Film Review: Napoleon

“You don’t reason with intellectuals. You shoot them.”—Napoleon
So I’d better watch out.
Alas, Boney didn’t say that in the movie. He was a witty man—“History is a set of lies agreed upon.” “In politics stupidity is not a handicap.”—but in Ridley Scott's film he doesn’t say much that's amusing. He suffers. Bonaparte was not a sufferer.
In the forefront are the battle scenes, which I think is why the reviews are so tepid. Battle scenes bore women. But men, even at my age, take a you-never-know attitude and watch anxiously.
The champion of such scenes, seldom even approached, is in The Birth of a Nation. No CGI there. (Don’t try to show that to your students today.) Then comes Eisenstein’s Alexander Nevsky, which Scott seems to have glanced at for his Austerltz sequence. And most of us know the opening of Saving Private Ryan, after which the movie dies and stumbles around like a zombie. (Of course I’m skipping a wealth of expertly made such scenes.)
Nabokov remarked that in reading a novel one should identify, not with a character, but with the author. Same for movies. Those back views of Napoleon and/or his generals watching the action suggest Scott himself. You have to be a general to manage that many people. Kubrick, as was typical of him, did it smoothly.
Jean Gabin appeared in no film without a train, it was in his contract. Dustin Hoffman until quite late made no movie in which he didn't runor no deal. In The MasterInherent ViceIrrational Man and Joker (two hours of humorless punishing abrasion), Joaquin Phoenix plays a man upon whose intellect we look down, and he may never do otherwise. This is the stuff of comedy, but he doesn't make comedies. His appearance in the Woody Allen film is enough to turn it melodramatic. And now we have his Napoleon.
Josephine was an embarrassment for Boney (I assume their correspondence is being quoted, or at least guiding the film, as Mozart’s did Amadeus); but he had mistresses to console himten, twenty-two, the count varies. Life goes on
The actress does not look unlike Josephine, except for her (Josephine’s) black teeth, which might explain why the film’s Napoleon takes her from behind, pumping away convulsively—so unsensuous, so unFrench, so ungorgeous. (See Gorgeousness.)
The food-and-drink scenes are too many to count. If you want to express disdain for someone, as several of these characters do, speak to him while eating; or as Josephine does, while drinking. She seems to be a tippler, perhaps to soften her distaste. Indeed, it’s a role only an Englishwoman could play.
This is the administrative genius who inspired, guided and set in place the Napoleonic Code of law, which influenced the entire world, and is still in force in France, a hundred and twenty other countries, Quebec, and Louisiana.
“I love power,” he said. “But it is as an artist that I love it. I love it as a musician loves his violin, to draw out its sounds and chords and harmonies.”
“Music,” he said, “is the voice that tells us that the human race is greater than it knows.” He’s said to have been a vulgarian but he sounds like a refined one.
He was an engineer. Here’s Emerson, perhaps closer to the subject: “There shall be no Alps,’ he said; and he built his perfect roads, climbing by graded galleries their steepest precipices, until Italy was as open to Paris as any town in France.”
He was under no illusions about the First Republic: “Among those who dislike oppression are many who like to oppress.”
He was a shrewd politician: “Four hostile newspapers are more to be feared than a thousand bayonets.”
Of the horrible stories that surround him Emerson says, “He must not therefore be set own as cruel, but only as one who knew no impediment to his will; not bloodthirsty, not cruel—but woe to that thing or person who stood in his way!”
According to Valéry, also closer to the subject, he was a man of letters: “Napoleon, Caesar, Frederick the Great: men of letters eminently gifted for manipulating men and things—with words….Napoleon was a victim of his mental gifts, whose power outran his own and wound up by destroying it.”
Indeed, he regrets that Napoleon wasted his mind: “It's sad to see a great brain like Napoleon's devoting itself to such petty things as empires, events, the roar of cannon, and the clamors of the mob; believing in history, in glory, in posterity, in ‘Caesar’; concerning itself with the shifting masses and surfaces of nations. Could he not feel that what really matters is something quite different?”
As if anticipating such objections Boney said, “The French complain of everything, and always.”
Of course no man can be understood, even oneself, but please, he was not a fool. What is it about him that even French cinema reduces him to a cartoon? In this reluctance to give him his due I smell a symptom of wokeness.
Let us turn, then, to the messages, because, though it straddles them awkwardly, this film is not above messages:
1) That it continually presents us with dates suggests that it thinks of itself as a history lesson. Indeed, the colors are so faint that I remember it, inaccurately, in documentary black and white, so that the bursts of color—the coronation, the underwater shots in the Austerlitz campaign—stand out as garish.
2) The mortality statistics at the end give it an anti-war feel, for which I have small patience. As Boney said, “Doctors will have more lives to answer for in the next world than we generals.”
3) Josephine’s refusal to take him seriously is a nod at feminism, very nice.
4) But its real message, muted almost to imperceptibility, is that when you indulge in political correctness as the citizens of the Republic did, and as we aging love-and-peace-niks do, when you “imagine all the people living for today” (impossible—no one lives in the present), when you lie spreadeagled in the grass revelling in Rousseau’s dream that humanity is “good” (see The Marquis de Sade, Father of Modern France), a strong man appears and jumps on you with both feet.
“The strong man,” said Boney, “is the one who is able to intercept at will the communication between the senses and the mind.”
The French were lucky in their strong man. It doesn’t always turn out that way.


