Film Review
The story of Joan of Arc has been told many times in cinema but this is
probably the quirkiest. Adapted from George Bernard Shaw's
celebrated stage play by Graham Greene,
Saint Joan compresses the
well-known story into a slightly confusing story which appears to put
the blame for Joan's martyrdom squarely on the Catholic Church.
Disappointingly, the battle sequences don't get much of a look in and
the end result is a somewhat stagy affair that is reminiscent of a
1950s television drama, lacking passion and focus, and at times veering
towards the downright silly.
Courageously, director Otto Preminger eschewed choosing an established
actress for the lead role and instead cast the then unknown Jean
Seberg. Seberg has been criticised for her portrayal of Joan, but
her performance is admirable, particularly when you consider she was
just seventeen at the time and had had next to no prior acting
experience. It would be fairer to criticise Richard
Widmark's painfully over-the-top interpretation of the Dauphin, a style
of acting that would be better suited for a children's pantomime than a
serious historical drama. Likewise, Preminger is hardly at
his best, his direction showing a distinct lack of inspiration.
It's an amusing take on a familiar story, but hardly a masterpiece.
© James Travers 2009
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Next Otto Preminger film:
Anatomy of a Murder (1959)
Film Synopsis
Twenty-five years after having been burnt at the stake for heresy, Joan
of Arc returns to King Charles VII of France as a ghost and taunts him
for having betrayed her. They recall the time when Joan, driven
by divine messages, persuaded Charles, then Dauphin, to allow her to
lead an army to attack the English at Orleans. Did Charles show
gratitude when Joan defeated the English, a victory that enabled him to
be crowned king at Reims? No, he only wanted her to return to her
village and resume the life of an anonymous peasant girl.
When she failed in her attempt to take Paris from the English, who came
to Joan's aid when she was arrested and tried by the Catholic Church
for heresy? No one...
© James Travers
The above content is owned by filmsdefrance.com and must not be copied.