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Three  onitsuka tiger shoes japan local film groups have joined forces to present what promises to be one of the singular film events of the season.
The Paci

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fic Film Archive in Berkeley, Paramount Theatre in Oakland, and Silent Film Festival in San Francisco have announced their co-presentation of Voices of Light The Passion of Joan of Arc, an oratorio with silent film which will be staged on December 2 at the Paramount Theatre.
This special event will combine a performance of Richard Einhorn’s choral and orchestral work, Voices of Light, with Carl Theodor Dreyer’s acclaimed 1928 silent film, The Passion of Joan of Arc.
Dreyer’s depiction of the trial and eventual execution of Joan of Arc is rightfully canonized as one of the masterpieces of world cinema. The original vers
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ion of the film, however, was long thought lost after a fire destroyed the master negative. Dreyer (1889 –1968), a Danish film director, attempted to reassemble a version from outtakes and surviving prints, but died believing his original cut was lost forever.
In one of the most important discoveries in cinema history (comparable with that of the recently discovery of the near complete Metropolis), a virtually complete print of the original version of The Passion of Joan of Arc was found in 1981 in a janitors closet of an Oslo mental institution. Today, Dreyers epic of personal suffering is considered one the greatest films of all time.
This celebrated silent film combines the actual written records of the trial of
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Joan with an at-times minimalist style onitsuka tiger shoes sale that draws on German Expressionism and Soviet-style montage to create a visually breathtaking and emotionally intimate portrayal of the young woman’s interrogation and last moments. As Joan, Maria Falconetti gives what may be the finest performance ever recorded on film, according to the renowned Petaluma-born film critic Pauline Kael. The cast also includes Ant tiger fencing onin Artaud, the noted French writer.
In 1929, the critic for the New York Times wrote, “... as a film work of art this takes precedence over anything that has so far been produced. It makes worthy pictures of the past look like tinsel shams. It fills one with such intense admiration that other pictures appear but trivial in comparison.”
In the mid-1950’s, when film archivist Henri Langlois mounted an exhibit celebrating the birth of cinema, he prominently included a massive image of Falconetti as Joan of Arc outside the Cinémathèque Française building.
According to the Chicago Sun-Times, the composition Voices of Light, scored by Richard Einhorn for soloists, chorus, and orchestra, matches in sublime fashion one of the great films of all time.
For the special December 2 presentation at the Paramount,Voices of Light will be conducted by Dr. Mark Sumner and performed by a chorus of 200 voices and a twenty-two piece orchestra. Dr. Sumner and the University of California Alumni Chorus will be joined by the women of UC Berkeley’s Perfect Fifth; tenor soloist Daniel Ebbers and baritone soloist Martin Bell; and the UC Men’s and Women’s Chorales.