Saint Joan (1957 film)

Saint Joan (also called Bernard Shaw's Saint Joan) is a 1957 historical drama film adapted from the 1923 George Bernard Shaw play of the same title about the life of Joan of Arc. The restructured screenplay by Graham Greene, directed by Otto Preminger, begins with the play's last scene, which then becomes the springboard for a long flashback, from which the main story is told. At the end of the flashback, the film then returns to the play's final scene, which then continues through to the end.

Saint Joan
Bernard Shaw's Saint Joan
Theatrical release poster designed by Saul Bass
Directed byOtto Preminger
Screenplay byGraham Greene
Based onSaint Joan
by George Bernard Shaw
Produced byOtto Preminger
Douglas Peirce
StarringJean Seberg
Richard Widmark
Richard Todd
Barry Jones
Anton Walbrook
John Gielgud
Felix Aylmer
Harry Andrews
Finlay Currie
Bernard Miles
Patrick Barr
Kenneth Haigh
CinematographyGeorges Périnal
Edited byHelga Cranston
Music byMischa Spoliansky
Distributed byUnited Artists
Release date
  • 8 May 1957 (1957-05-08)
Running time
110 minutes
CountriesUnited Kingdom
United States
LanguageEnglish
Budget$1 million[1]
Box officeUS$250,000 (domestic)[1]

This was the film debut of actress Jean Seberg, who won a talent search conducted by Preminger that reportedly tested more than 18,000 young women for the role.

Plot

In 1456, Charles VII (Richard Widmark), experiences dreams in which he is visited by Joan of Arc (Jean Seberg), the former commander of his army, burned at the stake as a heretic twenty-five years earlier. In the dream he tells Joan that her case was retried and her sentence annulled. He recalls how she entered his life as a simple, seventeen-year-old peasant girl; how she heard the voices of Saints Catherine and Margaret telling her that she would lead the French army against the English at the siege of Orléans and be responsible for having the Dauphin crowned king at Reims cathedral. When Joan arrives at the Dauphin's palace at Chinon she discovers that he is a childish weakling with no interest in fighting. After being tested by the members of the court, who conclude that she is mad, Joan imbues the Dauphin with her belief and fervor and he gives her command of the army.

Shortly thereafter, Joan witnesses the coronation of Charles. Although her military triumphs have made her popular with the masses, her voices, beliefs, self-confidence and apparent supernatural powers have given her fearful enemies in high places. Charles, who has no further use for her services, expects her to return to her father's farm. When Joan challenges Charles to retake Paris from the English, he tells her he would rather sign a treaty than fight. All refuse Joan's plea to march on Paris, and the archbishop warns her that if she defies her spiritual directors, the church will disown her. Nevertheless, Joan puts her faith in God and appeals to the common people to march on Paris. She is captured and handed over to the English. To assure that Joan will never again become a threat to England, the English commander hands her over to the Catholic Church to be tried for heresy. Joan spends four months in a cell and is visited frequently by the Inquisitor (Felix Aylmer). The English become impatient with the delay in her prosecution and press for the trial to begin. Joan holds to her faith, as always, refusing to deny that the church is wiser than she or her voices.

In a moment of panic when she learns she is to be burned at the stake, and worn down by the constant pressures applied by the Inquisitor, Joan signs a document of recantation in which she confesses that she pretended to hear revelations from God and the saints in the belief that this will result in her freedom to return to her life as a peasant girl. When she learns that the sentence of the Inquisition is her perpetual, solitary imprisonment, Joan destroys the document, refusing to face a life away from nature, the life that opened her spirit to hear God and the saints. She now believes that God wants her to come to him through the ordeal of being burned at the stake. After Joan is excommunicated, the English commander, weary of the Church's endless and delaying rituals, decides that Joan can be executed long before the Vatican learns about it, and so orders his soldiers to drag her to the square to be burned. The Inquisitor chooses to look the other way and let the English burn her. Those who witness Joan's death are stricken with remorse. The King's dream continues as he and Joan are visited by other significant figures from her life. Growing weary of all the spirit visitors, Charles tells Joan he has dreamed of her long enough and returns to his bed and his troubled sleep.

Cast

Critical reaction

Several reviews, including two in The Times, noted that Greene's condensation of the play resulted in

"some odd omissions, interpolations and additions" and that "the result is a certain scrappiness and confusion in the first half of the film in place of Shaw's slow and careful build-up."

Other reviewers complained that an epilogue Shaw wrote was used as a prologue and recurring scene throughout the film. The released film lacks any foreword or historical introduction. The film does not mention that Joan was beatified by the Catholic Church in 1909 and canonized in 1920, unlike Shaw's play, where a "Gentleman" appears in the last scene and announces that Joan has been canonized "in Basilica Vaticana, the sixteenth day of May, nineteen hundred and twenty."[2]) However, in both play and film, Joan's last line is "O God that madest this beautiful earth, when will it be ready to receive Thy saints? How long, O Lord, how long?"

Stanley Kauffmann called Saint Joan a disaster.[3]

Upon release of the film, Jean Seberg's performance as Joan was soundly panned, and Preminger was heavily criticized for casting an inexperienced unknown in a role which required her to act with veteran actors such as John Gielgud, Anton Walbrook, Felix Aylmer, and others.[4]

Historical inaccuracies

  • During and after Charles' coronation, the choral music, and later the organ music, is in the style of Handel and Bach, who lived and worked in the early 1700s.
  • Some of the vocabulary is unusual - it is doubtful that the term "cowboy" was in use in 1300s France; the word "slut" was in use in the 1300s, but it meant an untidy man, or possibly floor dust. The phrase, "God is on the side of the big battalions," quoted in the film, was first said by Napoleon Bonaparte, more than four centuries after Joan.
  • Richard de Beauchamp corrects the French bishop, defining the French legal court as a "Catholic court," as if it were the opposite of an English "Protestant court" (86 years before Protestantism was proclaimed by Martin Luther).
  • In the ending scene the English refer explicitly to papal infallibility, a doctrine which would not be precisely defined until 1869.

See also

References

  1. "New York Sound Track". Variety. 28 August 1957. p. 4.
  2. Shaw, George Bernard (1924). "Saint Joan" (Project Gutenberg). Retrieved 13 March 2013.
  3. Kauffmann, Stanley (1968). A world on Film. Delta Books. p. 175.
  4. A.h. Weiler (27 June 1957). "The Screen: 'Saint Joan'; Preminger's Version of Shaw Play Bows". The New York Times.
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