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Ridley Scott’s ‘Napoleon’ turns a legend into a loser (2:44 PM 12/13/2023)
Angelus ^ | December 5, 2023 | Andrew Fowler

Posted on 12/13/2023 2:59:32 PM PST by Fiji Hill

Rising above the 7th Arrondissement of Paris is the gold dome of Les Invalides, a landmark that serves as both a French military museum and the final resting place of the nation’s greatest general, Napoleon Bonaparte.

The engravings surrounding his sarcophagus depict him as one of the ancients, adorned with laurels and togas next to tablets listing his vast accomplishments.

Napoleon’s legacy as both a military mastermind and a statesman is hard to summarize — and complicated to assess. Similarly, there’s just too much to the man to capture in a single film.

Still, the tagline of celebrated director Ridley Scott’s new “Napoleon” — released in theaters Nov. 22 — promises an ambitious attempt: “He came from nothing. He conquered everything.”

For better or worse, those words are where the film’s respect for Napoleon ends.

There is nothing of Napoleon’s rise from obscurity in Corsica to the top of the French Republic, nor mention of his early military victories. The years that he spent building the charisma and political capital to seize power as First Consul and eventually as the self-crowned emperor go unnoticed. Viewing “Napoleon” in a vacuum, one might wonder: How did France become an empire? And who even is this guy?

Instead, the Napoleon introduced to viewers (played by Joaquin Phoenix) is reduced to a simp for his first wife Josephine (Vanessa Kirby) and, frankly, a bore.

The historical Napoleon is remembered for his energy, inquisitiveness, charm, and ability to micromanage the French Empire. But Scott’s Napoleon spends much of his screen time sitting forlornly on couches or behaving depravedly with Josephine, rather than leading his men in the throes of battle or engaging in geopolitical power plays with Russia, Austria, the Vatican, and his notorious adversary, Britain.

The director seems more inclined to show Phoenix’s Napoleon sleeping (for comedic effect) than doing anything interesting with his troops (apart from him passing out bread to several soldiers during the doomed Moscow campaign).

Scott’s strange inversions don’t stop there. While Napoleon has long been portrayed as a little man in stature (although in reality, he was average height for his day) but a big one in thought, will, and power, the on-screen version is the opposite.

After being told of Josephine’s affair while in Egypt, Napoleon returns to France to ragefully confront his wife. As a command, he warns that she is nothing without him. But it is a threat with no foundation, for this position of power is quickly reversed in the next scene with Josephine repeating the same words.

Josephine, we are made to understand, was truly the master of the relationship, while Napoleon was nothing more than a whimpering cuckold. It’s a notion that seems to drive the whole film: Napoleon was not really in command (this is even demonstrated when his cold, demanding mother convinces her sheepish son to have relations with a young woman to breed an heir for the empire).

By elevating Josephine as his prime motivation in several major events (including inaccurately suggesting she was the reason he left Elba during his first exile), Scott’s Napoleon is merely an angsty, boyish man.

His military maxims — ones that are still studied today — are also spurned. Beyond his strategizing for Waterloo, his greatest and last defeat that led to his second exile, Napoleon’s tact briefly shines forth during the Battle of Austerlitz, arguably his greatest victory; while cinematic, even Scott’s Austerlitz sequence rings hollow because it disregards the historical truth (and the French Army’s battleplan) for the myth — that thousands died as Napoleon’s artillery fired at the ice underneath the retreating Austrian and Russian troops.

In truth, only a dozen bodies have been found. But the myth masks the traps Napoleon laid; even in his greatest victory, the general cannot “win the day” in Scott’s “Napoleon.” Napoleon’s war victories — the most of any leader in history — are all enshrined on the tablets in Les Invalides but omitted in the film.

Scott seems uninterested in compensating for such omissions with other aspects of history. For example: The French Revolution and the Enlightenment, two other historical realities that are crucial to understanding what “made” Napoleon, appear nowhere in the movie.

