Résumés(1)

Lors du saccage par l'armée anglaise de son village, Jeanne, qui n'est encore qu'une enfant, assiste, horrifiée, à l'assassinat et au viol de sa soeur. Dès lors, elle se réfugie dans la religion et la prière. Devenue jeune fille, elle est persuadée de recevoir des messages de Dieu, qui la pressent de prendre la tête d'une armée afin de chasser l'envahisseur et rétablir la paix. D'abord incrédule, son entourage se laisse emporter par sa détermination. (Gaumont)

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Critiques (2)

Lima 

Toutes les critiques de l’utilisateur·trice

anglais For the the first two thirds the film is fast-paced and Joan's reimaginings of her encounters with God are brilliantly stylized. Mila Jovovich proves that she is not a good actress and overacts a lot, in her rendering, Joan, rather than a pious girl, looks like a hysterical cow. Engaged to Besson at the time, the poor man probably had no option when choosing the lead role, otherwise Saint Joan would have probably given him a hard time at home. The battle scenes are handled decently, but the last third drags excruciatingly. Overall, a strong three stars. ()

Othello 

Toutes les critiques de l’utilisateur·trice

anglais I quite wonder how Besson's grievance against Kathryn Bigelow, who had this project ripped out of her hands after a decade of work, resonated in its day when she refused to cast his then-wife, Milla Jovovich, in the main role. Because foreign and domestic critics ("HySteRicAl ScrEamER hic hic") are uncharacteristically unanimous in their condescension and incomprehension regarding her performance. Here Besson is thematically following on the theme of Nikita with the character of Joan of Arc, i.e. the story of a girl assigned a role who is not given the opportunity to grow up on her own. Here, however, that assigned role is ambiguous, contested, altogether traumatic, and Milla Jovovich is utterly unrealistic in it. She resists male-gazing and because the story is told from her point of view, she becomes an unreliable narrator. Here, Besson once again confirms his ability to create a dominant female character who, contrary to the current trend, is not written as a man but actually as a woman. And even if all of that weren't there, we'd give it five stars for the cinematography, wouldn't we? The latter, by the way, is behind the fact that we find arguably the best battle scenes in the pre-digital era. ()

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