
A Marxist study of the supernatural, filled with austere, sharply photographed black-and-white images, Kawalerowicz's best known film abroad is based on the actual events which occurred at a monastery near Loudun, where a group of nuns experienced a Satanic possession. Through dense dramatic conflicts, expressionistic settings, and powerful performances, Kawalerowicz created a psychologically and philosophically complex allegory of good versus evil and chastity versus eroticism.
Based on the life of St. Thérèse of Lisieux, a Carmelite nun who died at a young age and was later canonized, Alain Cavalier's film offers an observational portrait of a woman driven by divine inspiration. Catherine Mouchet portrays the young nun who devoted her life to her beliefs, only to succumb to tuberculosis at age twenty-four. Cavalier's visual style recalls late Bresson with his use of minimalist props, costumes, and settings, which bring life to this transcendental figure.
Part of film series
Screenings from this program
Ballad of a Soldier / The Forty-First

Nightfall / Great Day in the Morning

Verboten! / Dead Pigeon on Beethoven Street

I'll Never Forget What's 'is Name / The Jokers

Hearts of the World / True Heart Susie

Anna Christie / The Long Voyage Home

Suddenly Last Summer / The Roman Spring of Mrs. Stone

Quiet Days in Clichy / Henry and June

The Freshman / The Sin of Harold Diddlebock

The Sheep Has Five Legs / The Law is the Law
Hobson's Choice / Sidewalks of London

I Know Where I'm Going / Outcast of the Islands

An Inspector Calls / The Belles of St. Trinian's

Mother Joan of the Angels / Thérèse

Dawn of the Dead / Strange Behavior
