Joan the Maid 1: The Battles (1994) Poster

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Most historically accurate Joan of Arc movie to date
ramansour24 December 1999
In the November 15th 1999 issue of "The New Yorker," Joan Acocella called Rivette's "Joan the Maid Parts 1 and 2" "the best Joan of Arc movie ever made." I couldn't agree with her more. It's also the most historically accurate to date. The scenes and dialogue are taken practically word for word from primary source accounts made by her contemporaries. Unlike Hollywood's big-budget Joan of Arc "epics," Rivette's film is modestly low-budget, but its simplicity makes it all the more charming. It focuses on the character of this extraordinary 15th century woman rather than the big battle spectacles. As "Sight and Sound" magazine put it, "Rivette takes us not onto the stage of history but backstage -- to its green room." I found Sandrine Bonnaire's performance very moving. Most film portrayals of Joan of Arc fail what I call the essential "leadership test." (Would anyone follow Milla Jovovich's Joan of Arc into battle? We'd sooner put her in a padded cell.) But Sandrine Bonnaire portrays Joan as an intelligent, confident young woman that anyone would follow. She charms the audience as much as the real Joan charmed her countrymen.
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5/10
Maid in Orleans but not well enough
ken_bethell22 November 2010
Warning: Spoilers
I am a great admirer of the French cinema. That their film industry can consistently produce good quality material with very limited money speaks volumes for the professional artistry employed throughout the industry. Which brings us to 'Jeanne la Purcelle'. Joan of Arc has always been an emotive subject and one the French have found difficult to commit to celluloid. Although it was a dark historic episode from which France eventually emerged reinvigorated the story of Joan is essentially one of treachery and appeasement. A factual account might satisfy the purists but is not one that necessarily makes for good cinema. This is an 'epic' production, but only euphemistically, for size is not everything. Any production that stretches for three and a half hours, albeit over two films, has got to be offer the viewer something to compensate for what were only ever going to be symbolic battle scenes .... and it didn't!

It was wasn't just that the full scale assault was portrayed more like a small guerrilla skirmish it was the fight scenes themselves, the one-on-ones, which were poorly choreographed. The narrative was adequate but uninspiring - I guess Shaw is a hard act to emulate. The acting was merely efficient - Sandrine Bonnaire went on to do far more impressive work. The editing was poor with the camera being allowed to linger eternally on irrelevancies presumably to engender an 'atmosphere'. It failed. Overall the producers bit off far more than they could chew and were far too ambitious given the financial constraints imposed. A sobering lesson in how not to make a film.
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Very good Joan of Arc, but...
MarioB14 July 2000
The one and the only Joan of Arc of the movie world is Renée Falconetti, from the 1928 silent film of Carl Dreyer. I don't give credit to Jean Seberg in Preminger film, and to Ingrid Bergman, both in Fleming and Rosselini movies. One pretty good Joan of Arc movie was a French TV Movie of 1989 : Jeanne d'Arc: le pouvoir et l'innocence (it is not listed on IMDB!) featuring Cécile Magnet. And please, I don't want to think of that ugly 1999 film by Luc Besson. And here comes veteran Jacques Rivette, with this two part production of 1994. As many viewers have pointed out, it is very strong on an historical point of view. Sandrine Bonnaire is also very good, especially in the second part. But, like most of the Rivette's movies, it is too long. I know that it is his style, but sometimes, it's a little bit boring (like the crowning of the dauphin.) And everybody knows that the real Joan of Arc was a teenager. Everybody knows it, except movie directors. Sandrine Bonnaire is in her mid thirties! Why not take a younger actress? I think, for this film, that young very good actress like Marie Gillian or Élodie Bouchez (I love you, Élodie!) could have been more realistic. I don't mean to say that miss Bonnaire is bad, but it should be more realistic with a younger actress. There is also a sense of respecting the language of the priest, of the dauphin, but some soldiers talks a lousy 20th century french, which sounds very strange in this movie. One says : J'en ai plein l'cul (which means : My ass!) - oups! sorry! - and another says : J'vais t'casser la gueule = I'm gonna knock you out. Oh yeah? Really? In 1429? Despites these little annoying facts, I still think of the film as one of the best Joan of Arc movies of all time.
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4/10
What do we learn? Where is the passion? What's the point?
muddlyjames14 January 2002
This is "realism"? If Rivette was seeking to give us a ground-level study of a woman in a certain place and time and how she was able to influence (and was influenced by) the world around her, he has failed miserably. Most prominently because we never get a clue as to why thousands of men would have followed her into battle. There is certainly not enough exposition of the cultural/historical context to define the country's need for such a savior and, god knows, there is nothing particularly charismatic about Joan as she is presented here. Unless Bonnaire's wooden posturing and flat line readings are supposed to indicate transcendent faith and determination. The use of landscape is particularly uninspired - we never lose the feeling we are watching twentieth century actors wandering in a supposedly medieval landscape. And as for the battle scenes (which, in contrast to some commentors claims, do take up a good 15% of screentime)- they look like look like some some History Club from your local high school recreating a medieval siege, although the kids would no doubt put more passion into it. I will give Rivette credit, however, for picturing a side of Joan left out by other movies: that of a petulant, naive, and narcissistic adolescent (played by a woman all too clearly at least twice the age of the character she is supposed to portray) obviously unable to understand her place within the movement she is helping to create or the world existing outside her own passions. Joan's outrage at her own soldiers swearing and astonishment at the enemy for their lack of respect and obedience to her are jarringly spontaneous and believable notes (you suddenly realize such moments must naturally have occurred)in an otherwise uninvolving historical "representation". Unfortunately they also serve to point out precisely what is not addressed on screen -what made Joan SPECIAL? I must say I also continued to be puzzled and frustrated by certain foreign film lovers who equate tedium and lack of dramatic involvement with "artistry" and "seriousness". Does this film really increase our understanding or involvement with the subject? Or with anything for that matter? 4/10.
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Low-key homage to Joan of Arc in a documentary style
george-1025 April 2000
Warning: Spoilers
SPOILER WARNING. If you haven't ever heard of Joan of Arc, it would be better to learn about her from the film, not this comment.

