The Saragossa Manuscript isn't quite surrealism, but it hits on many of the same themes whilst still being very watchable.
It's a Polish film set in Spain, based on a French novel, and the structure is that everything that happens is a story within a story - often a character will tell a story, and one of his characters tells another story, which concludes. The focus is back onto the first storyteller, who's story then finishes and the focus moves to whoever was telling a story involving that storyteller.
Thematically it's very dark and lovely, with a mysterious and magical undercurrent, skulls, incest, decaying corpses and so forth.
When it was released over here it was in a 90 minute formatm in the states it was 120 minutes. Nowadays you can grab the full 180 minutes on DVD - thanks to Jerry Garcia mainly. Francis Ford Coppola and Lars von Trier (woo!) have both said it's their favorite film
