The Passion of Joan of Arc Comments

  • Melody 2022-03-24 09:02:10

    The movie in "Do As You Want" that made the heroine cry in the theater. It may be the silent film with the strongest emotional impact I have ever seen. A silent film without language can bring very little information. It is not easy to shoot such a shock. Without language, it is actually more difficult. Being able to free up my mind to feel some other things, such as every expression on that face, every upward movement, and a lot of emotional blank space, actually leaves a lot of space for the...

  • Dillan 2022-03-23 09:02:08

    The close-up and low-angle extend the viewing angle and locality outside the daily life and drama, the narration and the judgment are synchronized, and the film language power and beauty are...

  • Haven 2022-03-23 09:02:08

    Deliberately ignoring the spatial relationship, magnifying the emotions of the characters through close-up, oblique, and low-angle camera positions, and the super expressive and infectious power of the death penalty at the end makes people wake up instantly, and the thighs are almost crushed and they do not let themselves fall asleep. After all, tickets are so expensive, and Because the time was too late, I still called...

  • Alvis 2022-03-23 09:02:08

    After the birth of the film, when the inventor of the film was still using the film as a spectacle of publicity and a tool for capital monopoly of killing decisions, Dreyer used his own way to tell the world how sacred film can be. of an art. That close-up shot from the perspective of God should be the first picture in history to use moving images to make people feel the power of the human...

  • Bobby 2022-03-23 09:02:08

    After the birth of the film, when the inventor of the film was still using the film as a spectacle of publicity and a tool for capital monopoly of killing decisions, Dreyer used his own way to tell the world how sacred film can be. of an art. That close-up shot from the perspective of God should be the first picture in history to use moving images to make people feel the power of the human...

  • Eleanora 2022-03-23 09:02:08

    Mobile closeup. Denying depth of field and perspective, the ideal flattening of the image makes the medium shot, and the panoramic shot acts as a close-up, making a space or a white background equivalent to a close-up. By canceling the "atmosphere" perspective, let a pure time and even spiritual perspective take the limelight: break the third dimension, and let the two-dimensional space directly relate to feelings, the fourth-dimensional time and the fifth-dimensional...

  • Dusty 2022-03-22 09:02:01

    The face of Rene Maria Faoconnetti is almost a passport to understand the history of silent film, Joan of Arc is a confession of the seventh art, and Dreyer only relied on the close-up of human nature to shoot unparalleled gods....

  • Mittie 2022-03-22 09:02:01

    Long thought to have been lost to fire, the original version was miraculously found in perfect condition in 1981—in a Norwegian mental...

  • Ethel 2022-03-22 09:02:01

    Dreyer used almost all shooting angles, a work of faith that directly hits the soul. Joan of Arc refused the church, gave up the Eucharist, feared the pain of burning her body, made martyrdom a victory, and took death as a release, and finally she was able to live in pain. Redemption.|"If I have not received grace, may God grant me; if I have received grace, may God still grant me."|-"You betray the church and you will be alone"-"Alone, with God."| Joan of Arc cried out to Jesus when she was...

  • Darryl 2022-03-22 09:02:01

    Passion is a wonderful wording, which means both "passion" and "pain" in French, which is in line with the image of Joan of Arc. Dreyer's shock through various close-ups—in my limited viewing capacity—is far more shocking than Bergman's Persona. When it comes to the degree of touching, there is still no one to beat...

Extended Reading

The Passion of Joan of Arc quotes

  • Juge: Has God promised you things?

    Jeanne d'Arc: That has nothing to do with this trial!

  • Jeanne d'Arc: You claim that I am sent by the Devil. It's not true. To make me suffer, the Devil has sent you... and you... and you... and you.