The Nun (1966) Poster

(1966)

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8/10
A Major Work of the French Cinema
JamesHitchcock31 August 2018
During the 17th and 18th centuries it appears to have been quite common in Catholic countries for young women to be forced to enter convents against their will; this is, for example, the fate of one character in Manzoni's "The Betrothed", written in 1827 but set around 200 years earlier. "La Religieuse" by Denis Diderot is another work of literature which deals with the same problem. The main reason for this phenomenon was economic; although many convents required a "dowry" from prospective entrants, this was generally less than the amount of the dowry needed to attract a suitable husband, and once the girl had taken her vows the family no longer had any responsibility for her upkeep. In the case of Diderot's heroine Suzanne Simonin, however, there is another problem. She is the offspring of an extra-marital affair and her mother's husband is not her biological father. Suzanne's mother, therefore, resolves to shut her daughter up in a convent, partly because she believes that this will prevent her husband from discovering the truth, partly because the presence of the girl in the family home is a constant reminder of her adulterous affair, about which she now has a guilty conscience.

The film follows the unhappy Suzanne's life as a nun. It falls into three sections, corresponding to the three Mothers Superior under whom she serves. The first, Madame de Moni, is a kindly woman who knows that Suzanne has only entered into the religious life with great reluctance and does her best to make the girl's life bearable. When de Moni dies, however, the new Mother Superior, the fanatical and puritanical Sister Sainte-Christine takes a dislike to Suzanne, whom she sees as rebellious, treating her harshly, whipping her, putting her on a diet of bread and water, and forbidding the other nuns to have anything to do with her. (Sainte-Christine is also referred to by her family name, Madame de Tourmont, a name probably chosen because of its similarity to "tourment", French for "torment").

With the assistance of a sympathetic lawyer, Suzanne asks to be released from her vows, on the grounds that she was forced to become a nun against her will. This application is unsuccessful, but at least she is transferred to another convent. Sainte-Christine is reprimanded by the Bishop for her treatment of Suzanne, but is not otherwise punished. This change in Suzanne's fortunes, however, is not necessarily for the better. Whereas Sainte-Christine's regime was characterised by an excess of religious zeal, life in the new convent is marked by an almost total lack of it. The nuns pay only the bare minimum of attention to their religious observances, spending most of their time in gossiping, eating and drinking and frivolous entertainments. Suzanne is befriended by the Mother Superior Madame de Chelles, who despite her elevated rank is a gay (in the original sense), light-hearted young woman, not much older than Suzanne herself. What the naive Suzanne fails to realise is that her new friend is also gay in the modern sense of the word and is offering her rather more than platonic friendship.

There are some excellent performances, from Anna Karina as the naïve but spirited Suzanne, Liselotte Pulver as the hypocritical de Chelles, Francine Bergé as Sainte-Christine and Francisco Rabal as Dom Morel, a priest who offers to help Suzanne but might also have self-serving motives. For a French movie this one is surprisingly international- Karina was Danish, Pulver Swiss and Rabal Spanish. Another important role is played by the German Wolfgang Reichmann.

When this film was made in 1966 it was promptly banned by the French authorities. It might have been the swinging sixties in the Anglo-Saxon world, but De Gaulle's France was a surprisingly conservative place. The authorities objected to what they saw as a disrespectful attitude to the Catholic Church, even though the action takes place 200 years in the past and the events depicted are fictitious ones. The film, however, is not particularly erotic; in Diderot's novel Suzanne and de Chelles actually end up in bed together- the younger girl is too innocent to realise what is happening to her- but this scene is omitted from the film.

