Saint Ange

(Redirected from St Ange)

Saint Ange (also known as House of Voices) is a 2004 supernatural horror film written and directed by Pascal Laugier. It is Laugier's feature film debut.[2][3] The film stars Virginie Ledoyen, Catriona MacColl, Lou Doillon, and Dorina Lazăr.

Saint Ange
Theatrical release poster
Directed byPascal Laugier
Written byPascal Laugier
Produced byChristophe Gans
Starring
CinematographyPablo Rosso
Edited bySébastien Prangère
Music byJoseph LoDuca
Distributed byARP Sélection
Release date
  • 23 June 2004 (2004-06-23) (France)
Running time
98 minutes
Countries
  • France
  • Romania
Languages
  • French
  • English
Box office$6.8 million[1]

Plot

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In 1958, Anna Jurin accepts a job as a housekeeper of Saint Ange, a rusty and isolated orphanage located in the French Alps and owned by Madam Francard. The last batch of children have been sent elsewhere shortly after the mysterious death of a boy in the bathroom, which tarnishes the orphanage's reputation and threatens its closure. Other than Anna, the orphanage is now populated by only two people: the long-time cook Helenka and an adult orphan, Judith, who suffers from a mental disability and claims that there are other, unseen, children in the location.

Throughout her stay, Anna experiences apparent supernatural phenomena. However, Helenka dismisses her worries as mere hallucinations, especially after she learns that Anna is pregnant due to a gang rape, a fact that she tries to hide at first. Anna learns that Judith is one of the many sent to Saint Ange in 1946 as a war orphan of World War II; because of shortages of supplies and logistics, Judith is the only survivor.

Despite this explanation, Anna suspects that the orphanage deliberately killed and hid the children. She gains the trust of Judith by befriending and calming her when her kittens are apparently drowned by Helenka, enough for her to disclose that the children inhabit an area somewhere behind a mirror in the bathroom, revealed to be an abandoned dormitory. Helenka tries to prevent them from heading to the area, but Judith knocks her unconscious. The two women proceed to the dormitory and find remains of toys and rotten food. Judith realizes that the children had really died and begs Anna to stop searching, but the latter insists on continuing and boards an elevator heading to the underground. Anna arrives at a sterile, hospital-like structure with clean white walls and brightly lit lamps. She is confronted by the children who rise from a series of murky baths, who surround her. Anna goes into a sudden labor and is helped to deliver the baby by the children but the newborn infant is stillborn when the stillbirth killed Anna.

Sometime later, Francard and her assistant search for Anna in the underground, which is now damp, dark, and rust-walled. They find Anna and her baby on the floor, both dead. Deciding to leave them there, the two head upstairs to leave the premises alongside Helenka and Judith; it is implied that Anna has been hallucinating the phenomena due to the stress, as she is revealed to be the true culprit for the drowning of the kittens. However, before they leave, Judith throws away her medication, as Anna advised her earlier, and peeks into Anna's former bedroom, where she sees her and her baby, now as spirits of Saint Ange, alongside the dead children. Francard comes back for Judith and the film ends as the room is seen empty.

Language

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According to Christophe Gans, the film was shot both in French and English. The Canadian DVD has both cuts of the film.[4]

Cast

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  • Virginie Ledoyen as Anna Jurin
  • Lou Doillon as Judith
  • Catriona MacColl as Francard
  • Dorina Lazăr as Helenka
  • Virginie Darmon as Mathilde
  • Jérôme Soufflet as Daniel
  • Marie Herry as Marie
  • Éric Prat as an unnamed social services worker

Production

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Some thought that Virginie Ledoyen was actually five or six months pregnant during filming. The star in fact wore a prosthetic pregnancy for the shoot and spoke of the hard bodily work and physical discomfort this entailed: "We shot scenes in stifling heat, with my hair sticking to me, false blood on my face, and the latex stomach melting."[5]

References

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  1. ^ "Saint Ange (2004)". Box Office Mojo. Retrieved 28 May 2023.
  2. ^ "Saint Ange de Pascal Laugier (2004)". UniFrance. Retrieved 2009-08-13.
  3. ^ "Saint Ange". Moria - The science fiction, horror and fantasy movie review site. 2009-06-07. Archived from the original on 2010-05-20. Retrieved 2009-08-13.
  4. ^ Interview with Christophe Gans
  5. ^ ""In Fear and Pain":Stardom and the Body in Two French Ghost Films" (PDF). www.nottingham.ac.uk. Retrieved 20 February 2022.
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