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Conservator’s Choice: Directors in Short
Program Two

Screening on Film
  • Land Without Bread (Las Hurdes)

    Directed by Luis Buñuel.
    Spain, 1932, 35mm, black & white, 27 min.

Banned in Spain because of its "negativism," this portrait of the mountainous region of Las Hurdes captures a thoroughly inhospitable landscape and a people who long ago abandoned all hope. Reworking the traditional documentary to make this "essay in human geography," Buñuel deploys a highly objective, matter-of-fact commentary that serves only to heighten the devastating imagery of human misery and futility.

  • Borom Sarret

    Directed by Ousmane Sembene.
    With Abdoulaye Ly.
    Senegal, 1964, black & white, 19 min.
    French with English subtitles.

Sembene’s first film (aside from an unreleased documentary on the Songhay Empire, made for the government of Mali), Borom Sarret (“cart owner”) chronicles a day in the life of a beleaguered horse-cart driver in Dakar. In spite of the material limitations of the production—if not because of the challenges they posed—Borom Sarret manages to create a powerful social statement as it combines simple means with complex observations on bureaucracy, religion, and the anonymity of the modern city. Compressing his narrative into a mere nineteen minutes, Sembene conveys the condition of Senegal’s urban poor as he situates their experience in the larger social panorama of post-independence Africa.

  • Toby Dammit

    Directed by Federico Fellini.
    With Terence Stamp.
    Italy, 1968, 35mm, color, 40 min.

The final episode in a compendium of Edgar Allan Poe stories entitled Histoires Extraordinaires (Spirits of the Dead), Fellini’s Toby Dammit loosely adapts Poe’s macabre tale and transforms it into the story of a burnt-out British actor who arrives in Rome to star in the first Catholic western.

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Conservator’s Choice: Directors in Short

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