The Passion of Joan of Arc

The Passion of Joan of Arc

Theatrical poster
Directed by Carl Theodor Dreyer
Written by Joseph Delteil
Carl Theodor Dreyer
Starring Renée Jeanne Falconetti
Eugène Silvain
André Berley
Maurice Schutz
Cinematography Rudolph Maté
Edited by Marguerite Beaugé
Carl Theodor Dreyer
Distributed by Société Générale des Films
Release dates
  • 21 April 1928 (1928-04-21) (Denmark)
  • 25 October 1928 (1928-10-25) (France)
Running time
110 minutes
82 minutes (restored version)
Country France
Language Silent film
French intertitles

The Passion of Joan of Arc (French: La Passion de Jeanne d'Arc) is a 1928 silent French film based on the actual record of the trial of Joan of Arc. The film was directed by Carl Theodor Dreyer and stars Renée Jeanne Falconetti as Joan. It is widely regarded as a landmark of cinema,[1] especially for its production, Dreyer's direction and Falconetti's performance, which is often listed as one of the finest in cinema history. The film summarizes the time that Joan of Arc was a captive of England,[2] depicting her trial and execution.

Danish film director Dreyer was invited to make a film in France by the Société Générale des Films and chose to make a film about Joan of Arc due to her renewed popularity in France. Dreyer spent over a year researching Joan of Arc and the transcripts of her trial before writing the script. Dreyer cast stage actress Falconetti as Joan in her only major film role. Falconetti's performance and devotion to the role during filming have become legendary among film scholars.

The film was shot on one huge concrete set modeled on medieval architecture in order to realistically portray the Rouen prison. The film is known for its cinematography and use of close-ups. Dreyer also didn't allow the actors to wear make-up and used lighting designs that made the actors look more grotesque.

Prior to its release, the film was controversial due to French nationalists' skepticism about whether a Danish person could direct a film that centered on one of France's most revered historical icons. Dreyer's final version of the film was cut down due to pressure from the Archbishop of Paris and from government censors. For several decades it was released and viewed in various re-edited versions that had attempted to restore Dreyer's final cut. In 1981 a film print of Dreyer's final cut of the film was finally discovered in a mental institution in Oslo, Norway and re-released. Despite the objections and cutting of the film by clerical and government authorities, it was a major critical success when first released and has consistently been considered one of the greatest films ever made since 1928. It has been praised and referenced by many film directors and musicians.

Plot

After having led numerous military battles against the English during the Hundred Years' War, Joan of Arc is captured near Compiegne and eventually brought to Rouen, Normandy to stand trial for heresy by French clergymen loyal to the English.

On 30 May 1431 Joan is interrogated by the French clerical court. Her judges try to make her say something that will discredit her claim or shake her belief that she has been given a mission by God to drive the English from France, but she remains steadfast. One or two of them, believing that she is indeed a saint, support her. The authorities then resort to deception. A priest reads a false letter to the illiterate prisoner supposedly from King Charles VII of France, telling her to trust in the bearer. When that too fails, Joan is taken to view the torture chamber, but the sight, though it causes her to faint, does not intimidate her.

When she is threatened with burning at the stake, she finally breaks and allows a priest to guide her hand in signing a confession. However, the judge then condemns her to life imprisonment.

As the jailer shaves her head, she realises she has been unfaithful to God. She demands that the judges return and she recants her confession.

