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The Discreet Charm of the Bourgeoisie

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Wikipedia article




'The Discreet Charm of the Bourgeoisie' is a 1972 surrealist film directed by Luis Buuel from a screenplay co-written with Jean-Claude Carrire. The narrative concerns a group of bourgeois people attemptingdespite continual interruptionsto dine together. The French-language film stars Fernando Rey, Stphane Audran, Jean-Pierre Cassel, Paul Frankeur, Delphine Seyrig, Bulle Ogier, Julien Bertheau, and Milena Vukotic.

The film consists of several thematically linked scenes: five gatherings of a group of bourgeois friends, and the four dreams of different characters. The beginning of the film focuses on the gatherings, while the latter part focuses on the dreams, but both types of scenes are intertwined. There are also scenes involving other characters, such as two involving a Latin American female terrorist from the fictional Republic of Miranda. The film's world is not logical: the bizarre events are accepted by the characters, even if they are impossible or contradictory.

Buuel plays tricks on his characters, luring them toward fine dinners that they expect, and then repeatedly frustrating them in inventive ways. They bristle, and politely express their outrage, but they never stop trying; they relentlessly expect and pursue all that they desire, as though it were their natural right to have others serve and pamper them. He exposes their sense of entitlement, their hypocrisy, and their corruption. In the dream sequences, he explores their intense fearsnot just of public humiliation, but of being caught by police and of being mowed down by guns. At least one character's dream sequence is later revealed to be nested, or embedded, in another character's dream sequence. As the dreams-within-dreams unfold, it appears that Buuel is also playing tricks on his audience as they try to make sense of the story.

The film was both a critical and commercial success. It won the Academy Award for Best Foreign Language Film, and BAFTA Awards for Best Actress in a Leading Role (Audran) and Best Original Screenplay (Buuel, Carrire).

Plot



A bourgeois couple, Franois and Simone Thvenot, accompany Franois's colleague Don Rafael Acosta, the ambassador from the South American nation of Miranda, and Simone's sister Florence, to the house of the Snchals, the hosts of a dinner party. Once they arrive, Alice Snchal is surprised to see them and explains that she expected them the following evening and has no dinner prepared. The would-be guests then invite Alice to join them for dinner at a nearby inn.

Arriving at the inn, the party finds it locked. They knock and are reluctantly invited in by a waitress who mentions that the restaurant is under new management. Inside, there are no diners, and the prices on the menu are disconcertingly low. The party hears wailing from an adjoining room and discovers a vigil for the corpse of the manager, who died a few hours earlier. The party is told that the coroner is coming soon, but they hurriedly depart.

Later, at the Embassy of Miranda, Acosta meets with Franois and Alice's husband Henri to discuss the proceeds of a large cocaine deal. During the meeting, Acosta sees a young woman selling clockwork-animal toys on the footpath outside the embassy. He shoots one of the toys with a rifle and the woman runs off. He explains that she is part of a Maoist Mirandan terrorist group that's been targeting him for months.

Two days later, the bourgeois friends attempt to have lunch at the Snchals', but Henri and his wife escape to the garden to have sex instead of joining them. One of the friends take their unexplained absence this to mean that the Snchals know the police are coming and left to avoid arrest for their involvement in drug trafficking. The party again leaves in a panic.

When the Snchals return from the garden, their friends are gone, but they meet a bishop who has donned their gardener's clothing. They throw him out, but when he returns wearing his bishop's robes, they embrace him with deference. The bishop asks to work for them as their gardener. He tells them about his childhood that his parents were murdered by arsenic poisoning and that the culprit was never apprehended. (Later in the film, he goes to visit a dying man who turns out to be his parents' murderer; after blessing the man, the bishop kills him with a shotgun.)

