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Procès de Jeanne d'Arc

  • 1962
  • Tous publics
  • 1h 4m
IMDb RATING
7.4/10
6.4K
YOUR RATING
Procès de Jeanne d'Arc (1962)
A Joan of Arc's trial reconstruction concerning her imprisonment, interrogation and final execution at the hands of the English. Filmed in a spare, low-key fashion.
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A Joan of Arc's trial reconstruction concerning her imprisonment, interrogation and final execution at the hands of the English. Filmed in a spare, low-key fashion.A Joan of Arc's trial reconstruction concerning her imprisonment, interrogation and final execution at the hands of the English. Filmed in a spare, low-key fashion.A Joan of Arc's trial reconstruction concerning her imprisonment, interrogation and final execution at the hands of the English. Filmed in a spare, low-key fashion.

  • Director
    • Robert Bresson
  • Writers
    • Robert Bresson
    • Pierre Champion
  • Stars
    • Florence Delay
    • Jean-Claude Fourneau
    • Roger Honorat
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    7.4/10
    6.4K
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Robert Bresson
    • Writers
      • Robert Bresson
      • Pierre Champion
    • Stars
      • Florence Delay
      • Jean-Claude Fourneau
      • Roger Honorat
    • 30User reviews
    • 35Critic reviews
  • See production info at IMDbPro
    • Awards
      • 3 wins & 2 nominations total

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    Photos22

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    Top cast29

    Edit
    Florence Delay
    • Jeanne d'Arc
    • (as Florence Carrez)
    Jean-Claude Fourneau
    • Bishop Cauchon
    Roger Honorat
    • Jean Beaupere
    Marc Jacquier
    • Jean Lemaitre
    Jean Gillibert
    • Jean de Chatillon
    Michel Herubel
    • Isambert de la Pierre
    André Régnier
    • D'Estivet
    Arthur Le Bau
    • Jean Massieu
    Marcel Darbaud
    • Nicolas de Houppeville
    Philippe Dreux
    • Martin Ladvenu
    Paul-Robert Mimet
    • Guillaume Erard
    Gérard Zingg
    • Jean-Lohier
    Nicolas Bang
    • Garde
    • (uncredited)
    Alain Blaisy
    • Assesseur
    • (uncredited)
    Henri Collin-Delavaud
    • Evêque
    • (uncredited)
    Jean Collombier
    • Notaire
    • (uncredited)
    Guy-Louis Duboucheron
    • Assesseur
    • (uncredited)
    Pierre Duboucheron
    • Evêque
    • (uncredited)
    • Director
      • Robert Bresson
    • Writers
      • Robert Bresson
      • Pierre Champion
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews30

    7.46.3K
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    Featured reviews

    10marysuelyons

    If Only It Were Available on Netflix

    I saw this film along with numerous other Bresson films being shown at the National Gallery of Art in DC. In this film the English characters speak English and the French characters speak French. I knew little about Joan of Arc and was expecting it not to be one of my favorites. I was blown away by the way it brought Joan and her tragic experiences to life. It and Diary of a Country Priest were my favorites. I had the advantage to talk to a gentleman who teaches a course on Great Trials of the World who gave me background including how well this uneducated girl was able to handle the questions at the trial, how Bresson was faithful to George Bernard Shaw's play based on transcripts from the trial, etc. The emotional power of Joan of Arc's trial in this film is truly amazing. It should be available on Netflix for all to see.
    tieman64

    "The Passion of Joan of Arc" vs "The Trial of Joan of Arc"

    This is a very brief review of Carl Theodor Dreyer's "The Passion of Joan of Arc" and Robert Bresson's "The Trial of Joan of Arc".

    Some thoughts...

    1. What's immediately apparent when comparing these two films, is how focused Dreyer is on showing the opposing forces present at Joan's trial. Who was the chief architect of her martyrdom? The English invaders who imprisoned her? The French clergy who tried and condemned her? God? The girl herself? The people who identified with her and gave her martyrdom political purpose?

