The Nun

E329770

The Nun is a 1966 French drama film directed by Jacques Rivette, adapted from Denis Diderot’s novel about a young woman forced into convent life and struggling against religious oppression.

All labels observed (2)

How this entity was disambiguated

Statements (45)

Predicate Object
instanceOf French drama film
film
basedOn La Religieuse
novel by Denis Diderot
castMember Anna Karina
Francine Bergé
Jean-Claude Brialy
Liselotte Pulver
Michel Lonsdale
Micheline Presle
censorshipReason offense to public religious sentiment
censorshipStatus initially banned in France
characterOrigin Suzanne Simonin from Denis Diderot’s novel
cinematography Alain Levent NERFINISHED
countryOfOrigin France
director Jacques Rivette
distributor Columbia Pictures
surface form: Columbia Films
editedBy Denise de Casabianca
featuresCharacter Suzanne Simonin
filmingStyle austere
theatrical staging
follows life of a young woman forced into a convent
genre drama film
period drama
religious drama
mainTheme forced convent life
individual freedom vs institutional authority
religious oppression
musicBy Jean-Claude Eloy
narrativeFocus critique of monastic institutions
psychological suffering of the protagonist
notableFor censorship issues in France
controversial depiction of Catholic Church
originalLanguage French
partOf French New Wave
surface form: French New Wave era
productionCompany Orsay Films
Rome Paris Films
publicationDate 1966
reception critically acclaimed
releaseEvent Venice Film Festival
surface form: 1966 Venice Film Festival
runningTime 140 minutes
screenwriter Jacques Rivette
Jean Gruault NERFINISHED
setInPeriod 18th century
stars Anna Karina

How these facts were elicited

Referenced by (5)

Full triples — surface form annotated when it differs from this entity's canonical label.

La Religieuse titleInEnglish The Nun
Corinne Marchand notableWork The Nun
Anna Karina notableWork The Nun
Rob Cowan workedOn The Nun
Anne Heywood notableWork The Nun
this entity surface form: The Nun and the Devil (role as Sister Virginia Maria de Leyva)