The Last Duel is a haunting and masterfully crafted historical drama that revisits one of France’s final sanctioned duels, transforming a medieval legend into a powerful commentary on truth, power, and justice. Directed by Ridley Scott and written by Ben Affleck, Matt Damon, and Nicole Holofcener, the film blends grand-scale spectacle with intimate human tragedy, exploring the destructive nature of pride and the societal structures that silence women. Set in 14th-century France, it recounts the true story of knight Jean de Carrouges, his former friend and squire Jacques Le Gris, and Marguerite de Carrouges, whose accusation of rape sets in motion a brutal fight for honor and survival.
The film is divided into three chapters, each retelling the same series of events from a different perspective — Jean’s, Jacques’s, and Marguerite’s. This Rashomon-style structure gives the story remarkable depth, exposing how truth can be manipulated depending on who tells it. Jean (Matt Damon) views himself as a noble and wronged warrior, struggling to reclaim his family’s lost glory. Jacques (Adam Driver), in contrast, sees himself as a man of charm and intellect, seduced rather than guilty. But it is Marguerite (Jodie Comer) who delivers the most devastating version — one stripped of delusion and privilege, revealing the cold reality of a woman trapped in a world ruled entirely by men.

Jodie Comer’s performance anchors the film with quiet strength and heartbreaking conviction. Her Marguerite is not merely a victim; she is the moral core of the narrative, standing for truth even when the cost is her life. Matt Damon embodies Jean’s stubborn sense of duty with fierce intensity, while Adam Driver captures Jacques’s charisma and moral blindness perfectly. Ben Affleck’s portrayal of Count Pierre d’Alençon adds dark humor and decadence to the oppressive aristocratic world, making it clear how corruption and male vanity drive the story’s tragedy.
Visually, The Last Duel is stunning — Ridley Scott’s direction immerses viewers in a world both beautiful and brutal. The battle scenes are visceral, muddy, and chaotic, while the duel itself is one of the most gripping sequences of the decade, filmed with raw tension and emotional weight. The production design and costumes evoke the harshness of medieval life without romanticizing it, reinforcing the film’s thematic realism.

Beyond its historical setting, the film resonates deeply with modern audiences. Its exploration of consent, truth, and societal bias feels strikingly contemporary. The script’s layered approach allows each version of the story to deconstruct gender, power, and perception, culminating in a powerful message about who gets to define truth — and who suffers when lies prevail.
In its final act, as Jean and Jacques face each other in the duel to the death, Scott transforms a spectacle of violence into a profound moral reckoning. Marguerite’s fate, though overshadowed by the clash of men, lingers as the film’s enduring conscience. The Last Duel ultimately stands as both an epic period piece and a timeless examination of justice — a reminder that the battle for truth is often the most perilous duel of all.





