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Jeanne d'Arc

Original title: Joan of Arc
  • 1948
  • Tous publics
  • 2h 25m
IMDb RATING
6.4/10
4.1K
YOUR RATING
Ingrid Bergman in Jeanne d'Arc (1948)
Period DramaBiographyDramaHistoryWar

The abbreviated life of the 15th-century French heroine.The abbreviated life of the 15th-century French heroine.The abbreviated life of the 15th-century French heroine.

  • Director
    • Victor Fleming
  • Writers
    • Maxwell Anderson
    • Andrew Solt
  • Stars
    • Ingrid Bergman
    • José Ferrer
    • Selena Royle
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    6.4/10
    4.1K
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Victor Fleming
    • Writers
      • Maxwell Anderson
      • Andrew Solt
    • Stars
      • Ingrid Bergman
      • José Ferrer
      • Selena Royle
    • 50User reviews
    • 20Critic reviews
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • See production info at IMDbPro
    • Won 2 Oscars
      • 7 wins & 7 nominations total

    Photos85

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    Top cast99+

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    Ingrid Bergman
    Ingrid Bergman
    • Joan
    José Ferrer
    José Ferrer
    • The Dauphin - Charles VII, later King of France
    Selena Royle
    Selena Royle
    • Isabelle d'Arc - Her Mother
    Robert Barrat
    Robert Barrat
    • Jacques d'Arc - Her Father
    Jimmy Lydon
    Jimmy Lydon
    • Pierre d'Arc - Her Younger Brother
    • (as James Lydon)
    Rand Brooks
    Rand Brooks
    • Jean d'Arc - Her Older Brother
    Roman Bohnen
    Roman Bohnen
    • Durand Laxart - Her Uncle
    Irene Rich
    Irene Rich
    • Catherine le Royer - Her Friend
    Nestor Paiva
    Nestor Paiva
    • Henri le Royer - Catherine's Husband
    Richard Derr
    Richard Derr
    • Jean de Metz -Knight
    Ray Teal
    Ray Teal
    • Bertrand de Poulengy - Squire
    David Bond
    David Bond
    • Jean Fournier - Curé of Vaucouleurs
    George Zucco
    George Zucco
    • Constable of Clerveaux
    George Coulouris
    George Coulouris
    • Sir Robert de Baudricourt - Governor of Vaucouleurs
    John Emery
    John Emery
    • Jean, Duke d'Alençon - Cousin of Charles
    Gene Lockhart
    Gene Lockhart
    • Georges de La Trémouille - King's Chief Counsellor
    Nicholas Joy
    Nicholas Joy
    • Regnault de Chartres - Archbishop of Rheims and Chancellor of France
    Richard Ney
    Richard Ney
    • Charles de Bourbon - Duke de Clermont
    • Director
      • Victor Fleming
    • Writers
      • Maxwell Anderson
      • Andrew Solt
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews50

    6.44K
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    Featured reviews

    mary-135

    Full version deserves to be on DVD

    This Ingrid Bergman film was so under-rated. She put her heart and soul into acting the part of her great heroine and then the film was not only slated at the box office but horrendously cut when issued for television and on video. WHY?????? We know it didn't do well at the box office, because of the circumstances of Ingrid's private life in 1949 and 1950 - sadly, Hollywood and the whole world judged this lovely lady and they shouldn't judge anyone, ever!!! Miss Bergman was a lady and a great actress. But why was the film cut for video? The cut version, with silly voice overs and maps, is not one iota as good as the full version, where we see the young Joan and her experiences of her voices and also have a fuller version of the trial - where her acting is nothing short of brilliant. I hope someone who is able to influence the issuing of the entire film on DVD reads this comment! Mary
    7planktonrules

    A very well made failure.

    "Joan of Arc" is a film with a much larger budget and more prestigious cast than you'd expect from a movie released by RKO. After all, RKO was clearly a second-tier studio whose output was far lower budgeted than most films from MGM, Twentieth Centure-Fox and Warner Brothers. But here, the studio released a prestige film...with vivid color, a LOT of familiar actors and a plot involving one of the great women of the late Middle Ages. Unfortunately, the public did NOT respond well to this and the film actually lost money. How?