The women visit a teahouse just as it has run out of all beverages tea, coffee, and milk although it finally turns out they do have water. While they are waiting, a soldier tells them about his childhood: how after his mother's death his cold-hearted father sent him to military school. The ghost of the soldier's mother informed him that the man was not his real father, but his father's killer; they had dueled over his mother. Following the ghost's request, the soldier killed the culprit with poison.

Simone meets Acosta at his apartment. They are having an affair but are interrupted by a visit from her husband, whereupon she makes a convenient excuse and leaves with him. Acosta is next visited by the same terrorist from earlier, who has come to kill him. He ambushes and chastises her, then tells her to leave when she refuses his sexual advances; his agents capture her and take her away.

Several abortive dinner parties ensue; interruptions include the arrival of a group of army officers and enlisted men who join the dinner only to be called away for alarmingly close military maneuvers, the revelation that a colonel's dining room is a stage set in a theatrical performance for an audience that is angry with the actors for not knowing their lines, the ambassador's shooting of the colonel after he insults the nation of Miranda and slaps the ambassador, the arrest and release of the bourgeois friends, and their summary execution by the terrorists. Most if not all of these scenes turn out to be dream sequences in which ghosts make frequent appearances.

A recurring scene throughout the film, of the six people walking silently and purposefully on a long, isolated country road, is also the final sequence.

Cast



* Fernando Rey as Rafael Acosta

* Paul Frankeur as Franois Thvenot

* Delphine Seyrig as Simone Thvenot

* Bulle Ogier as Florence Thvenot

* Stphane Audran as Alice Snchal

* Jean-Pierre Cassel as Henri Snchal

*Julien Bertheau as Monsignor Dufour, the Bishop

*Milena Vukotic as Ins, the Snchals' maid

*Claude Piplu as the Colonel

*Maria Gabriella Maione as the female terrorist

*Muni as the peasant

*Michel Piccoli as the Minister of the Interior

*Pierre Maguelon as Brigadier Sanglant

*Franois Maistre as Commissaire Delecluze

*Jacques Rispal as the Gendarme

*Christian Baltauss as Lt. Hubert de Rochcahin

*Amparo Soler Leal as Rochcahin's mother

* Georges Douking as the gardener

*Maxence Mailfort as the dreaming Sergeant

*Alix Mahieux as the Colonel's wife

*Bernard Musson as the Tea Room waiter

Production



Pre-production

After having announced that 'Tristana' (1970) would be his last film,Wakeman, John. 'World Film Directors, Volume 1'. The H. W. Wilson Company. 1987, p. 88.

because he felt he was repeating himself, Luis Buuel met with screenwriter Jean-Claude Carrire and discussed the topic of repetition. Shortly afterwards, Buuel met with film producer Serge Silberman, who told him an anecdote about having forgotten about a dinner party and being surprised to find six hungry friends show up at his front door. Buuel was suddenly inspired, and Silberman agreed to give him a $2,000 advance to write a new script with Carrire, combining Silberman's anecdote with the idea of repetition. Buuel and Carrire wrote the first draft in three weeks and finished the fifth draft by the Summer of 1971, originally titled 'Bourgeois Enchantment'. Silberman was finally able to raise the money for the film in April 1972, and Buuel began pre-production.Baxter, John. 'Buuel'. New York: Carroll & Graf Publishers, Inc.. 1994. . p. 299.Wakeman, pp. 88-89.

Buuel cast many actors whom he had worked with in the past, such as Fernando Rey and Michel Piccoli, and catered their roles to their personalities. He had more difficulty casting the female leads and allowed actresses Delphine Seyrig and Stphane Audran to choose which parts they would like to play, before changing the script to better suit the actresses. Jean-Pierre Cassel auditioned for his role and was surprised when Buuel cast him after simply glancing at him once.Baxter, p. 300.

Filming and editing

Filming began on 15 May 1972, and lasted for two months with an $800,000 budget. In his usual shooting style, Buuel shot few takes and often edited the film in camera and during production. Buuel and Silberman had a long-running and humorous argument as to whether Buuel took one day or one and a half days to edit his films.Baxter, p. 301.