As more and more around her begin to recognise her true faith and calling she is permitted a final communion mass. She is then dressed in sack-cloth and taken to the place of execution. She helps the executioner tie her bonds. The crowds gather and the fire is lit. As the flames rise the women weep and a man cries out "you have burned a saint". The troops prepare for a riot. As the flames consume Joan the troops and crowd clash and people are killed. Joan is consumed by the flames but they protect her soul as it rises to heaven.[3]

Cast

Production

Background and writing

After the success of Master of the House in Denmark, Dreyer was invited to make a film in France by the Société Gėnėrale des Films and proposed a film about either Marie Antoinette, Catherine de Medici or Joan of Arc. He later claimed that the final decision on the film's subject matter was determined by drawing matches. Joan of Arc was in the news in France after World War I, having been canonised as a saint of the Roman Catholic Church in 1920 and adopted as one of the patron saints of France.[4] Dreyer spent over a year and a half researching Joan for the film, and the script was based on the original transcripts of Joan's trial and execution, condensing 29 interrogations over the course of 18 months into one scene.[5] The transcripts of the trial had been published in 1921 by editor Pierre Champion and were the main basis of Dreyer's script. The rights to Joseph Delteil's 1925 book on Joan of Arc were also purchased for the production, but nothing from Delteil's book was used in the finished film. However, at the film's premiere Delteil was partially credited as a source.[6]

Casting

Joan of Arc was Renée Jeanne Falconetti's second and last film role.[7] Although she always preferred the art of theater to cinema and said she never understood the positive reaction to the film's acting, Falconetti's performance achieved iconic status in film history almost immediately.[8] Dreyer had gone to see Falconetti backstage at a performance of Victor Margueritte's La Garçonne,[8] a comedic play that she was appearing in. He was initially unimpressed, but upon seeing her a second time the day after, Dreyer said he "felt there was something in her which could be brought out; something she could give, something, therefore, I could take. For behind the make-up, behind the pose and that ravishing modern appearance, there was something. There was a soul behind that facade."[9] Dreyer asked her to do some screen tests the next day, but without any make-up. During the tests, he "found in her face exactly what I wanted for Joan: a country girl, very sincere, but also a woman of suffering."[10] Dreyer then told Falconetti about the film and her role in great detail. She agreed to star in the film, secretly hoping that she would not have to cut her hair or forgo make-up.[8]

Jean Renoir praised her performance and said "That shaven head was and remains the abstraction of the whole epic of Joan of Arc." She was famously treated harshly by Dreyer, who had a reputation for being a tyrannical director. Dreyer would always clear the set whenever Falconetti needed to act in a particularly emotional or important scene, allowing her to focus without any distractions. Dreyer often had difficulties explaining himself to Falconetti and was known to turn bright red and begin stammering when passionately directing her.[11] Dreyer had stated that a director "must be careful never to force his own interpretation on an actor, because an actor cannot create truth and pure emotions on command. One cannot push feelings out. They have to arise from themselves, and it is the director's and actor's work in unison to bring them to that point."[5] Later in post-production, Falconetti was the only cast member to watch the rushes and the film's editing.[8] According to critic Roger Ebert:

For Falconetti, the performance was an ordeal. Legends from the set tell of Dreyer forcing her to kneel painfully on stone and then wipe all expression from her face—so that the viewer would read suppressed or inner pain. He filmed the same shots again and again, hoping that in the editing room he could find exactly the right nuance in her facial expression.[12]

Among the other cast members was French playwright Antonin Artaud as the monk Massieu. Artaud later stated that the film was meant to "reveal Joan as the victim of one of the most terrible of all perversions: the perversion of a divine principle in its passage through the minds of men, whether they be Church, Government or what you will."[13]

Cinematography

Falconetti in a scene from the film. Dreyer dug holes in the set to achieve the low camera angles seen here.

The camerawork of The Passion of Joan of Arc was highly unconventional in its radical emphasis on the actors' facial features. Dreyer shot much of the film in close-up, stating, "There were questions, there were answers- very short, very crisp... Each question, each answer, quite naturally called for a close-up... In addition, the result of the close-ups was that the spectator was as shocked as Joan was, receiving the questions, tortured by them."[5] Dreyer also did not allow his actors to wear makeup,[14] the better to tell the story through their expressions—this choice was made possible through use of the recently developed panchromatic film,[12] which recorded skin tones in a naturalistic manner.

