The Messenger: The Story of Joan of Arc (1999)
This page was generated on Sunday, December 23, 2018 at 08:36:54 PM   -- ZotDots --
Click for larger image.
close  The Messenger: The Story of Joan of Arc (1999)
Rated:  R 
Starring: Faye Dunaway, Dustin Hoffman, Milla Jovovich, John Malkovich, Vincent Cassel, Pascal Greggory, Desmond Harrington, Tcheky Karyo, Richard Ridings.
Director: Luc Besson
Genre: Biography | Drama | History | War
DVD Release Date: 04/04/2000

"A Gorgeous Epic…Easily The Best…Since "Braveheart". - Rene Rodriguez, Miami Herald

The year is 1429. France is in political and religious turmoil as members of the royal family battle for rule. But one peasant girl from a remote village gave her country the miracle it was looking for. Milla Jovovich (The Fifth Element, Dazed and Confused) is Joan of Arc, a young woman who would inspire and lead her countrymen until her execution at the age of nineteen. Raised in a religious family, Joan witnessed her sister's rape and death at the hands of an invading army. Years later, as the same war raged on, Joan stood before her king with a message she claimed came from God: give her an army, and in God's name she would reclaim his diminished kingdom.

But was the message real, or the delusion of a girl whose life had been shattered? This startling epic drama by Luc Besson (The Fifth Element) explores the life of Joan of Arc, her amazing victories, relationship with God, and tragic death. Co-starring John Malkovich and Academy Award winners Dustin Hoffman and Faye Dunaway, The Messenger is a modern take on a medieval saint who enthralls people even today.

Storyline: In 1412, a young girl called Jeanne is born in Domrémy, France. The times are hard: The Hunderd Years war with England has been going on since 1337, English knights and soldiers roam the country. Jeanne develops into a very religious young woman, she confesses several times a day. At the age of 13, she has her first vision and finds a sword. When coming home with it, she finds the English leveling her home town. Years after that, in 1428, she knows her mission is to be ridding France of the English and so sets out to meet Charles, the Dauphin. In his desperate military situation, he welcomes all help and gives the maiden a chance to prove her divine mission. After the successful liberation of Orléans and Reims, the Dauphin can be crowned traditionally in the cathedral of Reims - and does not need her anymore, since his wishes are satisfied. Jeanne d'Arc gets set up in his trap and is imprisoned by the Burgundians. In a trial against her under English law, she can't be forced to tell ... Written by Julian Reischl

Cast Notes: Milla Jovovich (Joan of Arc), Dustin Hoffman (The Conscience), Faye Dunaway (Yolande D'Aragon), John Malkovich (Charles VII), Tchéky Karyo (Dunois), Vincent Cassel (Gilles de Rais), Pascal Greggory (The Duke of Alençon), Richard Ridings (La Hire), Desmond Harrington (Aulon), Timothy West (Pierre Cauchon), Rab Affleck (Comrade), Stéphane Algoud (Look Out), Edwin Apps (Bishop), David Bailie (English Judge), David Barber [II] (English Judge).

User Comment: Mercian from NJ, USA, 24 October 2004 • There are many deviations from the accepted facts of Jeanne d'Arc's life as set out in her trial documentation and the writings of the time. This said, the central question of whether she was a saint, an inspired lunatic, wholly mentally ill, or simply a headstrong girl determined to grab her chances while she could is well asked. Many of the comments here assert that Besson makes it clear that the Maid was simply mentally ill, yet I read the film as deeply ambivalent about what was going on. Were her visions the hallucinations of a schizophrenic? Were they given by God? What's the difference? More questions are asked: Why does an omnipotent, omniscient, all-compassionate deity allow terrible things to happen? What is the meaning of kingship - to own or to serve? What is the difference between taking the lives of individuals and killing en masse? What's the difference between Christianity and the earthly institutions of that religion? Where does conviction end and fanaticism begin?

Jovavich's Jeanne is plagued by the difference between her idea of utter submission to God and the consequences of doing so; by doubt over the veracity of her visions; and by the gap between her ideals of the divine rights of kings and realpolitik. She is constantly on the verge of a nervous breakdown - is this a manifestation of her mental illness, or of her "burning for God"? And where's the difference between the two?

The film raises more questions than it answers, and that's as it should be. It is something of a shame that Besson's film takes liberties with the facts as we understand them (though history is more often about our interpretation of events than the events themselves), but in terms of raising important questions on the nature of faith, it succeeds beyond measure.

Summary: Inspired by...?

User Comment: Jack-91 • Some movies would probably try to make a more divine spirit out of Joan but at least Besson examines all possibilities as regards to what inspired her. I think it was as honest a film you could make about Joan. Her quest for revenge combined with tremendous belief in the forces above that ignited her fire. Through Dustin Hoffman the viewer can question her motives and get her response. And what a performance! Milla was simply breathtaking as Joan.

Summary: Milla was simply breathtaking as Joan

IMDb Rating (03/14/15): 6.4/10 from 52,295 users
IMDb Rating (03/17/02): 6.3/10 from 5,276 users

Additional information
Copyright:  1999,  Columbia / TriStar
Features:  • "The Messenger: The Search For The Real Joan Of Arc" HBO First Look
• Isolated Music Score
• Theatrical Trailers
• Talent Files
Subtitles:  English
Video:  Widescreen 2.35:1 Color (Anamorphic-16x9)
Audio:  ENGLISH: Dolby Digital 5.1 [CC]
ENGLISH: Dolby Digital Surround [CC]
Time:  2:38
DVD:  # Discs: 1 -- # Shows: 1
UPC:  043396046078
D-Box:  No
Other:  Producers: Patrice Ledoux; Writers: Luc Besson, Andrew Birkin; running time of 158 minutes;Packaging: Keep Case; Chapters: 28; [CC].
Rated R for strong graphic battles, a rape and some language.
{[V3.0-A4.5] MPEG-4 AVC - }

close