Film Review
At first sight, Jacques Rivette's sprawling five and a half hour
account of the life and death of Joan of Arc would appear to be a
radical departure for a director who is more closely associated with
intimate, contemplative dramas than large canvas historical
epics. Yet this admirable relic of the French New Wave defies our
expectations and, with his characteristic insight and economy, delivers
a work which feels more like a natural progression of, rather than an
eccentric digression from, what has gone before.
His
Jeanne la Pucelle is a thoughtful, incisive and darkly ironic
study of the most important and enigmatic woman in French history.
Whilst it may not add much to what has already been
said on the subject, it does at least make an absorbing piece of film drama.
Of course this is not the first time that the Joan of Arc story has
been emblazoned across the screen, and it certainly will not be the
last. The most celebrated film rendition of the tragic fate of
the Maid of Orleans is unquestionably Carl Theodor Dreyer's 1928 silent
masterpiece,
La Passion de Jeanne d'Arc.
This film, along with Robert Bresson's highly regarded
Procès de Jeanne d'Arc
(1962), concentrates on Joan's trial and execution. In his
Saint
Joan (1957), Otto Preminger made an attempt to show us the
military exploits of the French heroine, but failed on account of the
severe budgetary restrictions. The only film to date that
convincingly portrays Joan of Arc's famous battles is Luc Besson's
The Messenger: The Story of Joan of Arc
(1999), although this film falls down in virtually every other
department.
Rivette's
Jeanne la Pucelle
lies between the poetic abstraction of Dreyer's film and the period
realism of Besson's. Whilst a great deal of effort has
clearly gone into achieving historical authenticity, the film's few
action sequences, in this, the first part of the epic diptych, are
disappointing. The attack on what is supposed to be the town of
Orleans (but which is obviously a small run-down castle somewhere in
the middle of the French countryside) by a dozen or so unconvincing
warriors looks more like a heat in
It's
a Knockout (or should that be
Jeux
sans frontières?) than a serious recreation of the
historical event. Sensibly, Rivette keeps the action scenes to a
minimum, although you can't help wondering that the film would have
worked even better if they had been cut out completely.
So, given that the action scenes are so uninspiring and/or comical, is
it worth bothering with the first part of Rivette's film? Should
we not just skip it and go straight onto the second part,
Les Prisons, which deals with
Joan's confinement and martyrdom? The answer has to be a
categorical
no, as the first
installment offers far, far more than just a few shoddy battle scenes.
Les Batailles is an essential
lead-up to the second half of the story. It reveals to us the
young Joan's unfaltering certainty in her calling and her ability to
inspire confidence in others, without which her achievements would not
have come about and without which her tragic fate would have little
significance. This first part establishes Joan as an ordinary
young woman, belying the more familiar warrior and saint-like
portrayals, and this is where the film's power lies.
As you would perhaps expect from a Jacques Rivette film, it is the more
restrained, quieter passages that are the most moving and
compelling. The scenes in which Joan decides to cut her hair
(appropriately doing so by using a breastplate as an improvised mirror)
and learns to write her name are peripheral to the story and yet say so
much about the character and help to establish her as an ordinary,
frail human being. Rivette's economical mise-en-scène
serves the subject of the film well, effectively conveying the
austerity and brutality of the era in which the story takes place, as
well as giving greater focus to its central character.
What is perhaps most striking about Rivette's interpretation is that
his Joan is so ordinary and easy to engage with. Sandrine
Bonnaire's portrayal is that of a typical, down-to-Earth girl who just
happens to know she is God's champion. She is strong-willed,
feisty and brave, and yet she feels both physical and emotional pain as
keenly as any young woman of her age. The reality of battle
is almost more than she can bear to see, she genuinely believes she
will die when an arrow pierces her chest, and yet something within her
drives her on, an unswerving belief in her calling.
No one knows for certain just how it was that an uneducated teenage
girl was able to galvanise armies of men to defeat the English, but
a combination of her human qualities and her divine certitude
certainly played a role. Bonnaire may
be a little too old for the part (the real-life Joan was a mere 19 when
she was captured and tried) and yet her performance is spot on,
convincingly evoking both her character's vulnerability and her
iron-willed resolution, her humanity and her indomitable spirit.
Whatever shortcomings the film may have are more than made up for
by the arresting performance of its lead actress.
© James Travers 2010
The above content is owned by filmsdefrance.com and must not be copied.
Next Jacques Rivette film:
Jeanne la Pucelle II - Les prisons (1994)