The decision to omit this scene was, I think, the correct one, as "La Religieuse" was not made as a soft-porn fantasy but as a serious examination of three different types of religious hypocrisy, that of de Chelles, that of Suzanne's parents and that of Sainte-Christine, whose treatment of Suzanne owes more to an innate sadism than it does to genuine religious fervour. The serious nature of the film is emphasised by the austere look which director Jacques Rivette brings to it. Most of the action takes place in enclosed rooms, giving it a claustrophobic feel, and the predominant colour is the grey of the convent walls and of the nuns' habits. The moral climate in France gradually became more liberal, the ban was soon lifted and today "La Religieuse" can be seen as a major work of the French cinema. 8/10
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8/10
The Nun's Story
Galina_movie_fan13 June 2008
Warning: Spoilers
Jacques Rivette's La Religieuse (The Nun), 1966 is the adaptation of Denis Diderot's novel (1760). The movie tells a harrowing and simple story of 16 year old Suzanne Simonin (played by incredible Anna Karina), who is forced by her mother to enter a convent where she undergoes a lot of suffering including beatings, humiliations, semi-starvation, lesbian attentions from the Mother Superior (charming Liselotte Pulver of Das Wirtshaus im Spessart) and attempted rape by a priest. Made by the acclaimed New Wave director, "The Nun" feels more like a traditional (in the best meaning of this word) film, linear, poetic, moving, and very sad. Even before the film was completed and shown to the viewers, the association of former nuns and the parents of students in "free" schools demanded a banning order. This film was met with great controversy upon its release and was banned despite initial approval. Ironically, the scandal had benefited to the increased interest for the novel - many copies of Diderot's book were sold following the banning of the movie. Despite its controversy, the movie is not so much a criticism of the Catholic Church but more a condemnation of the society in which a woman had only two choices allowed by her family - marriage or the convent.
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7/10
Deo Gratias
brogmiller1 April 2021
'La Religieuse' was published twelve years after the death of its author Denis Diderot, one of the greatest representatives of the Age of Enlightenment and the most unjustly reviled during his lifetime.

The novel, supposedly inspired by the death of his sister in a convent, was unsurprisingly disdained by Catholics. When it was presented on the stage by Jean-Luc Godard with his then wife Anna Karina in the title role it caused not a ripple but when it came to the film version however, there were calls for it to be banned. There is no such thing of course as bad publicity and when it was released in 1967 the attendant controversy proved to be very good box office!

This is not an easy watch to put it mildly. Director Jacques Rivette makes no concessions to the viewer. There are few close ups, no score to speak of and the tempo is lento throughout its 135 minute length.

What it does have is four strong female roles played by four exceptional actresses. Anna Karina reprises her stage role of Suzanne and one can tell that she has lived with the part and made it her own. It is a stunning performance. Micheline Presle, in one of the best of her later roles, is the Mother Superior who takes Suzanne under her wing but whose death leaves her to the not so tender mercies of Sister Sainte-Christine whose excess of pious zeal is frightening. Francine Bergé's impersonation of a nun in 'Judex' might have caused a few tingles in the male of the species but her performance here gives one the shivers.

Once Suzanne has been moved to another 'maison' she then falls prey to the Sapphic advances of the Mother Superior played by Liselotte Pulver. This is another splendid performance by the luminous Liselotte and will come as quite a surprise to English speaking viewers who remember her dancing in a polka dot dress on a table top to the strains of the 'Sabre Dance' in Wilder's 'One, Two, Three'!

Of the male contingent, Jean Martin and Francisco Rabal both impress.

This is a tale of Repression and is shot in an austere, Bresson-esque style which suits the material very well. The trailer proclaimed it to be a 'Hymn to Freedom' which would have gladdened Diderot who famously wrote: "No man will be free until the last king is strangled with the entrails of the last priest."
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10/10
the feminine control factory of 18th century and beyond
Quinoa198428 January 2009
The Nun might be just another very good, possibly excellent and heartbreaking piece of "religion is rotten and the people in it control people in terrible and soul-crushing ways" movie-making akin to Carl Dreyer if not for its last third or maybe second half (it's something of that length). For a good while Jacques Rivette's film from the book by Denis Diderot is about Suzanne (Anna Karina), a young woman who is passed along from her parents, one the mother wanting to go to the afterlife "clean" without the burden of her sin which was connected to Suzanne's father not really being her father, to a convent and forced to say she will be celibate and devout and all that jazz. Jazz as in life as a nun, forced to say that she believes wholly in God and will deny herself everything in order to serve him- when he calls or feels like it of course.

In this first half or so the film is about as close as one can get outside of Carl Dreyer to it being about the pain inflicted upon an innocent in a world dominated by a) a natural prejudice towards women, in this case to go completely rigidly by the rules - or, b) for that matter, a hell placed upon those who *dont* want to be nuns and just want to experience something else in the world. We see Suzanne subjected to this convent at first run by a helpful and loving Mother Superior Mme de Moni only to die and her replacement be so hard-pressed as to eventually see Suzanne as being possessed by a devil, keeping her away from the other nuns, locked up without food or water, or any legal counsel.