    2. Dreyer always keeps Joan isolated within the frame, plumbing a solitary soul's duress under persecution. Elsewhere he deftly shows the transformation of the witnessing masses from a crazy mob into a responsible voice of moral protest.

    3. Maria Falconetti, who plays Joan in Dreyer's film, is given some of the most celebrated close ups in cinema history. What became of her? One legend claims that she so identified with her one major film role that she ended up in an insane asylum, convinced she was Joan.

    4. Unlike Dreyer's film, Bresson's is filled with non professional actors. His is a dry, almost distant film.

    5. Whilst Dreyer's film oozes grand emotions, Bresson's is modern, minimalist and existentially blunt.

    6. Bresson avoids the circus and stresses Joan's solitude. His Joan is defiant in court, but privately she is at a loss, constantly praying for answers.

    7. Dreyer's Joan (a kind of instinctual folk hero) acts according to her feelings, while Bresson's acts according to her conscience, which fluctuate as she broods.

    8. Bresson's Joan is actually reluctant to embrace martyrdom. She's in over her head, unsure, confused.

    9. In Dreyer's film, the audience becomes both Joan and the masses supporting her. In Bresson's, however, the audience is positioned as an outsider. We're the prison guards, the jailers, the priests, always "seperated" from Joan (by holes, by walls, by bars). The poor girl's kept at a distance.

    10. Bresson's film is filled with visual echoes. Joan's hands, chained across a bible, resemble a pair of wings. At her execution, her hands, now tied behind her back, reappear in closeup. When doves appear, shot from below, we are reminded of Joan's "winged" hands to haunting effect. The point: an image of confinement has become one of ultimate liberation.

    11. Bresson's film begins with two sounds: the ringing of church bells, followed by a drum roll. It ends only with a drum roll. Joan silences the Church that has put her to death.

    12. Bresson has criticised Dreyer's film on numerous occasions, stating that he found the acting "grotesque". He's right. Joan was a hardened warrior who fought with men. Why then does Dreyer portray her in such a melodramatic fashion? On the flip side, Dreyer's images do tap into something almost primal.

    13. Bresson's film abounds with delicious ambiguities. Was Joan really receiving messages from God? Is she deluded? Was she a crazy freedom fighter or holy saint? Was she simply a 15th century terrorist, opposing the English occupying army and the tents of the Catholic Church?

    8.9/10 - "The Trial of Joan of Arc"

    8/10 - "The Passion of Joan of Arc"

    Both masterpieces, though I personally prefer Bresson's austere approach. Worth one viewing.
    9deschreiber

    Wonderful. Impressive. Thought-provoking.

    This is minimalist film-making, with little beyond the questions and answers of Joan and the inquisitors. But what an impression it makes! How deeply we are forced to think about Joan! The calmness of her replies, her absolute consistency, her unassailable integrity, all leave you wondering, where did it all come from? What made her like this? She was no mere deluded martyr. It's not nearly enough simply to say she believed in her visions and her divine mission. She not only believed in them, she embodied her convictions so totally that it is difficult to understand her as a person without believing in her completely. No wonder her troops followed her into battle to their deaths! I think the transcript of the trial alone would be riveting, but this understated film does a wonderful job of bringing to life one of the most extraordinary people ever to walk the earth.
    chaos-rampant

    Against the grammarians

    This is the one Bresson allegedly made in response to Dreyer, though not sure if that was the real impetus or something said along the way to mark intentions. I can see how the project would appeal greatly to him; like his three previous ones, it's about an idealistic youth faced with a world that stifles the spirit. He must have felt it so apt that he could use actual transcripts of the trial kept by the notaries at Rouen.

    He films the trial as a process of facts, no flourish allowed anywhere, sparse and all the other things you'll read in comments, and all this as asceticism that purifies the eye, or so it goes. Dreyer's Joan was assailed by passions so overwhelming they escaped the body to rend the cinematic air. Huge contrast with Bresson's who is stoic and dispassionate, the air is static, everything is kept in body.

    One specific impetus behind the project I believe may hav been how to have the portrait of this woman, induce as much deliberate poverty of expression, and still give us a soul? He does it I think. He gives us a Joan who is indomitable, but also afraid, proud without losing her sweetness, glimmers of unsure innocence through the armor of god. He's gifted with a woman as marvelous as Dreyer had.

