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    FILM & VIDEO

    Land Without Bread & Simon of the Desert

    Land Without Bread & Simon of the Desert

    Presented by Harvard Film Archive at Harvard Film Archive

    June 19, 2011

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    LAND WITHOUT BREAD (LAS HURDES: TIERRA SIN PAN)
    Directed by Luis Buñuel.
    Spain 1933, 35mm, b/w, 28 min. In English

    Upon reading an ethnographic study of the poorest district of northern Spain, Las Hurdes, Buñuel decided to film there. The resulting work has remained controversial since its premiere, when it was banned by the Spanish government. Buñuel juxtaposes documentary images of human degradation, often posed or staged, with a voiceover commentary – written by the poet Pierre Unik – that combines travelogue exaggeration with a matter-of-fact recounting of the grim cost of rural poverty. Further, the soundtrack impassively adds music by Brahms and – in English-language versions at least – a flat-voiced reading of the commentary. The combination has led commentators to label the film everything from an impassioned cry of anger to a callous and callow documentary to a Surrealist parody of ethnography.


    SIMON OF THE DESERT (SIMÓN DEL DESIERTO)
    Directed by Luis Buñuel. With Silvia Pinal, Claudio Brook,
    Enrique Álvarez Félix
    Mexico 1965, 35mm, b/w, 45 min. Spanish with English subtitles.

    Perched atop a pillar in the middle of the desert in eternal penance for six years, six months, and six days, Simon – inspired by 15th century Saint Simeon Stylites – seeks spiritual purification through this rather spectacular means. Doling out miracles, prophesies, and words of wisdom to his fickle followers, Simon’s encounters elicit a string of blasphemous comedy routines occasionally anticipating those of Monty Python. His faith is ritually tested by the devil who reappears in various feminine incarnations - accounting for most of the matter-of-fact surrealist moments that would become signature late Buñuel. With as ascetic an aesthetic as Simon’s, the last film Buñuel made while exiled in Mexico is a richly compact allegory. The cynical tone – balancing somewhere between mockery and sympathy – is consummated by a whirlwind ending which is as incredulously shocking as it is completely appropriate.


    • At-a-
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      • Venue Info

        Harvard Film Archive

        Harvard Film Archive Cinematheque
        24 Quincy Street
        Cambridge, MA 02138

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      • Admission Info

        Tickets:

        $9 - Regular Admission
        $7 - Non-Harvard Students, Harvard Faculty and Staff, and Senior Citizens
        Regular HFA screenings are free for all Harvard students with a valid photo ID.

        Info Phone: 617.495.4700 or 496.3211

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      • Dates & Times

        Dates:
        June 19, 2011

        Times:

        7pm

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