This part seems straightforward as does the eventual Priests-find-out-Mme-is-unrelenting-and-transfer-her story progression... but something very fascinating happens, something that makes The Nun from what is already a heart-rending and tasteful story of repression and super 18th century Christian fervor into a great film. The second convent, on first appearance, is total bliss compared to the former one. Suzanne is treated to happy nuns, a happy Mother Superior Simonin, and even some lighthearted revelry like playing games outside, something that would have never happened at the previous convent. But there's also an underlying uneasiness that is confirmed by the Mother Superior being, how should I say, "clingy" to at first Suzanne's story and then Suzanne herself.

It's not just enough for Rivette, by way of the book, to show religion being domineering and cruel and at best complacent in the expected sense, but for another look at what should be religious organization run by caring and spiritual people to be also total kooks. It's like Rivette puts down this section of some fun like the slightest of reprieves and then to bring it back under the rug, and it's something really special to see. It's a bleak story not simply because a woman who has no rightful place in a convent of nuns is forced into it and made into another cog in the religious machine, but for the lack of hope conveyed in what good there is, the goodness of people devoted to a life of faith, that is revealed. It's an incredibly precise indictment on organized religion and society that allows how it runs as much as captivating morality drama.

The Nun can also be read as a searing feminist statement, but going into this part might make this too long a review. Suffice to say The Nun, a controversial film (at the time) made from a controversial book of its time, conveys what it wants to say in stark locations and even starker performances from the supporting cast. The two actresses playing the significant Mother Superiors in the story deserve credit, yet the main reason to see the picture is for Anna Karina. She makes a sense of purpose in every scene, a performance that is startling for it being so removed from ex-husband Godard's usual self-conscious comedy/dramas and into something that requires her to plunge the depths of whatever she can handle emotionally for the character. It turns out to be the best serious performance of her's I've seen to date outside of maybe Vivre sa vie. Suzanne, thanks to Karina, is so sad a character, so right in her common sense and driven almost mad by this rigid and monstrous Christian dogma that you cant take your eyes off her for a second. It's rare to see a performance this tender and selfless to the dark and light in human being. A+
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10/10
Atypically formalist, rigorous work from Rivette is one of his greatest and most moving films
OldAle15 May 2009
Warning: Spoilers
La Religieuse (The Nun) is Rivette's second feature, not finished and shown until six years after his first, "Paris nous appartient" and not given a significant release until the following year - and even then, banned from being shown to anyone under 18 in France and completely banned in French overseas possessions.

What was all the fuss about? There's no nudity, no strong language, no violence to speak of -- what got the French censors up in arms about was in fact one of the harshest attacks on organized religion - or at least on Catholicism as it used to be practised in France two centuries earlier - ever filmed. La Religieuse, based on an unfinished 1780 novel by Denis Diderot, is the story of Suzanne Simenon, a young woman in the problematic circumstance of being forced into convent life because of her mother's transgressions and her father's failures in business, and her attempts to escape this situation, which as you might imagine required much effort in the 18th century.

Suzanne, played in an extraordinary performance by Anna Karina, is in fact quite pious, virginal, innocent and naive; she seems to be fairly intelligent and musically talented; but she is also very independent, and for all her real and honest belief in God, cannot submit to the structured life and rigorous discipline of convent life. At first, she is somewhat comforted by a kind mother superior who admits to having had some of the same problems of having no vocation - of having no particularly feeling for monastic life. But her kind and understanding leader soon dies, and is replaced by a rigorous and intolerant young woman who despises Suzanne - despises the slightest bit of nonconformity - from the first. Suzanne's life becomes intolerable, more so even when she writes to a lawyer to try to be freed from the convent; eventually some pity is taken on her once it is learned how badly she has been treated (shunned, given no food and no change of clothes, not allowed to pray) and that her mother superior is possibly deranged - and Suzanne is moved to another convent.

This new location is problematic in its own way, though - at first it seems lively, carefree and joyous, but Suzanne soon becomes the object of a different kind of unwanted attention from the young and very sexual mother superior, and finds that here too, "freedom" is completely impossible. Karina manages to show the slow progression from complete naiveté to adult understanding - and despair - without ever seeming to lose faith in her God, though she may be losing her belief in humanity. It's a powerful statement made mostly in the eyes, a curled lip, shoulders - there are a couple of manic scenes, but they are never overdone or overlong; we get what we need to understand a spirit in torture. When, finally, she does manage to make an exit, she finds that life on the outside world for an uneducated and moral young woman without money is no better, and Rivette finishes the film, and Suzanne's life, the only way possible...

