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On Ridley Scott's Napoleon.

[Patreon Exclusive]

We couldn't avoid discussing the new biopic about the "world soul" himself, Napoleon Bonaparte. The film isn't great, but what can we learn from it? And how does it sit in a context in which most biopics today are about musicians, business leaders and scientists? 

We discuss:

  • Why did Scott choose to focus on Napoleon's relationship with Josephine?
  • What is Scott trying to say, if anything, about Napoleon and the Napoleonic wars?
  • Where are the depictions of youth, revolution and modernity?
  • Are there any redeeming aspects to the film? 
  • What do we make of Phoenix's portrayal?
  • Are we seeing the return of films about Great Men of History?

Comments

Steve Bowbrick

I reviewed the 1927 Abel Gance Napoleon over on my (free) substack - he finds much more of the MODERN, republican Napoléon but is still absolutely obsessed with Josephine, who is rendered as a kind of time-shift flapper sex-pot. The five-and-a-half hour film only gets up to the Italian Campaign so we don't get Imperial Bonaparte at all, though… Plenty of material from his early, republican/revolutionary phase and some brilliant revolutionaries - Robespierre is a kind of supervillian figure who wears terrifying dark glasses… https://bowbrick.substack.com/p/gross-part-15-napoleon-final-version

GS- Vlogs and Games

When you guys say body count does that mean her kill count or?