Dreyer often shot the priests and Joan's other interrogators in high contrast lighting, but then shot Joan in soft, even lighting.[15] Rudolph Maté's high-contrast cinematography also allowed unappealing details in people's faces, such as warts and lumps, to be fully visible. In addition, Dreyer employed many low-angle shots of Joan's persecutors so that they would appear more monstrous and intimidating; in the effort to do this, several holes were dug on the set for the camera to film from the appropriate angle, causing the crew to nickname him "Carl Gruyére".[5] Dreyer also shot the film "from the first to the last scene ... in the right order."[14]

Art direction

The film had one of the most expensive sets ever built for a European film up to that time.[16] Upon being given a budget of seven million francs, Dreyer constructed an enormous octagonal concrete set to depict Rouen Castle. Production designers Hermann Warm and Jean Hugo were inspired by medieval miniatures for their designs, adding unnatural angles and perspectives to add to Joan's emotional state of mind.[5] They also relied on medieval manuscripts with accurate architectural drawings, such as John Mandeville's Livre de Merveilles.[17] The huge set was built as one complete, interconnecting structure instead of in separate locations. The castle had towers in all four corners with concrete walls running along the sides. Each wall was 10 centimeters thick so that they could support the weight of actors, technicians and equipment.[17] A functional drawbridge was also built into one of the walls. Inside the walls were small houses, the courtyard where the burning took place and a cathedral. The entire set was painted pink so that it would appear grey in the black and white film and contrast against the white sky above it.

Despite all of the detail put into the set, only segments of it are ever visible in the film,[18] which later angered the film's producers since so much money was spent on the set. Dreyer later expressed, however, that the scope of the set heightened the abilities of the actors and actresses to give convincing performances.[19] Hermann Warm's original models for the film's set are currently stored at the Danish Film Institute Archives.[17]

Release and different versions

The Passion of Joan of Arc debuted on 21 April 1928 at the Palads Teatret cinema in Copenhagen. After a few private screenings, it finally premiered in Paris on 25 October 1928 at the Cinema Marivaux. The film's release was delayed due to the persistent efforts of many French nationalists – who objected to the fact that Dreyer was neither Catholic nor French, and to the then-rumored casting of Lillian Gish as Joan. As early as January 1927, Jean-Jose Frappa said that "whatever the talent of the director (and he has it)...he cannot give us a Joan of Arc in the true French tradition. And the American 'star'...cannot be our Joan, wholesome, lively, shining with purity, faith, courage and patriotism. To let this be made in France would be a scandalous abdication of responsibility."[20] Before its French premiere, several cuts were made by order of the Archbishop of Paris and by government censors. Dreyer was angered by these cuts, as he had no control over them. Later that year on 6 December, a fire at UFA studios in Berlin destroyed the film's original negative; only a few copies of Dreyer's original cut of the film existed. Dreyer was able to patch together a new version of the original cut using alternate and initially unused takes. This version was also destroyed in a 1929 lab fire. Over the next four decades, it became difficult to find copies of Dreyer's second version, and copies of the original were thought to be even scarcer.[20]

It was re-released in 1933 in a 61-minute cut which included a new narration by radio star David Ross, but no intertitles. In 1951, Joseph-Marie Lo Duca found a copy of the negative of Dreyer's second version in the Gaumont Studios vaults. Lo Duca then made several significant changes, including the addition of a Baroque score and the replacing of many intertitles with subtitles. For many years, Lo Duca's version was the only one available. Dreyer himself objected to this cut, however.[20]

The next version of the film was produced by Arnie Krogh of the Danish Film Institute. Krogh cut together scenes and sequences from several different available prints to attempt to create a cut that was as true to Dreyer's original vision as possible.[20]

Rediscovery of original version

The original version was lost for decades after a fire destroyed the master negative and only variations of Dreyer's second version were available. In 1981, an employee of the Dikemark Hospital mental institution in Oslo found several film canisters in a janitor's closet that were labeled as being The Passion of Joan of Arc.[1] The canisters were sent to the Norwegian Film Institute where they were first stored for three years until finally being examined. It was then discovered that they were Dreyer's original cut prior to government or church censorship. There were never any records of the film being shipped to Oslo, but film historians believe that the then director of the institution may have requested a special copy since he was also a published historian.

