Wednesday, October 23, 2013

Un Perro Andaluz, 80 Anos Despues

2009 was the 80th anniversary of the Bunuel/Dali film UN CHIEN ANDALOU, known in Spain as Un Perro Andaluz, and recognized today as a universal surrealist masterpiece. Although made in France, the film is in many ways a Spanish import, as Bunuel moved between Spain and Paris, writing the scenario from their dreams at Dali's home in Cadaques. Bunuel made the film with his mother's generous gift from her savings, her escudos, the nickel coins with a shield on the back. Bunuel premiered the film in Paris equipped with stones in his pockets to repel attackers. The 80th anniversary found the Tabakalera center in San Sebastian working with the Filmoteca Nacional on an exhibition and symposium to discuss the film's history and present a film restoration made from the original film materials. See here.

Maybe a year ago, I stumbled across a BFI blog where film enthusiasts and archivists were discussing recent dvd and blu-ray releases. The BFI had produced a dvd of L'Age d'Or which included Un Chien Andalou in the set, and somebody offered the information about the Spanish restoration project. I have been looking to import this book+dvd for at least the past 9 months. The set is a catalog for the exhibit which opened in San Sebastian and visited a few other Spanish cities. The restored film is online and looks gorgeous in the small frame. I had a new Holy Grail: finding a hard copy of this restored film. I looked online at bookstores in Spain and Spanish amazon, the European amazons and asked European friends. It is still difficult to import a rare book, even with the internet. The cost, 30 or $40 on the street in Spain, would probably approach $100 from a large bookstore, with shipping and import fees. I decided to wait and see if it would turn up via some American distributor or museum store. Every few months I remembered to look into it. This summer (2013), I called Schoenhof's in Cambridge, probably the biggest importer of foreign books in the US, where I had bought many Spanish books during my years in Boston, and asked them about ordering it; still around $100. Then I checked ABEbooks, the consortium of independent booksellers online, and someone in the US appeared to have a copy of the set: the 2 book volumes, 46-page Basque summary and the dvd of the restored film--the complete edition, at $65 + $10 shipping. On further inquiry, shipping would be an additional $8.70, bringing the total to $83.70. Still not cheap, this seemed a fair price for something I had been searching for so long. It arrived only a few days later. It is another classic piece for a Bunuel collector, a hardboard case holding 2 books and the film. I have an entire large bag filled with books on and by Bunuel. I have a multi-region dvd player. The last incredible film find was when I discovered that Hollis Frampton's films were out on a Criterion dvd. It was an incredible year for film. Don't ask me to borrow either of those dvds.