Film Review
Universally acknowledged as a true masterpiece of cinema, Carl Theodor
Dreyer's
La Passion de Jeanne d'Arc
continues to fascinate and beguile, offering a unique visual and
emotional experience that makes it one of the most remarkable films
ever made.
The film's unsettling composition and its powerful
depiction of the transcendence of a human soul set it apart from any other
cinematic work and make it one of the most expressive and compassionate
pieces of film art. There is a sublime humanity to this film that
is harrowing in its intensity and yet also spiritually
cleansing. No one who watches it can fail to be moved by
its startling visualisation of Joan of Arc's trial and
martyrdom.
Carl Dreyer had made eight films prior to this, most in his native
Denmark, but also others in Sweden, Germany and Norway. It was
the success of his 1925 film
Master of the House that led
the Paris-based company Société Génerale to offer
him a long-term contract. The studio's speciality was lavish
historical dramas and Dreyer was offered the choice of three subjects:
Marie-Antoinette, Catherine de Medici or Joan of Arc. He chose
the latter, reputedly by drawing lots. Dreyer appreciated the
large budget he was given but rejected the screenplay he was
offered. Instead, he wrote his own script after months of
painstaking research, using the transcript of Joan's trial as a source
for the inter-title dialogue.
Dreyer took eighteen months to complete this, his most ambitious and
innovative film. His relentless perfectionism earned him the
reputation of a tyrant and inevitably brought him into conflict with
his bosses at Société Génerale. Although the
film won very favourable reviews when it was released, it only recouped
a fraction of its production cost, and Société
Génerale attempted to terminate Dreyer's contract. The
director reacted in kind by suing the studio (successfully) and then
setting up his own production company, with the support of the wealthy
aristocrat Nicolas von Gunzburg. What could have been the
beginning of a monumental filmmaking career in France would soon end
with another dismal commercial failure,
Vampyr.
The fortunes of
La Passion de Jeanne
d'Arc were even more chequered than that of the man who had
created it. It was an astonishingly original film for its time,
quite unlike any film that had ever been made in the silent era.
Yet Dreyer's treatment of his subject made it also a highly
controversial film. It was banned in the UK for its perceived
anti-English sentiment and received outright hostility from right-wing
forces in France, who regarded its portrayal of the Church as overtly
sacrilegious. Not long after its first, commercially disastrous,
release, the film's original negative was destroyed in a fire.
Dreyer then constructed a second version, but this too was lost in a
fire. In subsequent years, various badly mauled prints of the
film were in circulation, leading some reviewers to question the
artistic merits of Dreyer's so-called masterpiece. Then, in 1981,
miraculously, a near-pristine print of Dreyer's first cut of the
film was found by chance in a caretaker's closet in a Norwegian mental
hospital. This unlikely resurrection silenced the doubters and
instantly confirmed the film's standing as one of the great
masterpieces of cinema.
The reputation of
La Passion de
Jeanne d'Arc rests on two of its more remarkable facets - the
way in which the film is composed, almost entirely in close-ups, and a
towering central performance from the actress who plays Joan, Maria
Falconetti (also known as Renée Jeanne Falconetti). There
is an indefinable genius to Falconetti's portrayal of Joan that has
made her an enduring icon of cinema, which is all the more surprising
when you realise that this was her only significant screen
appearance.
At the time she made this film, Falconetti was a well-known stage
actress who had played minor roles in just two films. Dreyer had
originally wanted to cast an established French film actress, but he
soon found that no movie star would voluntarily appear in a film
without makeup and have her head shaved in front of the camera (the two
main requirements of the part). Dreyer settled on Falconetti when
he saw her perform in a stage production of the scandalous comedy
La Garçonne.
Falconetti had exactly the quality that the director was looking for,
an ability to convey immense inner suffering behind a mask of
serenity.
Maria Falconetti found the experience of working for Dreyer extremely
arduous. In his striving for authenticity, the director would
systematically deprive her of sleep and food, and he would often force
her to spend hours kneeling on a stone floor. This might
explain why Falconetti never appeared in a film again (although it is
believed that Dreyer had planned to make a second film with her).
She went back to the stage and had a enormously successful career,
appearing with the Comédie Française. In the 1930s,
Falconetti suffered a sudden cruel reversal of fortune, losing most of
her money when her theatre went bust. During WWII, she fled to
Switzerland, and then settled in Buenos Aires. Here, she threw
away what remained of her fortune on a lavish lifestyle and compulsive
gambling. Before her death in 1946, she survived by giving
elocution lessons to French-speaking Argentines. The big comeback
that she had hoped to make never materialised - a sad outcome for an
actress who once gave what is widely considered the greatest screen
performance of all time.
Dreyer's use of the close-up in
La
Passion de Jeanne d'Arc is deliberate and highly
effective. It serves two purposes. The longer takes (which
are mostly of Joan) compel the audience to empathise with the
protagonist, to share his or her emotions as they slowly bubble up to
the surface. The shorter takes (most of which last barely a
second or two) are assembled into a frenzied montage which suggest
hostility and conflict. Dreyer's intention is obvious: to portray
Joan as a victim of an evil conspiracy. She is the innocent lamb
who is being savaged by the ferocious pack of wolves that are her
interrogators. The choice of camera angle reinforces this
impression. Joan looks upwards towards us as a suppliant,
beseeching us to have pity on her. By contrast, the judges look
down on us, with grim intimidating expressions which suggest brutal
authority that is bereft of remorse. Whereas her persecutors are
shown to be merciless upholders of a dead religion, their inner
feelings as withered and gnarled as their cracked faces, Joan is
portrayed as a true disciple of Christ, humble and incorruptible, her
faith being all she has to sustain her against a relentless barrage of
barren theological probing.
The film's unusual stylisation also plays an important role in defining
and strengthening its emotional impact. Rudolph Maté's
cinematography, with its distinctive lighting and unusual camera
angles, brings an austerity and stifling sense of oppression to the
courtroom scenes, qualities which Maté would use to good effect
on his subsequent Hollywood film noir thrillers. The
expressionistic set design is also effective, its disconcerting
geometry and unnatural whiteness lending the film an unsettling
dreamlike feel. These stylistic touches convey the
impression that the film does not take place in the real world at all,
but rather in some shard of the imagination in
which the only things that are real are the intense emotions of the
protagonists.
It is not hard to see just why
La Passion de
Jeanne d'Arc was so controversial when it was
first seen. It can so easily be interpreted as an attack on
religious fundamentalism, characterising the Church as hypocritical and
dogmatic, whilst boldly likening Joan of Arc to Jesus Christ. The
film's title reveals Dreyer's intent, to portray the Maid of Orleans as
Christ. In one scene, Joan is even forced to wear a crown made
from straw and she is then referred to, mockingly, as the Daughter of
God. Joan's ordeal and execution so closely mirror the passion of
Christ that we can have no doubt that Dreyer saw Joan and Christ as
equivalent manifestations of the Divine. The film's dramatic
ending - a frenetic montage sequence in which crowds of peasants turn
on the state (the Church and the army) to proclaim Joan a saint -
reinforces the notion that this film is intended to be a representation
of the conflict between faith and religious dogma. As the world
descends into anarchy, Joan's defeat at the hands of God's
representatives on Earth is transformed into triumphant victory,
leaving us with the consoling thought that, in the end, light must
prevail over darkness.
© James Travers 2010
The above content is owned by filmsdefrance.com and must not be copied.
Next Carl Theodor Dreyer film:
Vampyr (1932)