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The Discreet Charm of the Bourgeoisie Poster

The Discreet Charm of the Bourgeoisie (1972)

PG Sep 15, 1972 Comedy 1h 41m
User Score
75%
847 votes
Internet Movie Database
78%
Rotten Tomatoes
98%
Metacritic
9300%

Overview

In Luis Buñuel’s deliciously satiric masterpiece, an upper-class sextet sits down to dinner but never eats, their attempts continually thwarted by a vaudevillian mixture of events both actual and imagined.

Jean-Claude Carrière
Screenplay
Luis Buñuel
Screenplay

Top Billed Cast

Full Cast & Crew

Media

Official Trailer [Subtitled]
Official Trailer [Subtitled]
Trailer
Official Trailer - 40th Anniversary Reissue
Official Trailer - 40th Anniversary Reissue
Trailer
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Reviews

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A review by talisencrw
Written on August 15, 2016

This came in the outstanding 10-DVD boxed set 'Rialto Pictures: 10 Years', one of the finest things I've bought from The Criterion Collection (and a great deal too, one I'd heartily endorse).

I had to wait an entire day, after watching the dreadful 'Disaster Movie', to get the acrid taste out of my mouth to watch this one, by my fourth favourite director ever ('Viridiana' is still probably my favourite of his, though). Luckily it had three of my favourite French actors from the period, in Bulle Ogier (just check out 'Maitresse' if you don't understand why), Delphine Seyrig and Fernando Rey (for the two 'French Connection' films alone)--even though for a director of Bunuel's strength, any actors could have sufficed. It's the ideas that stand out most triumphantly.

It's most known for ...

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A review by CinemaSerf
Written on September 19, 2022

It's quite a difficult film to review this, as it essentially has no real plot and very little structure. It is a series of dream sequences following a group of friends - each with some form of skeleton in their closet - as they try to meet for a dinner that repeatedly gets aborted. Fernando Rey is on good form as the Ambassador from the Republic of "Miranda" - a man living in fear for his life from revolutionaries at home, and who is also not averse to adding a little spice to the contents of the diplomatic bag. Jean-Pierre Cassel and Stéphane Audran are the "Sénéchal" couple - they like a bit of al fresco nookie; the "Thévenot" couple (Delphine Seyrig and Paul Frankeur) are ostensibly the most normal of the group, though the latter has a bit going on the side with "Florence" (Bulle O...

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