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The Nun

Original title: La religieuse
  • 1966
  • GP
  • 2h 14m
IMDb RATING
7.5/10
3.4K
YOUR RATING
Anna Karina in The Nun (1966)
Watch Bande-annonce [OV]
Play trailer1:33
2 Videos
63 Photos
Drama

Suzanne is forced against her will to take vows as a nun and three mothers superior treat her in radically different ways. Suzanne's virtue brings disaster to everyone.Suzanne is forced against her will to take vows as a nun and three mothers superior treat her in radically different ways. Suzanne's virtue brings disaster to everyone.Suzanne is forced against her will to take vows as a nun and three mothers superior treat her in radically different ways. Suzanne's virtue brings disaster to everyone.

  • Director
    • Jacques Rivette
  • Writers
    • Denis Diderot
    • Jean Gruault
    • Jacques Rivette
  • Stars
    • Anna Karina
    • Liselotte Pulver
    • Micheline Presle
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    7.5/10
    3.4K
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Jacques Rivette
    • Writers
      • Denis Diderot
      • Jean Gruault
      • Jacques Rivette
    • Stars
      • Anna Karina
      • Liselotte Pulver
      • Micheline Presle
    • 16User reviews
    • 29Critic reviews
  • See production info at IMDbPro
    • Awards
      • 2 nominations total

    Videos2

    Bande-annonce [OV]
    Trailer 1:33
    Bande-annonce [OV]
    La Religieuse - Restoration Trailer
    Trailer 1:32
    La Religieuse - Restoration Trailer
    La Religieuse - Restoration Trailer
    Trailer 1:32
    La Religieuse - Restoration Trailer

    Photos62

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    + 59
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    Top cast19

    Edit
    Anna Karina
    Anna Karina
    • Suzanne
    Liselotte Pulver
    Liselotte Pulver
    • Mme de Chelles
    Micheline Presle
    Micheline Presle
    • Mme de Moni
    Francine Bergé
    Francine Bergé
    • Soeur Sainte-Christine
    Francisco Rabal
    Francisco Rabal
    • Dom Morel
    Christiane Lénier
    • Mme Simonin
    Yori Bertin
    Yori Bertin
    • Soeur Saint-Thérèse
    Catherine Diamant
    • Soeur Saint-Ursule
    Gilette Barbier
    Gilette Barbier
    • Soeur Saint-Jean
    Annik Morice
    • Soeur Saint-Jéròme
    Danielle Palmero
    • Soeur Saint-Clément
    Françoise Godde
    • La domestique
    Jean Martin
    Jean Martin
    • Monsieur Hébert
    Marc Eyraud
    Marc Eyraud
    • Le père Seraphin
    Charles Millot
    Charles Millot
    • Monsieur Simonin
    Pierre Meyrand
    Pierre Meyrand
    • Monsieur Manouri
    Wolfgang Reichmann
    Wolfgang Reichmann
    • Le père Lemoine
    Hubert Buthion
    • L'archevêque
    • Director
      • Jacques Rivette
    • Writers
      • Denis Diderot
      • Jean Gruault
      • Jacques Rivette
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews16

    7.53.4K
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    Featured reviews

    7richardchatten

    Diana Monti Back in the Habit

    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'.
    jandewitt

    Liselotte Pulver is STUNNING, nothing but STUNNING

    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.
    10Jackstone54

    Anna Karina est magnifique!!!

    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.
    dbdumonteil

    Jansenist

    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 .
    10Quinoa1984

    the feminine control factory of 18th century and beyond

    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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    Related interests

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    Drama

    Storyline

    Edit

    Did you know

    Edit
    • Trivia
      Despite being approved by the Censorship Board the film's theatrical release was initial blocked by the Minister of Information.
    • Goofs
      Suzanne plays and sings the song "Plaisir D'Amour". The final title card identifies the time and place as 'Paris, 1760', but the song was not composed until 1785.
    • Quotes

      Monsieur Hébert: Your superior will shortly be told in the name of Sister Marie-Suzanne Simonin of a protest against her vows with a request to leave religious life and leave the cloister to live her life as she sees fit.

    • Connections
      Featured in Deux de la Vague (2010)
    • Soundtracks
      Plaisir d'Amour
      Music by Jean-Paul-Égide Martini

      Lyrics by Jean-Pierre Claris de Florian

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    FAQ17

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    Details

    Edit
    • Release date
      • July 8, 1971 (United States)
    • Country of origin
      • France
    • Official sites
      • Independent Cinema Office (ICO) (United Kingdom)
      • Les Acacias (France)
    • Languages
      • French
      • Latin
    • Also known as
      • Redovnica
    • Filming locations
      • Chartreuse, 58 rue de la République, Villeneuve-les-Avignon, Gard, France(convent)
    • Production companies
      • Rome Paris Films
      • Société Nouvelle de Cinématographie (SNC)
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Box office

    Edit
    • Gross US & Canada
      • $30,245
    • Opening weekend US & Canada
      • $6,273
      • Jan 6, 2019
    • Gross worldwide
      • $32,659
    See detailed box office info on IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      • 2h 14m(134 min)
    • Sound mix
      • Mono
    • Aspect ratio
      • 1.85 : 1

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