The Messenger

Reviewed by: AceOfSpades

November 15, 1999

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Brief review of The Messenger: The story of Joan of Arc:

Sucked.

Expanded review:

Sucked ass.

Longish review:

Marked by frequent, unfunny, inappropriate humor. Glaring example: Woman is murdered and then raped (in that order); rape of corpse shown as graphically as possible in R-Rated movie. Rapists' compatriots exchange comic looks during rape of corpse, like "Do you believe this crap?" Then rapist ejaculates into cooling body and says, Who's next? Compatriots give each other another funny look. That's the worst offender, but the film is peppered throughout with cheap unfunny mood-breaking jokes that even Mel Brooks would discard.

Mila Jovavich is cute, but most of performance is panting, manic, shrill one-note delivery.

Malkovich wasted. Huge minutes wasted with Malkovich.

Problem: If film is accurate, Joan of Arc did very little. She urged on the French at the siege of Orleans and the siege was lifted. That's it. That's all. After that, she led two very unsuccessful actions and was captured by the Bourbons.

Battle-scenes suck ass. Do not think you're going to see Braveheart-quality medieval action. Editing is shoddy and keeps you from following the action, which I believe is a deliberate trick used when the action is really quite lame and boring and the director wishes to conceal that fact from you; frantic, ineptly edited confusion is chosen over coherent boredom. There's over-the-top gore, but no drama, no excitement. Imagine the inept action scenes from Fifth Element. Now imagine the Fifth Element with morningstars and plate-mail.

And then we come to the Hoffman scenes. Hooooooo boy. This is where the film shifts out of the second-gear it had been grinding in and lurches backwards and sideways and upside-down. Once Joan is captured, she is tried for witch-craft and heresy. Since she won't answer the Church Court's questions, the film postulates a mental construct-- "The Conscience," embodied by Dustin Hoffman, snoozing -- who grills Joan instead.

The Hoffman scenes-- which go on for the last forty-five minutes or so-- are an internal monologue of sorts probing Joan of Arc's psyche. Hoffman asks obvious questions-- "Were you really fighting for His glory, or for your own?"-- and Joan is predictably tongue-tied in answering them. Hoffman suggests-- with more inappropriate humor-- that Joan's visions might have been, in fact, hallucinatory, and Joan is stunned.

Let me tell you: We in the audience were fucking stunned, too. Who could have possibly imagined that a girl who claims to get messages from Jesus Christ himself might have been HALLUCINATING? It's pure Luc Besson to leave no obvious stone unturned. I wouldn't mind it so much if he didn't take forty-five minutes exploring the obvious.

And then Joan is burned at the stake. FINALLY. The audience yes, applauds, if only on the inside. Torch the bitch, we scream in delight, for her damnable internal dialogue with Hoffman has made us late for dinner.

The film is an abomination.

The film is inept in so many other ways, but I'll spare you. Let me just say the dialogue sounds thrice translated, first from the original French, thence into Japanese, and then finally translated into English by a computer program. I've read Japanese video-game instructions with more punch.

Oh. One more thing:

When Joan comes to take over the French army at Orleans, the French commander is of course a bit upset. Guess what he says to her:

"You-- an ignorant peasant, and a girl besides, you think you are capable of leading an army?"

"I'll be god-damned before I follow a woman into battle."

"You must understand. You think we do not have manly pride? We are men. We have trouble submitting to a woman's authority."

 

 

Yes, the fifteenth century man-at-arms does indeed give the introspective, self-searching Alan Alda/Phil Donahue style answer, Number Three.

 

Ace's Rating:

Zero.

 

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