Ultimately, his love and friendship with Josephine are not enough to present “Napoleon’s” portrait of its main subject as flesh and blood.

Les Invalides’ monuments are not flesh and blood either, but they convey a sense of the man’s standing in history. But “Napoleon” leaves us wondering why this man is even worth remembering at all. The film does not wrestle with his legacy, criticize his mythic stature, or explore what made him tick beyond sexual desires and dynastic aspirations. There is only one moment on St. Helena when the famed general — who, at this point, has lost everything he loved, including Josephine — purports a false narrative of himself that is easily debunked by two young girls.

The scene, however, is not enough to counter Napoleon’s self-aggrandizement and mitigating responsibility for blunders in his memoirs (which the film also fails to portray). “Napoleon” shortchanges its protagonist in too many respects to the point where the film’s tagline is meaningless, baseless like the character’s command to his wife. By the end, the viewer does not know where he came from, what he conquered, and how he should be regarded today.

The lifeless and hollow Napoleon of Scott’s film would be unworthy of a shrine in Paris that more than 1 million tourists visit per year — or, perhaps, even a movie more than 200 years after his death.


TOPICS:
KEYWORDS: cinema; joaquinphoenix; movies; napoleon; ridleyscott
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To: Boogieman

The credits show actors cast for roles that are not played on screen - Marshals Ney, Soult, Davout, Bessieres, etc., and others. In the movie they may be present in the background or may have been a rather random line without being identified. The longer cut may give more of a role to these.


41 posted on 12/13/2023 4:29:00 PM PST by buwaya (Strategic imperatives )
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To: Fiji Hill

They don’t make “War and Peace” or “Gone With the Wind” caliber movies anymore. Died off kind of like the country as a whole.


42 posted on 12/13/2023 4:30:00 PM PST by Bonemaker (invictus maneo)
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To: Ruy Dias de Bivar

“...but I am too old to go out at nights..”

Not too old...just wise.


43 posted on 12/13/2023 4:32:30 PM PST by Bonemaker (invictus maneo)
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To: Ruy Dias de Bivar

BTW its Vivar these days, not Bivar. Been there, its a tiny place. Its a very short drive from Burgos. Burgos is worth a couple of days, and there is way more “El Cid” there, and its rather charming otherwise as well.


44 posted on 12/13/2023 4:36:22 PM PST by buwaya (Strategic imperatives )
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To: Ikemeister

Ouch! That was boneheaded of me. But yeah.


45 posted on 12/13/2023 4:51:23 PM PST by BenLurkin (The above is not a statement of fact. It is either opinion, or satire, or both.)
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To: BenLurkin

Thomas Jefferson loved France and had a lot of sympathy for the French Revolution (he witnessed its earliest stages in 1789 and the Federalists in 1800 were terrified he would inaugurate the horrors of the Revolution if he was elected President), but he had nothing but contempt for Bonaparte.


46 posted on 12/13/2023 4:57:16 PM PST by Verginius Rufus
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To: Fiji Hill

I may have went to see this one. I listened to this guy who is a history expert and thought “well maybe not”.

https://rumble.com/v2zvu4h-napoleon-movie-is-going-to-be-horrific.html


47 posted on 12/13/2023 4:59:24 PM PST by dforest
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To: Ruy Dias de Bivar

Lol! Thanks for that post.
Some folks ya just can’t please.
I liked it.


48 posted on 12/13/2023 5:12:17 PM PST by MotorCityBuck (Keep the change, you are filthy animal! )
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To: buwaya

The French are as dumb as the Brits. Both countries executed their monarchs to be instantly gratified, creating more problems for themselves in the long-run, only to once again return to a monarchy. France’s last monarchy ran from 1852 to 1870. After Lord Protector Oliver Cromwell died in 1658, his son decided he didn’t want to succeed his father, so the Brits begged Charles II to return to England from exile, so the monarchy could be restored.