Reception

On its initial release, the film was a critical success and immediately called a masterpiece. It was also a huge financial flop and caused the Société Générale to cancel its contract with Dreyer after the failure of this film and of Abel Gance's Napoléon. Dreyer angrily accused the Société Générale of mutilating the film so as to avoid offending Catholic viewers and sued them for breach of contract. The lawsuit went on until the fall of 1931, during which time Dreyer was unable to make another film.[5] It was banned in Britain for its portrayal of crude English soldiers who mock and torment Joan in scenes that mirror biblical accounts of Christ's mocking at the hands of Roman soldiers. The Archbishop of Paris was also critical, demanding changes be made to the film.[21]

The New York Times film reviewer Mordaunt Hall raved:

... as a film work of art this takes precedence over anything that has so far been produced. It makes worthy pictures of the past look like tinsel shams. It fills one with such intense admiration that other pictures appear but trivial in comparison.[21]

Of the star, he wrote, "... it is the gifted performance of Maria Falconetti as the Maid of Orleans that rises above everything in this artistic achievement."[21] However Variety gave the film a negative review on its initial release, calling it "a deadly tiresome picture."[22] In 1929 The National Board of Review named the film one of the best foreign films of the year.[23]

Legacy

The film and Falconetti's performance have continued to be praised by critics throughout the years. Pauline Kael wrote that Falconetti's portrayal "may be the finest performance ever recorded on film."[1][7] Roger Ebert praised the film and said that "You cannot know the history of silent film unless you know the face of Renee Maria Falconetti."[24] Jean Sémolué called it "a film of confrontation" and Paul Schrader has praised "the architecture of Joan's world, which literally conspires against her; like the faces of her inquisitors, the halls, doorways, furniture are on the offensive, striking, swooping at her with oblique angles, attacking her with hard-edged chunks of black and white."[5] Jonathan Rosenbaum wrote that "Dreyer's radical approach to constructing space and the slow intensity of his mobile style make[s] this “difficult” in the sense that, like all the greatest films, it reinvents the world from the ground up."[25]

Some critics have found faults in the film, and Paul Rotha called it "one of the most remarkable productions ever realized in the history and development of cinema, but it was not a full exposition of real filmic properties". Tom Milne stated that "somehow the style Dreyer found for the film seems irremediably false. Instead of flowing naturally from his chosen materials...it seems imposed upon them...Throughout the film there is a constant stylistic uncertainty, an impurity, which jars heavily today," but adds that "Jeanne d'Arc has a majestic power which steamrollers its way through all its faults and excesses."[5]

The Passion of Joan of Arc has appeared on Sight & Sound magazine's top ten films poll five times: as number seven in 1952[26] and 1972,[27] and as number ten (Critic's List) and six (Director's List) in 1992[28] and as number nine in 2012 (Critic's List).[29] It ranked thirty-seventh on the Director's List in 2012 and was listed by such filmmakers as Manoel de Oliveira, Atom Egoyan, Tsai Ming-Liang, Walter Salles, Béla Tarr, Michael Mann,[30] who called it "Human experience conveyed purely from the visualisation of the human face: no one else has composed and realised human beings quite like Dreyer in The Passion of Joan of Arc",[31] and Kutlug Ataman, who said the film "taught me film could be just poetry and timeless."[32] The Village Voice ranked it the eighth of the twentieth century in a 2000 poll of critics.[33] In 2010, the Toronto International Film Festival released its "Essential 100" list of films, which merged one list of the 100 greatest films of all time as determined by an expert panel of TIFF curators with another list determined by TIFF stakeholders. The Passion of Joan of Arc was ranked as the most influential film of all time.[34][35] Her performance was ranked 26th in Premiere Magazine's 100 Greatest Performances of All Time,[36] the highest of any silent performance on the list.

