Synopsis 
        "
Bresson’s shortest feature film is exactly what its title says: it presents the trial and execution of 
Joan of Arc. The settings here are as limited as in 
A Man Escaped, confined as they are to the barn in which Joan is held and tried and the stake outside where she is executed. This is the first of 
Bresson’s two period pieces, and it exhibits his anti-spectacular approach to the past. The focus on the end of Joan’s life echoes that of 
Dreyer, but 
Bresson eschews the baroque camera angles and décor of that film, as well as the virtuosic acting on display in the silent film. If his career is seen as a process of winnowing to the essential, perhaps 
The Trial of Joan of Arc goes the furthest: no narration, no music, only one set, and a brief running time. While 
Falconetti suffers exquisitely for 
Dreyer’s camera, 
Bresson’s Joan remains resolutely stoic, neither heroic nor tragic
." – Harvard Film Archive