Un chien andalou = The Andalusian dog / directed, produced and written by Luis Buñuel and Salvador Dalí.
Material type:
- Andalusian dog
- Luis Buñuel's Un chien andalou, Land without bread
- VAE 8374 (viewing copy)
- VAF 4237 (viewing copy, copy 2)
Item type | Current library | Collection | Call number | Status | Date due | Barcode | |
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Centerville Audiovisual | No ficción | Not for loan | 39999000004151 | |||
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Midway Audiovisual | No ficción | Not for loan | 39999000004137 |
Copyright: Grands Films classiques. Appl. au.: Luis Buñuel. PUB 1929; REG 16Aug96; PA859-175; reg. under GATT/URAA restoration.
Minor change version: [Version with synchronized musical sound track]. -- United States : Interama Video Classics, [1990?].
Copyright for minor change version: no reg.
Title appears as Luis Buñuel's Un chien andalou, Land without bread on videocassette box.
This is the 1960 version with a synchronized musical sound track; it is based on the 1929 musical selections and Buñuel advised on its compilation per Aranda, J.F. Luis Buñuel : a critical biography, p. 288; LC copies are reissue copy of version with synchronized musical sound track. DLC
Original date given as 1929 and 1928 on videocassette box; original release date given as 1929 in Aranda, J.F. Luis Buñuel : a critical biography, p. 288; possible reissue date taken from copyright notice for videocassette packaging and design on videocassette box.
Summary taken from videocassette box.
On videocassette label: Interama Video Classics 0313.
On cassettes with: Las Hurdes = Land without bread; not originally released together theatrically.
Sources used: copyright data sheets (PA804-406 and PA859-175); copyright data base; videocassette box; Aranda, J.F. Luis Buñuel : a critical biography, p. 288; videocassette label.
Pierre Batcheff, Simone Mareuil, Jaime Miravilles, Salvador Dalí, Luis Buñuel.
Spanish director Luis Buñuel's first film, this surrealistic masterpiece was written over the course of a three-day exchange of fantasies and dreams with Salvador Dalí and contains one of the most memorable scenes in film history--a razor blade slicing an eyeball. The film was made to shock rather than please its audience.
viewing copy, copy 2;
viewing copy;
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