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The Passion of Joan of Arc
(La Passion de Jeanne d’Arc)

F is for Falconetti
Live Musical Accompaniment
Screening on Film
Directed by Carl-Theodor Dreyer.
With Maria Falconetti, Antonin Artaud, Eugene Silvain.
France, 1928, 35mm, black & white, silent, 100 min.

The close-up of the tear-stained face of Marie Falconetti in Dreyer’s The Passion of Joan of Arc is one of the most famous images in all of cinema. Based on authentic records of the eighteen-month-long trial of the fifteenth-century warrior-saint in Orléans, the film brings a rigorous formal style, exquisite cinematography, and striking architectural sets to bear on the moral questions that surround Joan, her judges, and her ultimate fate. Falconetti had never appeared in films before and would never act again, but her performance here is ranked among the greatest creations of cinema.

Part of film series

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Treasures from the Harvard Film Archive: Actors E–J

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