Francisco del Villar’s Los Perros de Dios (1974) is a surrealist, absurdist look at life in contemporary Mexico. Brimming with allegorical themes and symbols that even the most keyed-in moviegoer might need a guidebook to catch, Villar’s film is as fiendishly funny as a Luis Buñuel classic and as outlandishly lurid as one of Alejandro Jodorowsky’s deeper meditations--top-notch company as arthouse directors go. Veteran actress Helena Rojo assumes the lead role, and she’s not shy about stripping down, even if she does get a bit feisty about it.