49 posted on 12/13/2023 5:16:10 PM PST by mass55th (“Courage is being scared to death, but saddling up anyway.” ― John Wayne)
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To: Fiji Hill

Napoleon’s life is too big to put in a single movie, a multi miniseries would be a better venue for his life.
That being said, I’ll pass on a cuckolded Bonepart.


50 posted on 12/13/2023 5:21:25 PM PST by RedMonqey ("A republic, if you can keep it" Benjam Franklin.)
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To: Fiji Hill

It is rare to find truth in anything created today.


51 posted on 12/13/2023 5:21:29 PM PST by alternatives?
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To: Bonemaker
They don’t make “War and Peace” or “Gone With the Wind” caliber movies anymore. Died off kind of like the country as a whole.

Same with popular music. When you walk into a store like Trader Joe's which plays background music, you hear songs from the middle decades of the last century rather than the top tunes of 2023.

52 posted on 12/13/2023 5:21:43 PM PST by Fiji Hill
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To: mass55th

Thats one effect. There were others. Which is why I highly recommend Paul Johnsons “Birth of the Modern”. Napoleons influence reached from Portugal to Russia. He turned everything in Europe upside down. The independence of Brazil to the Decembrist plot, just to name a couple, were all inspired to a degree by his actions and memory.

Complex business.


53 posted on 12/13/2023 5:32:14 PM PST by buwaya (Strategic imperatives )
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To: alternatives?

There was never “truth” in theater, ever. Nor is there in popular memory. Shakespeare (as a for instance) cannot be relied on.

There is a rather nice bit in Napoleon that makes this point, the the theatrical pantomime where Napoleon first sees Josephine hanging out with Barras.


54 posted on 12/13/2023 5:36:34 PM PST by buwaya (Strategic imperatives )
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To: Gene Eric

Still have it.

I’ve been tempted to go see Napoleon in the theaters simply to see the battle scenes on the big screen. Once that window closes, home screens just aren’t the same.

The Holdovers has just been released. Seems to be a very good movie of the kind we say endlessly that we want Hollywood to make more of. If we’re serious about that, we should go see them when they come out. I want to see it before writing it up for the ping list, so I guess I’d better get moving.

American Fiction has just hit the theaters. I recommend it highly. Bear in mind that this isn’t just a parody of black-white relations in America today, which is how the usual suspects among the critics take it. They’re mostly all so deep in their bubble they don’t have a clue, but EVERY white character in the film is a smug, condescending, virtue signaling, identity politics liberal. They are drawn from academia, publishing and the movie industry. And the movie is brutal on them. Conservatives will see the point instantly. Liberals? Nah. But see it and enjoy.

Angel Studios, which produced The Sound of Freedom, is now out with The Shift, which is being reviewed as a retelling of the Book of Job. Also on my list.


55 posted on 12/13/2023 5:42:55 PM PST by sphinx
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To: mass55th

If you read the Commonwealth Protectorate Constitution - called ‘Instrument of Governance’ later revised and called ‘Petition and Advice’ they sound surprisingly modern. They will also seem very familiar! They were the first examples of a written constitution for a nation.


56 posted on 12/13/2023 5:45:13 PM PST by Reily (!!)
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To: buwaya

Thanks for the info.


57 posted on 12/13/2023 6:04:53 PM PST by mass55th (“Courage is being scared to death, but saddling up anyway.” ― John Wayne)
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To: Reily

Thanks for the information.


58 posted on 12/13/2023 6:05:18 PM PST by mass55th (“Courage is being scared to death, but saddling up anyway.” ― John Wayne)
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To: Fiji Hill

anyone remember Bill and Ted’s Adventure?


59 posted on 12/13/2023 6:11:12 PM PST by MNDude
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To: sphinx

Appreciate the recommendations!

Regarding Napoleon, I’m looking forward to the combination of Scott & Phoenix. Ultimately, it’s a form of entertainment that’s hopefully ‘close enough’ to the events being portrayed.

Yeah, I tend to favor both A24 and Angel.


60 posted on 12/13/2023 6:11:13 PM PST by Gene Eric (Don't be a statist!)
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