    Ingrid Bergman plays the title character and the story consists of her life from her middle teens to her execution at age 19. This is a SERIOUS problem, as when the film began she was about 15-16...and looked like the 33 years she actually was.

    The other main problem with the film is that the filmmakers were too reverential towards the character...with dirge-like music and a pace slower than a snail! Telling it faster and with perhaps more behind the scenes intrigues would have helped. Regardless, I just kept wanting the film to speed up...particularly at the end when you KNOW what's going to happen and it takes too long to get there. Well made and nice looking...but also a film that might bore you as well.

    By the way, although it didn't impact my viewing, the film was a pet project of Ingrid Bergman but she also was responsible for helping to tank the film. Negative publicity about her affair with a married man became public at about the time the film was released. This very unsaint-like behavior surely must have negatively impacted the box office numbers.
    dbdumonteil

    When will we see the full version?

    In Europa,I've often heard people complaining .Why has the movie been boiled down to a digest of barely 100 min? In France,Joan's native country,it's a scandal!It was broadcast on the history channel yesterday and again in the "short" editing.It seems that many scenes were replaced by a voice over which is infuriating ,cause Fleming's version of "Joan Of Arc" ,although inferior to Preminger's and Dreyer's works, is quite interesting.

    Although too old for the part,Ingrid Bergman had enough charisma to make you forget that Joan was 17 when her epic began.Fleming's style is far away from Dreyer's bare aestheticism or Luc Besson's video game battles.Holy picture best describes his way of filming Joan,which makes sense ,cause it begins with the heroine's canonization (only in 1920!).

    Good things:La Tremouille's bad influence on the king;Joan who did not realize in 1430 that fighting had been replaced by negotiations;the abjuration: in Rouen,you can see a commemorative plaque which reads "Here ,in 1431, Joan of Arc suffered the infamous ordeal of abjuration" .On the "Place du Vieux Marché" ,where she was burnt alive,another plaque reads "To you,Joan,who knew that a hero's grave was the heart of the living." (André Malraux)
    jimjo1216

    100-minute edit a mangled embarrassment

    (NOTE: This review concerns the 100-minute edited cut shown on TCM.)

    This 1948 version of Joan of Arc's story is a big disappointment considering the talent involved: director Victor Fleming, who directed both GONE WITH THE WIND and THE WIZARD OF OZ in 1939, and a cast including Ingrid Bergman, José Ferrer, and Ward Bond. JOAN OF ARC (1948) fails to live up to any expectations.

    The editing is amateurish. There are abrupt cuts from one shot to the next, often cutting off bits of dialogue on the soundtrack. The voice- over does its job in setting the scenes within a historical narrative, but gives the movie an air of vintage "making of" TV specials. It almost seems as if stand-alone scenes were shot without knowing how to weave them together.

    The storytelling is too sincere and sentimental, giving the film an awkward hokey sensibility. Whereas Carl Theodor Dreyer's 1928 masterpiece THE PASSION OF JOAN OF ARC left room for interpretation regarding matters of divine intervention, this version is pretty straightforward about holy miracles, playing like a Sunday school movie. That is to say it's a religious fable about Ste. Joan of Arc, rather than a historical piece about Joan rallying her countrymen against English rule. (Not that there's anything wrong with that.)

    Ingrid Bergman was actually nominated for an Academy Award for her portrayal of Joan, a French teenager in the 1400s who believed she was called upon by God to raise an army against the English occupation of her country, later to be convicted of heresy by a council of pro-English clergymen. (It was Bergman's fourth nomination out of a career total of seven, including three wins.) José Ferrer also earned a nomination, playing the French Dauphin whom Joan fought to put on the throne. The top performances were by Bergman as Joan, Francis L. Sullivan as the corrupt judge, and J. Carrol Naish as a slimy one-eyed nobleman. Much of the supporting cast is second-rate.