Scenes from the film appear in Jean-Luc Godard's Vivre sa Vie (1962), in which the protagonist Nana sees the film at a cinema and identifies with Joan. In Henry & June, Henry Miller is shown watching the last scenes of the film and in voice-over narrates a letter to Anaïs Nin comparing her to Joan and himself to the "mad monk" character played by Antonin Artaud.

Music

In the 1920s film music was normally played live in the theatre. Different scores were used for the two premieres of the Passion of Joan of Arc in Copenhagen and Paris. The music of the Paris version, for orchestra and singers, has survived and has been revived.[37] It was composed by Leo Pouget and Victor Alix, who as well as being film composers, both wrote operettas; Pouget was coming to the end of his career whereas Alix was regarded by Le Ménestrel as becoming an established composer.[38] Their score of Joan of Arc has been seen in recent years as having some limitations,[37] but seems to have been regarded as acceptable at the time. In 1929 selections were released in 78 format in a performance by "l'orchestre symphonique du Lutetia Wagram" (the Lutetia Wagram being a large Parisian cinema of the time, since demolished).

Dreyer also heard the sound-track of Joseph-Marie Lo Duca's version of the film, featuring Bach, Albinoni and Vivaldi, of which he disapproved; he appears not to have encountered a score which he considered definitive.[39] Since Dreyer's death and the rediscovery of the original print, numerous composers have provided music for the film.

