Un Chien andalou Review
By Jake Euker
There is no plot, per se, but rather an amalgamation of images centering on a romance seemingly being conducted between the film's leads. Although Buñuel subverts every expectation that a viewer might bring to the film (time moves arbitrarily forward and backward, characters vanish and reappear, and the action remains stubbornly illegible), the images he uses to convey his deeper meanings remain passionate, resonant, and alarmingly, weirdly sexual to this day. These deeper meanings have to do with the innate drives sublimated to society, and in Un Chien Andalou they pop out everywhere with horrifying insistence: ants crawl from a hole in a human hand, pubic hair grows on faces, and, in the film's most infamous passage, an eyeball is slit with a razor just as a cloud cuts across the face of the moon. It's unsettling at least, but it also genuinely hypnotizes.
The best testimony I can offer on behalf of Un Chien Andalou is a personal one. I first saw this film when I was fifteen; roughly half way through I made the realization that it didn't make sense on purpose and my life, without exaggeration, was thus changed. Un Chien andalou was my introduction to the power of the irrational and to the concept that art could exist for its own sake. Twenty-five years after my own initiation - and 75 years after the film's release - it's my fervent hope that, in the company of Un Chien Andalou, more young recruits are being born.
Un Chien Andalou, like Buñuel's glorious 1930 feature L'Âge d'or, has been made available on DVD at long last with extras including a scholarly commentary track and a pair of interviews with Buñuel and his followers.
Aka An Andalusian Dog.

Facts and Figures
Year: 1929
Run time: 16 mins
In Theaters: Thursday 6th June 1929
Reviews
Contactmusic.com: 5 / 5
Rotten Tomatoes: 100%
Fresh: 20
IMDB: 7.9 / 10
Cast & Crew
Director: Luis Buñuel
Producer: Luis Buñuel
Screenwriter: Luis Buñuel, Salvador Dali
Starring: Luis Buñuel as Mann im Prolog, Salvador Dalí as Seminarist, Pierre Batcheff as Mann, Simone Mareuil as Mädchen, Robert Hommet as Junger Mann, Marval as Seminarist, Fano Messan as Hermaphrodite, Jaume Miravitlles as Seminarist
Also starring: Salvador Dali