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The Passion of Joan of Arc Poster

The Passion of Joan of Arc

An Immortal Screen Classic that will live Forever!
1928 | 82m | French

(66648 votes)

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Popularity: 2 (history)

Details

A classic of the silent age, this film tells the story of the doomed but ultimately canonized 15th-century teenage warrior. On trial for claiming she'd spoken to God, Jeanne d'Arc is subjected to inhumane treatment and scare tactics at the hands of church court officials. Initially bullied into changing her story, Jeanne eventually opts for what she sees as the truth. Her punishment, a famously brutal execution, earns her perpetual martyrdom.
Release Date: Apr 21, 1928
Director: Carl Theodor Dreyer
Writer: Carl Theodor Dreyer, Joseph Delteil
Genres: Drama, History
Keywords judge, woman martyr, heresy, court case, suffering, sentence, torture chamber, religion, trial, saint, martyrdom, dove, silent film, catholicism, martyr, joan of arc, forgery, judiciary, 15th century, burning at stake, holy communion, bloodletting, jeanne d'arc
Production Companies Société générale des films
Box Office Revenue: $18,121
Budget: $0
Updates Updated: Apr 03, 2025
Entered: Apr 03, 2025
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Full Credits

Name Character
Maria Falconetti Jeanne d'Arc
Eugène Silvain Bishop Pierre Cauchon
André Berley Jean d'Estivet
Maurice Schutz Nicolas Loyseleur
Antonin Artaud Jean Massieu
Michel Simon Jean Lemaître
Jean d'Yd Guillaume Evrard
Louis Ravet Jean Beaupère
Armand Lurville Judge
Jacques Arnna Judge
Alexandre Mihalesco Judge
Léon Larive Judge
Jean Aymé Judge (uncredited)
Gilbert Dacheux Judge (uncredited)
Gilbert Dalleu Jean Lemaître (uncredited)
Paul Delauzac Martin Ladvenu (uncredited)
Dimitri Dimitriev Judge (uncredited)
Fournez-Goffard Judge (uncredited)
Henri Gaultier Judge (uncredited)
Paul Jorge Judge (uncredited)
Marie Lacroix Woman Looking at the Stake (uncredited)
Henri Maillard Judge (uncredited)
Raymond Narlay Judge (uncredited)
Name Job
Rudolph Maté Director of Photography
Carl Theodor Dreyer Screenplay, Title Graphics, Director, Editor
Joseph Delteil Writer
Jesper Kyd Music
Paul La Cour Assistant Director
Victor Alix Music
Jean Hugo Art Direction
Valentine Hugo Costume Design
Marguerite Beaugé Editor
Ralph Christian Holm Assistant Director
Ole Schmidt Music
Léo Pouget Music
Hermann Warm Art Direction
Name Title
Organization Category Person
Popularity Metrics

Popularity History


Year Month Avg Max Min
2024 4 19 25 13
2024 5 21 29 16
2024 6 19 29 13
2024 7 19 33 12
2024 8 15 29 11
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2024 10 14 33 8
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2025 3 6 21 2
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Trending Position


Year Month High Avg
2025 6 658 683
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2025 5 644 727
Year Month High Avg
2025 4 959 959

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Reviews

Geronimo1967
7.0

Maria Falconetti is superb as the eponymous tortured soul betrayed and tried for heresy in 15th century France. The history is well known, and Carl Theodor Dreyer sticks fairly faithfully to the more established, traditional, chronology which leaves us, the audience, to focus much more on the wonder ... fully emotive, gritty and poignant efforts from the cast and the wonderfully creative talent behind the camera. The combination of innovative, intimate and intense photography coupled with the beautifully expressive facial expressions from Miss Falconetti; the subtle but potent brutality of her persecutors - personified well by Eugene Silvain's Bishop Cauchon but also well exemplified by the cold and soul-less panel of judges all make this an effective and chilling film. The score - semi angelic, frequently intimidating but always powerful helps create an atmosphere that genuinely makes you feel fear and trepidation for this young woman, a pawn in things she little understands, but sticking faithfully to her beliefs of divine intervention and pureness of spirit. That emotional link is contagious, and even as a man of little faith myself, I found myself feeling an overwhelming pity for this person caught up in a trap of very much earthly ambition and deceit. It's a tough watch at times, especially as the chronicles remove even the slightest of chances for this woman. It is also pretty short - and that helps keep that momentum moving really well; there is no time for extended and sprawling cinematography to lessen the impact - it's a film about humanity, trauma and fear; and takes some beating...

Jun 08, 2022
cyberflixgold
10.0

There are a few different versions of this movie with different audio tracks. Dreyer himself criticized a bastardized version in the 1950s that changed the vignettes and audio to better fit for audiences of the time. I saw this movie long ago from a poor reproduction with what I assume was the or ... iginal score and it was pretty good. Years later showed it to someone else and we saw the remastered Voices of Light version. It had been elevated to a true masterpiece. The higher video quality really lets us see Dreyer's decision to not use the extremely common heavy makeup found in the silent film era. The missing puzzle piece was found in the form of perfectly fitting vocals. Dreyer will simply have to excuse us for modifying his film.

Feb 12, 2025