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THE
DISCREET CHARM OF THE BOURGEOISIE
Blu-ray/DVD.
Studio Canal
Coming
in the middle of Luis Bunuel’s final period of filmmaking,
The Discreet Charm of the Bourgeoisie is one
of the three Bunuel films (the others being The Milky
Way and That Obscure Object of Desire)
that not only introduced me to his work as a child, but also were
amongst the earliest ‘arthouse’ cinema I ever saw.
Watching these films on BBC2 broadcasts (back when you could see
subtitled films on a Friday night on BBC2) was as significant
a revelation to me as first watching Hammer and Universal horror
movies – a realisation that cinema could be so much more
than I had previously experienced. Alongside Hans-Jürgen
Syberberg’s Hitler – A Film from Germany,
these films were life-changing experiences, and Bunuel has remained
one of my favourite filmmakers since.
The Discreet Charm…, is perhaps the most iconic
film from his late French period (if we are to separate out the
Sixties production Bell De Jour), and possibly
the most accessible. A barbed social satire, the film is suitably
surreal, yet has a narrative that is easy to follow; gently humorous
with a subtle yet pronounced bite; and compelling despite very
little actually happening.
The film is, at the most basic level, about a group of rich, arrogant
snobs who continually try to have dinner together, only for various
events to scupper their plans. These can be as simple as a mix
up over dates, or as strange as an army division staying at the
house. But the film is a neatly inverted comedy of manners –
the vacuous, hypocritical lifestyles and attitudes of the shallow
participants constantly revealed, and their carefully laid plans
continually doomed to failure because of their own social pretensions.
Woven within this are stories involving the main characters being
involved in cocaine smuggling and diplomat Fernando Rey (his role
as a drug lord neatly reflecting his appearance in The
French Connection) being the target of ‘terrorists’
from his home country (the fictitious ‘Miranda’, a
central European dictatorship with a dubious human rights record).
Bunuel takes delight in exposing the hypocrisy of these people
who consider themselves a cut above the rest of society, but who
are in fact corrupt, criminal and insincere, even amongst themselves
– infidelity and mistrust runs rampant amongst this group.
As
the story progresses, more and more incidents take place within
dreams (or dreams within dreams from different characters), eventually
throwing the viewer’s understanding of what is or isn’t
real out of the window, while flashbacks reveal mini-ghost stories
from incidental characters. Bunuel is playing with the audience,
revealing that we can’t believe anything we’ve seen
in the film.
With a stellar cast of Euro-cult talent of the time (alongside
Rey, the cast includes Delphine Seyrig, Bulle Ogier and Jean-Pierre
Cassel), this film might sound wildly convoluted, but in fact
it has a flow that makes it seem deceptively simple. Unfussy,
thought provoking and visually slick, it’s perhaps the ideal
introduction to Bunuel’s later work – and absolutely
essential viewing.
DAVID
FLINT
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