See also

Notes

  1. Simon, best known for Boudu Saved from Drowning and L'Atalante, is visible for two brief moments only.

References

  1. 1 2 3 The Criterion Collection: Passion of Joan of Arc, The – Synopsis by Anonymous. Retrieved 22 March 2007.
  2. DVD commentary by Casper Tybjerg, Associate Professor of Film Studies at the Department of Media, Cognition and Communication at the University of Copenhagen.
  3. Dreyer, Carl Theodor. Four Screenplays. Bloomington & London: Indiana University Press. 1970. ISBN 0-253-12740-8. pp. 27-76.
  4. Wakeman, John. World Film Directors, Volume 1." The H. W. Wilson Company. 1987. p. 268. ISBN 0-8242-0757-2.
  5. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 Wakeman. p. 268.
  6. Dreyer. p. 21.
  7. 1 2 Kael, Pauline (1982). 5001 Nights At the Movies. Holt, Rinehart and Winston, New York. p. 449. ISBN 0-03-042606-5.
  8. 1 2 3 4 Criterion. Interview with Hélène Falconetti.
  9. Milne. p. 95.
  10. Milne. pp. 95-96.
  11. Milne. p. 97.
  12. 1 2 Ebert, Roger (16 February 1997). "The Passion of Joan of Arc (1928)". rogerebert.com. Retrieved 9 September 2010.
  13. Milne. pp. 106-107.
  14. 1 2 Carl Theodor Dreyer. "Realized Mysticism in The Passion of Joan of Arc". Danish Film Institute (reprinted by The Criterion Collection). Retrieved 8 September 2010.
  15. Milne. p. 103.
  16. The Criterion Collection. The Passion of Joan of Arc DVD. Special features: Production design. 1999.
  17. 1 2 3 Criterion. Production design.
  18. Milne, Tom. The Cinema of Carl Dreyer. New York: A. S. Barnes & Co. 1971. SBN 498-07711-X. p. 94.
  19. Cutler, Sylvia. "The Passion of Joan of Arc: Alienation and Games of Perception". Brigham Young University. Retrieved December 19, 2015. "When the first rounds of the film were released the producers were horrified to find that the rebuilt city was not featured in the film. Dreyer explained that the city was not for the film, but rather for the actors so that they could experience the milieu of the old city for themselves."
  20. 1 2 3 4 Criterion. Version History.
  21. 1 2 3 Mordaunt Hall (March 31, 1929). "The Passion of Joan of Arc (1928)". The New York Times.
  22. "Review: 'Le Passion de Jeanne D'Arc'". Variety (magazine). 1 January 1928. Retrieved 2014-11-28.
  23. "The Passion of Joan of Arc (1928)". The New York Times. Retrieved 2014-11-28.
  24. "The Passion of Joan of Arc". rogerebert.com. Retrieved 2014-06-08.
  25. "The Passion of Joan of Arc". The Chicago Reader. Retrieved 2014-06-08.
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  27. "The Sight & Sound Top Ten Poll: 1972". Sight & Sound. Retrieved 2008-02-24.
  28. "The Sight & Sound Top Ten Poll: 1992". Sight & Sound. Retrieved 2008-02-24.
  29. Christie, Ian (29 July 2015) [2012]. "The 50 Greatest Films of All Time". Contributors to Sight & Sound magazine. Sight & Sound. Retrieved 19 December 2015 via British Film Institute.
  30. "Joan of Arc". Sight & Sound. Retrieved 2014-11-28.
  31. "Michael Mann". Sight & Sound. Retrieved 2014-11-28.
  32. "Kutlug Ataman". Sight & Sound. Retrieved 2014-11-28.
  33. 100 Best Films – Village Voice. Filmsite.org (4 January 2000). Retrieved 5 June 2012.
  34. "TIFF Essential 100". 22 December 2010. Retrieved 22 December 2010.
  35. "Dreyer film voted most influential". Copenhagen Post. 22 September 2010. Retrieved 26 September 2010.
  36. Premiere Magazine's 100 Greatest Performances of All Time. Listology (14 March 2006). Retrieved 5 June 2012.
  37. 1 2 Joseph McLellan (25 July 1996). "ORCHESTRA AND SINGERS BRING SILENT FILM TO LIFE". Washington Post. Retrieved 10 March 2016.
  38. Le Ménestrel. Vol. 94 no. 19 (6 May 1932): 200. Accessed via RIPM (subscription required).
  39. 1 2 Greig, Donald (7 July 2015). "Joan of Arc". theguardian.com. Retrieved 7 August 2015.
  40. Jo van den Booren. Jovandenbooren.nl. Retrieved 5 June 2012.
  41. Moving Pictures: Chorus Performs Dramatic Oratorio for Classic Film. Category: Arts & Events from. The Berkeley Daily Planet. Retrieved 5 June 2012.
  42. Nick Cave Collector's Hell 1977-2011 Nick Cave Fan Site. Retrieved 8 June 2014.
  43. Chan Marshall interview. Kinda Muzik site. Retrieved 8 June 2014.
  44. Ugress website ugress.com. Retrieved 8 June 2014.
  45. In the Nursery website inthenursery.com. Retrieved 8 June 2014.
  46. Jesper Kyd Online. Jesperkyd.com. Retrieved 5 June 2012.
  47. Estonian Composer Union website. helilooja.ee. 8 June 2014.
  48. Berg Orchestra website. www.berg.cz. Retrieved 8 June 2014.
  49. Performing Arts Live website www.performingartslive.com. Retrieved 8 June 2014.
  50. "Music". stefansmulovitz.ca. Retrieved 10 March 2016.
  51. The Passion of Joan of Arc. Colston Hall (7 May 2010). Retrieved 5 June 2012.
  52. Joan of Arc Website. www.joanofarcband.com. Retrieved 8 June 2014.
  53. "The Passion of Joan of Arc - The Ultimate Picture Palace". uppcinema.com. Retrieved 10 March 2016.
  54. Ensemble MidtVest, 'Jeanne d'Arcs Lidelse og Død'. www.emv.dk. Retrieved 3 October 2014.
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