That Obscure Object of Desire

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That Obscure Object of Desire
Directed by Luis Buñuel
Produced by Serge Silberman
Written by Luis Buñuel
Jean-Claude Carrière
Pierre Louÿs (novel)
Starring Fernando Rey
Carole Bouquet
Ángela Molina
Distributed by First Artists (USA)
Criterion (Region 1 DVD)
Release date(s) August 17, 1977 (France)
October 8, 1977 (USA)
Running time 102 min.
Language French
Spanish
Allmovie profile
IMDb profile

That Obscure Object of Desire (French: Cet obscur objet du désir; Spanish: Ese oscuro objeto del deseo) is a 1977 film directed by the auteur Luis Buñuel. Set in Spain and France against the backdrop of a terrorist insurgency, the film tells the story of an aging Frenchman who falls in love with a young woman who repeatedly frustrates his romantic and sexual desires. Written by Buñuel himself with long-time collaborator Jean-Claude Carrière, it is based on the French novel La Femme et le pantin by Pierre Louÿs, although many changes were made for the screenplay.

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[edit] Synopsis

The movie begins with Mathieu (Fernando Rey), a middle-aged, wealthy Frenchman, travelling by train from Seville to Paris. He's trying to distance himself from his young girlfriend, Conchita (played by both Carol Bouquet and Angela Molina in alternate scenes), whose belongings – which include a pillow bloodied and soiled panties – he destroys. As Mathieu's train is ready to depart he finds that the bruised and bandaged Conchita is pursuing him. From the train he pours a bucket of water over her head. He believes this deters her, but she sneaks aboard the train.

Mathieu's rude act is witnessed by his fellow coach-cabin passengers who include a mother and her young daughter, a judge who is coincidentally a friend of Mathieu's cousin, and a psychologist suffering from dwarfism. They inquire about his motivation for such an act and he then explains, in flashbacks, the history of his tumultuous relationship with Conchita, an impoverished but beautiful flamenco dancer from Seville. The story is set against a backdrop of terrorist bombings and shootings.

Conchita, who claims to be 18, vows to remain a virgin until marriage, yet she tantalizes Mathieu with sexual promises, however never allows him to satisfy his sexual desire for her. At one point she goes to bed with him wearing what appear to be a pair of tightly laced canvas shorts, making it impossible for the couple to have sexual intercourse. Conchita's antics cause the couple to break up and reunite repeatedly, each time leaving Mathieu confused and frustrated.

Eventually, Mathieu finds Conchita dancing nude for tourists in a Seville nightclub. After becoming enraged, Mathieu forgives her and buys her a home. The movie's climax arrives when, soon after moving into the home, Conchita tells Mathieu that she hates him and that kissing and touching him make her sick. She then appears to have sex with a young man in full view of Mathieu to prove her independence from him.

After this, Conchita attempts to reconcile with Matthieu, insisting that the sex was fake and that her "lover" is in reality a homosexual friend. However, during her explanation, Mathieu beats her (she says then "Now I´m sure you love me"), resulting in her bandaged and bruised state earlier in the film (as well as the bloody pillow).

Just as the fellow train passengers seem satisfied with this story, Conchita reappears from hiding on the train and dumps a bucket of water on Mathieu. After the train deboards the couple apparently reconciles yet again and is seen walking together, arm-in-arm, enjoying themselves on the streets of Paris.

A public announcement is broadcast alerting that a strange alliance of extreme leftist groups, including the P.O.P., the P.R.I.Q.U.E. and the R.U.T. together with the Revolutionary Army of the Baby Jesus, intend to sow a state of confusion in society through terrorist attacks. The announcement adds that several right-wing groups plan to counterattack.

As the couple continues their walk they notice a seamstress in a shop window mending a bloody veil. They begin arguing just as a bomb explodes, apparently claiming their lives.

[edit] Casting

Veteran Spanish actor Fernando Rey (who frequently worked with Buñuel in his later years) plays Mathieu, but his voice is dubbed by Michel Piccoli.

The film is notable for its use of two actresses, Carole Bouquet and Angela Molina, in the single role of Conchita; the actresses switch roles in alternate scenes and sometimes even in the middle of scenes (at one point, Molina walks behind a curtain and Bouquet emerges a second later). Many film critics believe this to be an example of Buñuel's surrealist sensibilities, arguing that the odd use of casting highlights Conchita's mercurial nature.[citation needed] Another suggested explanation is that Carole Bouquet walked out on the production; and in other accounts, Buñuel is said to have replaced her in the middle of the production because she would not take his direction.[citation needed] Originally, the character of Conchita was only to be played by Maria Schneider, from Last Tango in Paris, but she objected to appearing in the nude scenes.[citation needed] In his autobiography, Buñuel writes that he was inspired in this particular idea by drinking.[citation needed]

[edit] Responses

The film was not financially successful, but it became a critical favorite, garnering Best Foreign Language Film nominations at both the Golden Globes and the Academy Awards (where it was also nominated for Best Writing, Screenplay Based on Material from Another Medium) but failing to win at either. The critics associations were slightly more generous, with the National Board of Review, and the Los Angeles Film Critics Association both giving the it Best Foreign Language Film awards in 1977. Luis Buñuel won Best Director at the National Board of Review and National Society of Film Critics awards. He was also nominated at the French César Awards.

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