    Maybe JOAN OF ARC is only unimpressive today as viewed by modern cynics. Or perhaps the trouble lies with the existing copies of the film. Whatever the case may be, the movie earned seven Oscar nods (including Best Editing!) and won an honorary award for its moral values.

    NOTE: Apparently the original release was a 145-minute cut, which was trimmed down to 100 minutes with added voice-over narration. This chopped-down version is shown on TV and is an embarrassing mess. The 145-minute version won the awards and is supposedly available on DVD.

    UPDATE 1/9/12: The full 145-minute version (just shown on TCM) is clearly superior to the edited-down version with the awful narration. It's an ambitious production, although its Sunday School tone is still a bit over-the-top (at least for this reviewer). The film takes itself way too seriously overall, but Jose Ferrer brings personality to the proceedings and Francis L. Sullivan stands out in his villainous role. The second half, with Joan's trial at the hands of the wicked Sullivan, is more effective than the first half and Ingrid Bergman's best moments are in her final scene.

    5/10 for the butchered version; 6.5/10 for the full-length epic
    mary-135

    Ingrid's great triumph!

    I am lucky enough to have a video of the uncut version of this film, in which the trial is shown in full. This is the part of the film in which we see Ingrid's best acting. It's so immensely moving! Ingrid believed in Joan and it shows. She had just come from a triumphant Broadway run in Joan of Lorraine, the play on which this movie is based. The movie is a more straightforward telling of Joan's story [the play is a play within a play] and I would say it's accurate, though some details have to be left out, due to lack of time. Sadly, Ingrid's popularity in the USA had waned when this film was released. What a tragedy! I am amazed that a so-called enlightened and free nation could turn against this honest woman, because of her love for an Italian film director and the birth [out of wedlock] of their beautiful son. I think Ingrid would have won another Oscar with "Joan of Arc", had it not been for the "scandal". It's definitely the best film version of this remarkable saint's story and a fulfilment of Ingrid's lifetime wish. Long live Ingrid Bergman - and her favourite saint! Mary Hutchings [Founder, Ingrid Bergman International, Yahoo clubs]

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    Storyline

    Edit

    Did you know

    Edit
    • Trivia
      The first film to receive 7 Academy Award nominations without receiving a Best Picture nomination.
    • Goofs
      Length of Joan's chain mail is different from 43:38 to 44:29.
    • Quotes

      La Hire: Why are you crying?

      Joan of Arc: Because they're dead. Horribly dead. And it was I who killed them.

      La Hire: Killed who?

      Joan of Arc: All these men. Ours, and the enemy's.

      La Hire: Huh! Are you crying about the English?

      Joan of Arc: I have no hatred for the English. I spoke bold and loud so that you would follow me. I thought victory would be beautiful, but it is an ugly, bloody thing.

      La Hire: Why, there never was a more beautiful victory than this!

    • Crazy credits
      In the 145-minute version of the film, the cast list, naming not only the actors but who they played, was deliberately presented in the style of the cast list of "Gone With the Wind", in order to evoke the feeling of an epic about to be presented. Victor Fleming, who directed "Joan of Arc", had also directed "Gone With the Wind" (after replacing George Cukor, "GWTW"'s original, uncredited director).
    • Alternate versions
      In 1998, UCLA restored "Joan of Arc" to its original length of 145 minutes, and the complete version was finally given its first public screening in nearly fifty years on December 3, 1998.
    • Connections
      Featured in Le roi pirate (1953)

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    FAQ18

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    Details

    Edit
    • Release date
      • October 21, 1949 (France)
    • Country of origin
      • United States
    • Languages
      • English
      • Latin
    • Also known as
      • Juana de Arco
    • Filming locations
      • Balboa, Newport Beach, California, USA(Assault on the Tourelles)
    • Production companies
      • Walter Wanger Productions
      • Sierra Pictures
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Box office

    Edit
    • Budget
      • $4,600,000 (estimated)
    See detailed box office info on IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      • 2h 25m(145 min)
    • Color
      • Color
    • Aspect ratio
      • 1.37 : 1(original release)

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