The
Passion of Joan of Arc Movie Review:
I
must admit right here that I've never viewed a silent film
from front to back. No Chaplin, no Keaton, no Erich Von
Stroheim, nothing. So it was a bit daunting to see Carl
Dreyer`s The Passion of Joan of Arc. This was made in 1928,
and is considered one of the greatest of silent movies,
and, indeed, all of film. The story, of course, is about
the trial of a peasant woman named Joan, who in the 1430's
was charged with blasphemy. Joan believes God is speaking
to her, and telling her to behave certain ways, etc. For
much of the trial, she is defiant against persecution. And,
as was standard practise, she dies for that defiance.
A
well-known aspect of this movie is the close-ups of the
faces which dominate the film's appearance. Since this is
a silent film, faces must tell everything. And they do.
Joan`s face reveals to us the strong conviction interspersed
with equally strong naivety. She certainly does not seem
like a woman who could actually harm anyone, with her wide
eyes, and round, unadorned face, yet she is treated like
America`s latest serial killer. She is constantly charged
with horrible offenses when certain facts on her life are
brought out, like.......the fact that she wears men`s clothing!
("An immodest attire hateful to God!!") And the fact she
believes she is hearing voices of God make the judges claim
Satan is in fact trying to trick her into turning away from
the Catholic Church.
There
is a somewhat predatory business-like attitude to this.
The eagerness in which the judges want to dispatch of Joan
is similar to a company using predatory, subversive tactics
to weed out the competition (Microsoft, anyone?). In the
case of the church, if they have competition from a lowly
peasant woman, that means perhaps the flock may decide to
change sides and buy her "product", so to speak, depriving
the old-line of their monopoly. And so she must be discredited
and silenced before she undermines the supreme authority
the Church has always had. And this makes sense when you
consider that the Catholic Church would have been the supreme
authority. To discredit doctrine is akin to treason. (Just
as, I suppose, I discrediting Bill Gates could get me in
trouble.)
Now
this theory comes from a mind which believes religion is
an utterly fantastical, impractical, and possibly dangerous,
concept. You might believe Joan is a heroine, a woman who
values the individual pursuit of spirituality, against the
tyranny of the church. I, on the other hand, would believe
the whole lot of them are foolish, placing such high importance
on doctrine created by (take your pick) madmen, the gullible,
con-men, power-seekers, bigots, misogynists, and people
who take their fictional creations seriously. The tragedy
is that everybody in this movie is absolutely insane! To
actually kill people because you, in essence, really, really
like this one particular book, is about the same equivalent
to if I burnt my friend`s house down, or worse, because
she had the gall to claim Stanley Kubrick`s Eyes Wide Shut
is nothing but pornography. Sure, it`s a foolish claim,
and Kubrick was a genius, but it`s not exactly the unbendable
truth. 2001 was just written by some guy, just as The Bible
was written by a bunch of guys. To not be allowed to criticise
or have different feelings over any work, or to even disregard
it, without being threatened is pretty scary stuff.
And
at the same time, Joan doesn't strike me as a person I`d
want to spend more than five minutes with. While she is
certainly very harmless, nowadays she`d be just strange,
with equally peculiar habits. And no matter how much sympathy
you have for her, if you are sensible, you won`t just fall
on your knees and believe because she tells you she wants
to be martyred. You would think she was suicidal, and needs
to seek help.
Yet
I still think the film works, because it does show us how
things were back in those bad old days. For us, it`s a history
lesson on the arrogance of the church. No sensible person
would want Joan killed for any reason; she's quiet, unassuming,
etc. If she wants to believe God's speaking to her, let
her about her business. She`s not bugging anyone.
The
film also works because of its imagery, a silent film's
main attribute. No makeup was used in the production, which
give a more intense appearance in the actors. The old judges
look menacing, with their evil eyes and craggy faces, and
we know they don`t want to give up their senority. It also
helps too that we see the judges looking down on her. Joan,
as well, looks more genuine, for she looks like the plain,
common person she is. Other numerous images are just as
effective with or without sound, and any open-minded person
should at least try to view what is considered the most
celebrated of silent films.
David
Macdonald
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