
shocking the world with his early surrealist work, filmmaker Luis Buñuel dodged the oppressive control of Franco-era Spain by crafting a
slew of landmark works in Mexico including Los Olvidados and The Criminal Life of Archibaldo de la Cruz. His last three Mexican works have often been considered a trilogy of sorts, as they all star actress Silvia Pinal and were produced by her husband, Gustavo Alatriste (who later went on to marry Mexican horror star Ariadna Welter). All three of these films garner international acclaim and are considered among the director's most important work, setting the stage for his watershed French period that would more or less define the rest of his career. All three films have been available from quite some time from the Criterion Collection as well as Blu-rays in Spain and Japan, but in 2024, Radiance Films delivered the best editions by a long shot in their stacked Blu-ray set, Nothing Is Sacred: Three Heresies by Luis Buñuel, featuring greatly improved transfers of each film.
of a nun in training, Viridiana (Pinal), who's sent before taking her final vows to visit
her only relative, the widowed Don Jaime (frequent Buñuel star Rey). Her stay turns into a life-changing one as he drugs her into a bizarre evening replicating the death of his wife on their wedding night, and through macabre circumstances, she inherits half his estate with the rest going to her cousin, Jorge (Dagon's Rabal). That leads to an odd living arrangement with housekeeper Ramona (Lozano) and Jorge's girlfriend, Lucia (Zinny), as Viridiana tries to find a new way to help the needy in her own way.
This has been a fairly easy film to see over the years, with home video releases including a late '80s VHS from Hens
Tooth and numerous DVD editions in Europe. A restored transfer with optional English subtitles appeared from Criterion in 2006 with extras including interviews with Silvia Pinal (14m24s) and author Richard Porton (12m39s), excerpts from a 1964 episode of Cinèastes de notre temps (37m23s) on Buñuel's early career, and the American trailer, plus liner notes by Michael Wood. The Radiance Blu-ray comes from a brand new 4K restoration from the original negative, and it looks beautiful with more image info in the frame, richer black levels, greatly improved detail, and a lot less damage (including no more scratches running throughout the first reel like the previous releases). The optional English subtitles are also greatly improved and the LPCM 1.0 Spanish mono audio is excellent, as with the other two titles in the set. Extras here kick off with the 1983 BBC Arena documentary The Life and Times of Don Luis Buñuel (101m17s) featuring interviews with Buñuel and collaborators including Catherine Deneuve, with an optional 9m40s intro by Anthony Wall. It's a thorough overview of his life and career across multiple continents with a generous amount of film clips that will make you want to program your own mini-festival. Director Lulu Wang provides a new 10m56s appraisal of the film including its impact on later filmmakers and its subversive take on male-female relationships, and you get a significantly longer version of that episode of Cinéastes de notre temps, now
clocking in at 47m46s. A gallery of stills and posters is also included. The film itself comes with a thorough new audio commentary by Michael Brooke who goes into the film's pivotal exposure on British TV in the '80s, the filming locations, backgrounds of the significant actors,
the subversion of viewer expectations at play (especially if you know the director), the effective "crepuscular" lighting and gothic imagery, the naughty meaning of the final scene, and a slew of cultural and artistic references and connections you could easily miss.
time the festivities start, and as the evening wears on, all the attendees find themselves utterly unable to leave. When one of the servants, Julio (Brook), returns the following morning, he also becomes trapped as death, inexplicable
conversational glitches, multiple animals, and a massive crowd building outside turn the situation into a comic nightmare.
with blown-out white subtitles that were mostly illegible. The first genuinely good-looking release came on DVD from Criterion in 2009, followed by a very nice quality Blu-ray in 2016 from the same label with extras including the Spanish-language
subtitled trailer, a 10m18s interview with Pinal (including some funny memories of what would happen when she asked "why" things were happening), a 15-minute interview with director Arturo Ripstein on the film's influence, and The Last Script: Remembering Luis Buñuel (97m4s), a 2008 documentary featuring screenwriter Jean-Claude Carrière and filmmaker Juan Luis Buñuel chatting about the director's life and impact. The insert booklet features an essay by Michael Wood and an archival Buñuel interview. The Radiance cites its presentation as being from a 4K scan by Radiance Films, and it appears to be from the same film source as the earlier release but with a bit more image info, stronger black levels, and better detail. Most significantly, a few tiny visual elements like glinting light reflects that appear to have been scrubbed off the earlier Blu-ray during the noise reduction process are intact here. Extras include 1995's A Mexican Buñuel (55m41s), a standard definition documentary by Emilio Maillé about the filmmaker's lengthy period in Mexico ranging from major realist works like Los Olvidados to his groundbreaking surrealist masterpieces, an appreciative intro by Alex Cox (9m39s), and an interview with Guillermo Del Toro (18m55s), who cast Brook in his debut film Cronos, about the film's effect on him and its use of horror elements. Also included are a production
photo gallery and Alexandra Heller-Nicholas' video essay "Dinner and Other Rituals" (16m52s) about the depiction of meal eating and its related social customs as elements of the director's
work.
to more physical and spiritual challenges that transcend time itself.
real ascetic, the Syrian saint Simón Stylites, who was claimed to have survived for over three decades on a similar pillar. The execution though is pure Buñuel with its depiction of how the wealthy class handles the refusal of material rewards, even when it's within the framework of piety that organized religion needs to survive.
new 4K restoration here is the biggest leap of them all with a colossal increase in detail and the most image
info to date by a wide margin. It really looks terrific and is worth the upgrade all by itself. Here on the Radiance disc you get a new appreciation from filmmaker and actor Richard Ayoade (14m55s) about why this is one of his favorites of the director's work, the 2021 documentary Buñuel: A Surrealist Filmmaker (87m8s) by Javier Espada offering a fresh overview of his life and career with a focus on the evolution of his artistic sensibilities post-Dali and through Spain, Mexico, and France, and "The Other Trinity: Alatriste, Buñuel and Pinal" (32m35s), a visual essay by Abraham Castillo Flores about the limited but highly creative and important collaboration between the star, actor, and producer in this period of just a few years. The box also comes with a limited edition 80-page book featuring new essays by Glenn Kenny, Justine Smith, Lindsay Hallam and David Hering, plus archival material.VIRIDIANA: Radiance (Blu-ray)
VIRIDIANA: Criterion (DVD)
THE EXTERMINATING ANGEL: Radiance (Blu-ray)
THE EXTERMINATING ANGEL: Criterion (Blu-ray)
SIMON OF THE DESERT: Radiance (Blu-ray)
SIMON OF THE DESERT: Divisa (Blu-ray)