On the advice of Silberman, Buuel used video playback monitors on the set for the first time in his career, resulting in a vastly different style than any of his previous films, including zooms and travelling shots instead of his usual close-ups and static camera framing. It also resulted in Buuel's being more comfortable on set, and in limiting his already minimal direction to technical and physical instructions. This frustrated Cassel, who had never worked with Buuel before, until Rey explained that this was Buuel's usual style and that since they were playing aristocrats their movements and physical appearance were more important than their inner motivation.

Buuel once joked that whenever he needed an extra scene he simply filmed one of his own dreams. 'The Discreet Charm of the Bourgeoisie' includes three of Buuel's recurring dreams: a dream of being on stage and forgetting his lines, a dream of meeting his dead cousin in the street and following him into a house full of cobwebs, and a dream of waking up to see his dead parents staring at him.

Reception



The film was a box office hit in both Europe and the US, and critically praised. Roger Ebert called it a comedy but noted that Buuels comedies were more like a dig in the ribs, sly and painful. Robert Benayoun said that it was "perhaps [Buuel's] most direct and most 'public' film".Wakeman, p. 89. Vincent Canby wrote in his 1972 review of the film, In addition to being extraordinarily funny and perfectly acted, 'The Discreet Charm' moves with the breathtaking speed and self-assurance that only a man of Buuels experience can achieve without resorting to awkward ellipsis.Canby, Vincent. The Discreet Charm of the Bourgeoisie. 'The New York Times Guide to the Best 1,000 Movies Ever Made'. Ed. Peter M. Nichols. [New York]: Times Books (Random House), 1999. Buuel later said that he was disappointed with the analysis that most film critics made of the film. He also disliked the film's promotional poster, depicting a pair of lips with legs and a derby hat.

Buuel and Silberman travelled to the US in late 1972 to promote the film. Buuel did not attend his own press screening in Los Angeles and told a reporter at 'Newsweek' that his favorite characters in the film were the cockroaches. While visiting LA, Buuel, Carrire and Silberman were invited to a lunch party by Buuel's old friend George Cukor, and other guests included Alfred Hitchcock, Billy Wilder, George Stevens, Rouben Mamoulian, John Ford, William Wyler, Robert Mulligan and Robert WiseBaxter, p. 302. (resulting in a famous photograph of the directors together, other than an ailing Ford). Fritz Lang was unable to attend, but Buuel visited him the following day and received an autographed photo from Lang, one of his favorite directors.Baxter, pp. 302-03.

On Rotten Tomatoes, the film maintains a rating of 98% based on 57 reviews with the consensus: "An intoxicating dose of the director's signature surrealist style, 'The Discreet Charm of the Bourgeoisie' represents Buuel at his most accessible."

Awards and nominations



Awards trivia

Sensing that he had a special film, Silberman decided not to wait until May to premiere it at the Cannes Film Festival and instead released it in the fall of 1972 specifically to make it eligible for the Academy Award for Best Foreign Language Film. Buuel was famously indifferent to awards and jokingly told a reporter that he had already paid $25,000 in order to win the Oscar. 'The Discreet Charm of the Bourgeoisie' did win the Oscar for Best Foreign Language Film and Silberman accepted on Buuel's behalf at the ceremony. At the Academy's request, Buuel posed for a photograph while holding the Oscar, but while wearing a wig and oversized sunglasses.

Unproduced musical



In October 2014, Stephen Sondheim stated that he and playwright David Ives were working on a new musical with a plot inspired by both 'The Discreet Charm of the Bourgeoisie' and another of Buuel's films, 'The Exterminating Angel' (1962). In April 2021, Sondheim revealed that these plans had been shelved.

See also



* Bourgeois personality

* List of French submissions for the Academy Award for Best Foreign Language Film

* List of submissions to the 45th Academy Awards for Best Foreign Language Film

References



Further reading



*


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