I want to comment on Jeanne la Pucelle part 2 as well as part 1 here, since the two films shouldn't really be separated; it would be ten times better to see both, rather than either one by itself.

Many people will find these films boring. Unlike other versions of the Joan of Arc story, such as Dreyer's classic silent film "La Passion de Jeanne d'Arc", clever camera angles, or trials, or battles, are avoided. Much of the action is off-stage, and we only learn about it through documentary-style interviews from participants. Where there is action, such as the battle at the end of Part I, or the Dauphin's coronation in Part II, it is usually drawn out so long as to be boring. The other 90% of the film is about waiting. Like real life.

And that is what I think the director intended. While Joan is waiting, we see her talking. And what a talker she is! How can an illiterate peasant woman be given command of an army and become the saviour of France? We hardly ever see real fighting on screen, because Joan's strength is talking not fighting. Joan's innocence, wit, and consistency make it easy to believe that she is speaking for God. But as is said in Part II, she is indeed no angel. We see her wounded twice, and when she finally learns she is about to be burnt, she shows much more fear than any other Joan I have seen. And her humanity is central to her appeal to us and the people around her.
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This movie was a beautiful show of artistry
dd3675 November 2006
I found the performance flawless and would endorse it to any of my students, especially those of french history. The way in which the battles were portrayed on such a low budget would make any film fan proud. The mild problems in French English can be overlooked, and all I see is a wonderful performance by a gifted actress. The artillery fire was a bit drawn out, and some of the special effects teams may want to take a lesson in CG, and I found just two sound effects which were taken off Casablanca, perhaps as an omage. The cannons I can say were somewhat out of era, as the "le swine, Dvallalle models were not in production for another 15 years, and some of the long shots displayed these inaccuracies. Overall a great film.
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Superbly realized
philosopherjack20 August 2021
Warning: Spoilers
As superbly realized by Jacques Rivette, Jeanne d'Arc is both a figure of immense psychological and historical specificity, and a forerunner of the kind of behavioural mystery that populates much of his great contemporary-set work. The mystery of how an illiterate young woman could have acquired such vision and purpose is integral to her longevity as a cinematic icon, and Rivette allows room for a range of readings and responses; for example, she convinces the "Dauphin", whom she aspires to restore to the throne, of her legitimacy by privately revealing something to him that (in his words) only God would know, but the film withholds the details of what that actually consists of. Sandrine Bonnaire perfectly embodies Jeanne's stubborn fortitude, while also conveying her fragility and immaturity, her feelings easily hurt by enemy insults, entirely believable when she says she would rather have been at home sewing; the physical immediacy of her presence channels that of the film around her - the climactic battle scene captures as few others ever have the sheer smallness and intimacy of war at that time, the primitiveness of the weapons and tools at hand, the physical closeness between adversaries, the overwhelming fatigue. This vividness meshes with Rivette's recurring interest in theatre and performance, with Jeanne clearly aware of herself as a projection, styled and dressed to fit the desired image, keenly aware of the power of symbolism in forging reality (such as her insistence in using that term "Dauphin" until the circumstances justify its replacement by "King.") For all its seriousness though, the film isn't without a streak of deadpan socially-based comedy, particularly in the varied reactions of the male soldiers to the impassioned female in their midst (she instructs one of them in toning down what she sees as his overly colourful use of expletives).
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