to form a narrative in your mind.

Document information

Uploaded on
January 4, 2022
Number of pages
1
Written in
2018/2019
Type
ESSAY
Professor(s)
Unknown
Grade
A
£3.49
Get access to the full document:

Wrong document? Swap it for free Within 14 days of purchase and before downloading, you can choose a different document. You can simply spend the amount again.
Written by students who passed
Immediately available after payment
Read online or as PDF


Also available in package deal

Thumbnail
Package deal
Film History OCR Example Essays and Study Materials
-
3 9 2022
£ 27.92 More info

Get to know the seller

Seller avatar
Reputation scores are based on the amount of documents a seller has sold for a fee and the reviews they have received for those documents. There are three levels: Bronze, Silver and Gold. The better the reputation, the more your can rely on the quality of the sellers work.
katieleah University of Westminster
View profile
Follow You need to be logged in order to follow users or courses
Sold
24
Member since
4 year
Number of followers
17
Documents
29
Last sold
1 week ago

3.0

1 reviews

5
0
4
0
3
1
2
0
1
0

Recently viewed by you

Why students choose Stuvia

Created by fellow students, verified by reviews

Quality you can trust: written by students who passed their exams and reviewed by others who've used these revision notes.

Didn't get what you expected? Choose another document

No problem! You can straightaway pick a different document that better suits what you're after.

Pay as you like, start learning straight away

No subscription, no commitments. Pay the way you're used to via credit card and download your PDF document instantly.

Student with book image

“Bought, downloaded, and smashed it. It really can be that simple.”

Alisha Student

Working on your references?

Create accurate citations in APA, MLA and Harvard with our free citation generator.

Working on your references?

Frequently asked questions