Most critics will remark that this is Rivette's most conventional film, and so it may be on the surface; the narrative is very easy to follow, the scenes are quite fluid and the editing fairly simple, the storyline lacks any of the fantasy, whimsy, or narrative play that most of his other films are full of - but look closer. Certainly this is the director's most overtly political/socially critical film - though even here it is careful in its balance. Suzanne is not an atheist, does not hate the church; she simply does not belong in this life and the film's anger is at a society and a religious organization that doesn't care about her feelings or even her life. It is anti-totalitarian, not at all anti-spiritual.

The structure of the film is quite remarkable as well, though its most obvious innovations or experimentations are with sound rather than image. The score is a modernist, percussive and often harsh one, and the sounds of nature, of the world outside the convent walls, are often powerfully amplified. Inside is only the life of rules and orders, to be followed without question - outside are birdsong, the howling wind, bells and horses' hooves on pavement. Most scenes are composed of a single shot, typically a minute or two in length; Rivette's original design was to have both sound and image mimic the monastic cell, though the end result didn't work out exactly as he had hoped. Still, he and his collaborators, most notably composer Jean-Claude Eloy and the sound department headed by Michel Fano, create a world terrifyingly powerful in its ability to destroy a body, if not a soul, and yet still exist as a false and beautiful incentive, never to be grasped by a young woman without hope or ability. The further from her initial jail-like surroundings she gets, the more she finds that she only eludes one kind of prison for another - and the further we go in the film, the harsher and angrier the music and the aural surrounding become.

Like every Rivette film I've seen, this improves on multiple viewings; I first saw this on the first release of the complete uncut film in the USA in 1990, later again video, and a third time just now. Though I'm sure some will be put off by the subject matter or the depressing storyline, anyone with an interest in this great director and certainly anyone interested in the plight of women in film - Rivette's model in many ways in this film is the work of proto-feminist Japanese director Kenji Mizoguchi - should really see this. It stands with the best of the New Wave, and Karina's performance proves that she wasn't just the pretty face that she typically is in Godard's work.
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Liselotte Pulver is STUNNING, nothing but STUNNING
jandewitt13 August 2004
Playing a role that few people thought would ever fit her and shadowed by vultures predicting disaster, Liselotte Pulver delivered the surprise coup of many a cinematic season in the icily directed 'La Religieuse'.

Ms. Pulver, the beloved eternal comedienne of the German cinema, has taken on that most daunting role: the lesbian Mother Superior, the ultimate debauched nun in the ultimate 'Why was the Revolution necessary?' tale, Denis Diderot's grand tale 'La Religieuse'. Working against type and expectation under the direction of Jaques Rivette, Ms. Pulver has created the most complex and compelling portrait of her long career, and she has done this in ways that deviate radically from her former screen roles.

Ms. Pulver's Mother Superior, emerges in this adaptation with her monumental weakness intact. But something new and affecting is simmering within the character, a damning glimpse of self-awareness. You get the sense that if her frantic movement stops for a second, she'll deflate into a small and bitter creature.

In films like 'Die Züricher Verlobung' and 'Das Wirtshaus I'm Spessart' Ms. Pulver's persona has always been that of a delectable waif, a vulnerable creature with a heart of gold. Here she was cast against type and rumors went that she did not get along with Mr. Rivette. And then, halfway through the film, there she was, and for the first time in her long career she didn't look remotely like an ingénue.

Ms. Pulver's portrait is so intimate and persuasive that you aren't allowed to step back and think, 'What a monster she is.' That's because, thanks to this actress's willingness to turn herself and her character inside out, you've been inside her mind. What a sad and fascinating place it is.
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7/10
Diana Monti Back in the Habit
richardchatten25 April 2022
As the ruthless Diana Monti in Georges Franju's 'Judex' (1963), Francine Berge (soon to be seen in Philippe Garrel's forthcoming 'La Lune Cravee') had attempted to abduct virginal young heroine Jacqueline Favreaux (played by Edith Scob) while disguised as a nun. Three years later it's now Anna Karina she has in her clutches as the cruel Sister Sainte-Christine.

As it reels from one abuse scandal to the next the last thing the Catholic Church needs right now is the timely revival of this harrowing reminder of the sheer relentless boredom and awfulness of convent life over two centuries earlier into which young women were often cast for financial rather than spiritual reasons. Especially as we now know the church was still pursuing it's abuse of the vulnerable even as it waged a furious campaign to suppress this film on it's initial appearance back in the sixties.

