The Passion of Joan of Arc (The Criterion Collection) |  | Director: Carl Theodor Dreyer Actors: Maria Falconetti, Eugene Silvain, André Berley, Maurice Schutz, Antonin Artaud Studio: Criterion
List Price: $39.95 Buy New: $24.27 as of 5/19/2012 12:27 MDT details You Save: $15.68 (39%)
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Format: Black & White, Dolby, DVD, Silent, Special Edition, NTSC Languages: English (Unknown), French (Original Language) Rating: Unrated Region: 1 Discs: 1 Aspect Ratio: 1.33:1 Running Time: 82 Minutes Shipping Weight (lbs): 0.3 Dimensions (in): 7.5 x 5.4 x 0.6
MPN: PMIDPAS050D ISBN: 0780022343 UPC: 037429139820 EAN: 9780780022348
Release Date: October 19, 1999 Availability: Usually ships in 24 hours
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Product Description Renee Falconetti, Michel Simon. This groundbreaking film, known for its intense cinematography, is based on actual trial transcripts from Joan of Arc's interrogation and French execution. Silent. 1928/b&w/77 min/NR/fullscreen.
Carl Dreyer's The Passion of Joan of Arc is as truly mythic as any film ever shot, its artistic achievement rivaled by its turbulent history. The focal point of controversy when released in 1928, the original film was lost for a half-century until an intact copy of Dreyer's original version was recovered in the early '80s.Seeing Joan of Arc today remains a cinematic revelation, its approach to storytelling, set design, editing, and especially cinematography (by Rudolph Maté, who also shot Dreyer's visionary Vampyr) radical then, and still strikingly modern many decades later. Influenced by both German expressionist film and the French avant-garde, Dreyer's huge set was designed with asymmetrical doors, windows, and arches, through which Maté's camera moves along equally off-centered, even vertiginous, but fluid trajectories. Although the story is epic in its implications, the film is composed primarily of extreme close-ups, especially of Joan and her principal interrogator, Bishop Cauchon, and medium shots of small groups, often shot from low angles. Dreyer and Maté shot their cast in bright light, without makeup, giving each wrinkle, blemish, or tuft of hair sculptural detail. For all its visual invention, however, Dreyer's film is most devastating in its central performance by Falconetti (née Renee Falconetti), a French stage actress who made her only screen appearance here--one critic Pauline Kael has suggested "may be the finest performance ever recorded on film." Through Falconetti, Joan's spiritual devotion, simple dignity, and suffering become utterly real; even without a dialogue track and only sparse inter-titles, the film achieves a fevered eloquence. This meticulous restoration also includes composer Richard Einhorn's beautiful oratorio, Voices of Light, inspired by Dreyer's film and set to texts by women mystics from medieval and early-Renaissance Europe. A luminous work on its own, Einhorn's oratorio matches both the dramatic arcs and tremulous emotions of Dreyer's film, while its juxtaposition of choral and solo voices (with early-music vocal quartet Anonymous 4 evoking Joan herself) echoes the martyr's confrontation with the court. --Sam Sutherland
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