
France, 1425. In the midst of the Hundred Years’ War, the young Jeannette, at the still tender age of 8, looks after her sheep in the small village of Domremy. One day, she tells her friend Hauviette how she cannot bear to see the suffering caused by the English. Madame Gervaise, a nun, tries to reason with the young girl, but Jeannette is ready to take up arms for the salvation of souls and the liberation of the Kingdom of France. Carried by her faith, she will become Joan of Arc.
- Cannes Film Festival – Quinzaine des Cinéastes
- Transilvania International Film Festival – Official Selection
- Toronto International Film Festival – Wavelengths Section
- Busan International Film Festival – World Cinema Section

Bruno Dumont is a French film director. To date, he has directed several feature films, all of which border somewhere between realistic drama and the avant-garde. His first feature film La vie de Jésus was selected at Directors' Fortnight. His films have won several awards at the Cannes films Festival. Two of Dumont's films have won the Grand Prix award: both L'Humanité (1999) and Flandres (2006). The only other director who has twice won the Cannes Grand Prix is Andrei Tarkovsky. Dumont's Hadewijch won the 2009 Prize of the International Critics (FIPRESCI Prize) for Special Presentation at the Toronto Film Festival. In 2016, Slack Bay, starring Juliette Binoche and Fabrice Luchini, was presented in Competition at the Cannes International Film Festival. The year after, Jeannette, a musical adaptation of Charles Péguy’s writings about Joan of Arc, is selected in Cannes’ Directors Fortnight.
In 2021, he directed "France," a frenetic chronicle of the life of a star television journalist portrayed by Léa Seydoux, caught in the whirlwind between her profession - from TV studios to distant wars -, the routine of her family life, the torments of her fame, a life too full where the mundane and the glamorous, the poor and the powerful, constantly mingle. The film was selected at the 74th Cannes Film Festival.
Dumont’s latest film, directed in 2023, is "The Empire", a tale of a merciless Manichaean struggle drawn from the sci-fi repertoire and set in a fishing village on the Opal Coast. Beneath the facade of the locals' ordinary life emerges the parallel, epic life of interplanetary empire knights at the birth of the Margat, Beast of the End Times, who takes the form of an ordinary infant in a residential neighborhood. In competition at the 74th Berlinale, the film received the Silver Bear Jury Prize.
- The Empire – 2023
- France – 2021
- Joan of Arc – 2019
- Coincoin and the Extra-Humans – 2018
- Jeannette – 2017
- Slack Bay – 2016
- Lil' Quinquin – 2014
- Camille Claudel 1915 – 2013
- Hors Satan / Outside Satan – 2011
- Hadewijch – 2009
- Flandres – 2006
- Twentynine Palms – 2003
- Humanity – 1999
- The Life of Jesus – 1997
Lise Leplat Prudhomme
Jeanne Voisin
Lucile Gauthier
Victoria Lefebvre
Aline Charles
Elise Charles
Nicolas Leclaire
Gery De Poorter
Regine Delalin
Anaïs Rivière
Screenwriter: Bruno Dumont
DOP: Guillaume Deffontaines
Editor: Bruno Dumont, Basile Belkhiri
Costume Design: Alexandra Charles
Hair & Make Up: Simon Livet
Sound: Philippe Lecteur
Sound Editing: Romain Ozanne
Mixing: Emmanuel Croset
Music: Igorrr
Choreography: Philippe Decouflé
Production Companies: Taos films, Arte France, Pictanovo, Le Fresnoy
World Sales: Luxbox