An incongruously sumptuous-looking production in widescreen & colour from one of the most austere directors of the Nouvelle Vague, the film is of course vastly enhanced by the melancholy beauty of Anna Karina in the title role and by the ever delightful Lilo Pulver as the sapphist Mother Superior of a rollicking and worldly convent that closely resembles Castle Anthrax in 'Monty Python and the Holy Grail'.
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10/10
Anna Karina est magnifique!!!
Jackstone543 February 2006
When "The Nun" was released in the US in 1971, the movie generated a lot of positive reviews. Anna Karina's performance was unanimously hailed as a great one. Judith Crist of New York Magazine called it "unforgettable." Archer Winsten of the New York Post described it as "superb". Gene Shalit dubbed Anna as "exceptional" while Kathleen Carroll of the New York Daily News thus enthused: "Anna Karina gives a performance of unusual depth". Indeed, Anna's interpretation is one of her best in a career of over 70 movies. It ranks with her performances in "Vivre sa Vie", "Pierrot le Fou", "Rendezvous a Bray", "L'Alliance" and "L'Etranger". She was reunited with Rivette in the musical "Haut Bas Fragile". She is slated to direct her second movie this year in Montreal, a road movie with the composer Philippe Katerine.
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7/10
Exactly, kind of
cfosteresq10 September 2023
This is exactly the kind of thing I would watch on Encore movie channel as a 13 year old in the 90s and think because it was a highly specific film hidden in the dark hour of 2 AM that it must be underground or convey secret things about life.

And I guess it does if these are secret, irrelevant, forgotten things, like the dream of a previous era that one can never know to be true or false.

But for sure, the films I saw like this I won't forget. They are like whole history lessons delivered in double--the time period of the story, and the culture period of the production.

The acting, and the beautiful set pieces and locations, and the nonmusical, drony bell music add to this impression of jarringly subtle value, meanwhile the story has that quality of classic French novels which I can somehow feel emanating from old Penguin paperbacks... the height of drama in an atmosphere of emptiness, the pathetic outnumbered by the purely unsympathetic, scene after scene; and all of it mired in seriousness and God.

Drink a few beers and go for it!
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9/10
New wave Diderot
Sorsimus13 May 2002
Warning: Spoilers
***SPOILERS*** ***SPOILERS*** In the aftermath of the French new wave, out of the Cahiers bunch of Truffaut, Godard, Chabrol, Rohmer and Rivette, the last became the most enigmatic filmmaker of the posse. Probably the most famous effort from this meticulous artist is "Celine et Julie vont en bateau", somewhat overshadowing this little masterpiece.

And when I say little i mean, that even in its 135 form "La Religiuse" is one of the shortest films by Rivette. It is fittingly minimalistic in everything but emotion. Which flows in abundance. The story is obviously packed with emotional goodies: parents "donate" one of their daughters to a monastery, because they cannot manage hew dowry, in the first monastery she is abused violently, because she obviously lacks faith and dedication, she gets a move to another establishment where the head nun harasses her sexually. It all ends in suicide.

This is filmmaking of the highest calibre where only what is essential is shown. You'll know whether you'll like it!
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9/10
One of the key, and most underrated, French films of the sixties.
MOscarbradley14 December 2021
I'm not quite sure how seriiously Diderot meant his text to be taken when he wrote his novel "La Religieuse"; it's certainly anti-clerical and it did provoke a scandal. Here was a tale of savagery and what was perceived as sexual perversity within the Catholic Church and amongst nuns no less and, of course, the story told in "La Religieuse" can shock us even now even if we are a little more sophisticated.

Jacques Rivete filmed Diderot's "La Religieuse", (English title, "The Nun"), in 1966 and it's a classic, certainly one of the key French films of the period. It's the story of a young 19th century French girl with no prospects of marriage put, like so many of her contemporaries, into a convent. However, Susanne, (a never better Anna Karina), is a rebel and her rebellion takes the form of a lawsuit against her convent so that she can renounce her vows and go back into the world. However, the nuns have other ideas and she is subjected to all the horrors they can inflict on her.

When she loses her case she is transferred to a, let's call it a more 'open prison', where the nuns gambol and frolic like gay versions of the sisters in "The Sound of Music" and where the Mother Superior takes a more than motherly interest in Susanne and where even the local priest takes a less than religious fancy to her. The contrast to her former convent is deliciously perverse; religion is scorned and debauchary championed and poor Susanne is torn between the devil and the deep.