    It was an ongoing project for Bresson that stretched back several films, he surpasses them here in complete austerity. He was probably a happy camper looking back.

    But more than any individual film, it's his philosophy of purity that I feel is worth examining, and I'm in the middle of a few posts where I grapple with it. He was writing along the way a book that delineates this philosophy. It was seeing quotes from this book for years that prompted me to follow up on the films, it was something I've always had in the back of my mind tied to personal observations about emptiness and purity.

    I won't have conclusions before Balthazar, which is next in line, and probably the one after, but there is something to say here.

    We say that Bresson is pure, but if you look up close, there's a method. It's one of timing and blocking exact pieces, this extends from the camera to the actors, who become pieces to be moved. What he's doing is that he's taking the language of film and breaking it down to the most basic grammar. I see this as both an intellectually barren project to pick, why all your work will just be simplifying, and it sets you down a slippery slope where the only thing purer is is simple.

    Bresson makes a lot out of the importance of stillness, but at the center I perceive another notion; he writes that he wants nothing false, nothing that the eye doesn't see. It's a grammarian's insistence on what is true, or seems so at this point, a dogmatist's claim on reality. How about all that we don't see but can feel move through us? He deliberately mutes this in the actors.

    And in the film we have what? A young girl who is full of inner things she feels, god or madness it's the same courage for her, faced with a cadre of clerics who set out to disprove it all as impure, the devil's work. What's happening during the trial is that these dogmatists are trying to corner Joan into saying that she saw what the eye doesn't see, the abstract in the world of senses, which is what Bresson is working against.

    (From a Christian view, it would be heretic to say that the divine was bound thus and so, and you were privy of that form)

    Were the saints clothed? Did St. Catherine have her hair down?

    Grammarians of spirituality.

    Now the task is open. More interesting than the actual films for me is this battle in Bresson, between the grammarian of spirituality with his fixed notions on the divine and Joan who wants to preserve the truth of what she felt. Is the world full of presence? Balthazar is up next.
    Kirpianuscus

    simplicity

    it is the main virtue. based by original documents of trial, the film is a cold portrait of Jeanne. minimalist, convincing, blank, without the ingredients of dramatization. a form of docudrama ? not exactly. a form of exposure of director faith ? almost. because the film is a confession, no doubt. but one escaping to expectations. sure, it reminds La Passion de Jeanne d 'Arc by Dreyer . but differences are significant not only for different styles or ages but for the common points. because the same source has the different way to a message who ignores, in the case of this Jeanne, at the first sigh, the technique solutions. so, an useful film.

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    Storyline

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    Did you know

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    • Trivia
      Prologue: "Joan of Arc died on May 30, 1431. She has no tomb and we have no portrait of her. But we have something better than a portrait: Her words to her judges at Rouen. I used the authentic texts of her condemnation. At the end, I used statements from her rehabilitation trial 25 years later. When the film begins, Joan has been in prison for several months at a castle in Rouen. Captured at Compiègne by traitorous French soldiers, she was sold to the English for a very high price. Her tribunal was composed exclusively of anglophiles from the University of Paris, led by Bishop Cauchon."
    • Goofs
      Although the story takes place in 1431, Jeanne's hairstyle is strictly a popular mode of the early 1960s. This is not a "goof" but an intention on the director's part to help young people identify with the character.
    • Quotes

      Bishop Cauchon: You must tell your judge the truth.

      Jeanne d'Arc: Beware of calling yourself my judge.

    • Connections
      Edited into Histoire(s) du cinéma: Une histoire seule (1989)

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    Details

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    • Release date
      • March 15, 1963 (France)
    • Country of origin
      • France
    • Languages
      • French
      • English
    • Also known as
      • The Trial of Joan of Arc
    • Production company
      • Agnes Delahaie Productions
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Tech specs

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    • Runtime
      1 hour 4 minutes
    • Color
      • Black and White
    • Aspect ratio
      • 1.66 : 1

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