Rivette, of coursem films all this in his typrically austere style drawing excellent performances from his largely female cast and certainly giving it 'the look' of a proper period piece. It's also one of his most accessible films though it was never likely to pack the local cinema on a Saturday night. This is art-house fare of the best kind; intelligent and gripping and its reputation is richly deserved.
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Religious institutions as a means of social control
philosopherjack17 April 2020
Warning: Spoilers
Although Jacques Rivette's La religieuse focuses on a young nun fighting for her freedom, the film never seems to discount the possibility of devotion and God's grace: the outrage lies in using religious institutions as a means of social control. The protagonist, Susanne, is pushed by her family into taking her vows because of financial and social considerations, the France of the time (around 1750) apparently allowing no practical alternative that they can perceive or tolerate: the bulk of the narrative follows her mistreatment at the hands of one vengeful superior, and her attempts to avoid the desirous advances of another. The film is most audacious in its final stretch, after she escapes with the assistance of an equally unhappy priest: it skips through subsequent events (perpetually in fear of being recaptured; reduced either to begging or else working in a series of menial or demeaning jobs) in fragmented fashion, suggesting that for all her unhappiness, the institution did provide a form of coherence that the outside world lacks. Of course, this only underlines the pervasive lack of alternatives for a woman who falls outside the prevailing structures of control and belief. Anna Karina is a perfect centre for the film, entirely convincing and moving in her essential goodness, driven not by inherent rebelliousness but by a sense of wrongness, that God sees through and is offended by her pretense, even as many of those around her offend against their vows in different ways. It's hard to know how easily a viewer could attribute the film to Rivette, if he or she didn't already know it's his, but among other things, the film evidences his affinity for theatre and performance, as for instance in the opening scene where she takes her vows before an audience, separated by a grill, and more broadly in the notion of God as the ultimate perceived spectator and judge of authenticity.
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8/10
Cinema Omnivore - The Nun (1966) 8.1/10
lasttimeisaw11 January 2021
"The crux is, for Susanne, devout as she is, she feels that she has never received the calling from God. Her eventual vow-taking ceremony is conspicuously omitted on the screen, and reckoning by the reactions of her mother (Lénier) and Mother Superior Mme de Moni (Presle, ever so graceful and compassionate), something is certainly amiss there. Later Susanne claims that she has no recollection of the ceremony, perhaps she was in a fugue, witnessed by many, that fact could have been graciously taken as a testimony of revoking her vows had the church assumed a more liberal attitude towards its devotees. So one can see that it is religious orthodoxy, not Catholic church itself is the fair game here."

read my full review on my blog: cinema omnivore, thanks
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impressive
Kirpianuscus8 July 2015
one of films who reflects inspired vision about Diderot's novel and high performances. one of the most impressive roles for Ana Karina and touching science for explore the detail for Liselotte Pulver. a film as puzzle of delicate nuances. subtle, cruel, delicate, precise, touching. and surprising for the atmosphere and for the image. reflecting the spirit of a period, it becomes a gem. for the grace and for the cruelty. for the vulnerability of each character and for the force of the lead character. for the beauty of image. and for the art of Jacques Rivette to use a theme in the most convincing manner. a film about freedom. and the fight for it.
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Jansenist
dbdumonteil18 May 2002
Although Jacques Rivette was labeled "new wave","la religieuse" is actually an austere work,a bit academic,very close to the pre-new wave generation,very close to Jean Delannoy.By far ,one of the two most palatable works by highbrow Rivette (the other one being the umpteenth version of Joan of Arc,thanks to Sandrine Bonnaire's portrayal).Needless to say ,all other Rivette works are "intellectual" works ,reserved for the happy(?) few ,and they will make yawn your head off.

"La religieuse" caused a big scandal when it was released in the mid-sixties.The Church insisted on calling the movie "Suzanne Simonin ,la religieuse de Diderot".

Released with a PG 18, the movie seems harmless today:yes there's a lesbian nun ,but the crowds have seen worse since.It's a jansenist work,with a very slow pace,faithful to Diderot's novel-which anyway depicted an improbable situation:they did not lock the girls in nunneries anymore ,it was a thing of the past in the XVIII th century-,except for the ending ,but Rivette's one makes sense all in all.

The cinematography is beautiful and anti-nouvelle vague,the actresses convincing:Micheline Presles,a saint of a nun,Anna Karina, her cruel mother's unfortunate victim,and Liselotte Pulver,a bon vivant character who's got a crush on Suzanne .
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