Robert MacLean is a bad poet and an independent filmmaker. His The Light Touch is on Amazon PrimeTubiScanbox, and YouTube, and his 7-minute comedy is an out-loud laugh. He is also a screamingly funny novelist, a playwright, a blogger, a YouTuber, a reviewer of films, a literary critic, and a stand-up comic poet. Born Toronto, PhD McGill, taught at Canadian universities, too cold, live Greece, Irish citizen. Committed to making movies that don't matter. No brains, but an intellectual snob.


I-could-not-love-thee-dear-so-much-loved-I-not-moi-même-more sort of thing.

Red Devil Rag

"Stay, Mephistopheles, and tell me, what good will my soul do thy lord?"

In the streets of New York a miserable wretch wandered anonymously through the crowd, a short, bald, ugly man trailing the tails of his army greatcoat, which covered his feet and spread around him on the sidewalk. He saw a gorgeous young woman in spike heels and a fake leopard skin coat waving at taxis that didn’t stop, and fell in love. 

“Hi,” he said. His voice was bestial, guttural. “Nice shoes. Can I smell one?” 

She waved strenuously at a cab but it passed. 

“Want to have anal sex?” He smiled. “I guess I’m just a moldy little rat.”

Frantic now she stepped out to stop a taxi but it honked and veered around her.

“It’s a physical world!” he pleaded. “We’re implicated!”

She put her finger on her tongue and made the puke gesture at him.

“I’m a baby on the floor here! If you could see me with spiritual eyes—” 

A mini-cab stopped. She got in with a contemptuous flash of thigh and roared off as he stood there.

That night he was warming his hands at a burn barrel when the flames flared into a ten-foot Devil. The wretch stared up in awe, but soon found his voice. “Can you make her fall in love with me?”

“Well, I can’t touch the center of her being,” said the Devil, “but I can break her! Torture her into submission! You wouldn’t want that.”

“Sure!”

“What about a car accident? Make her a quadriplegic! Then you could rape her and she wouldn’t be able to resist!”

“Yeah! Yeah!”
 
“Could you handle the guilt?”

“What?”

“The guilt! Could you handle the guilt?

“Fuck are you talkin’ about?”

“Are you infinitely less sophisticated than I am, or infinitely more sophisticated than I am?”

“Can I have her?”

“Well, maybe if you didn’t look like that—”

“Yeah! Yeah! Make me beautiful!”

The next day the young woman was at the curb when the impossibly handsome Cary Clooney stepped in front of her and flagged a taxi down, then turned as if only now aware of her. “Oh, sorry. How could I not see you?” He got in first. “Can I drop you?”

She looked at her watch, looked for another cab and, pressed, squeezed in.

“Where you headed?”

“Madison and Fifty-First,” she told the driver.

“You know, you got legs like some kinda fuckin’ dream or something. I don’t even care if you have a human soul!”

She hesitated. “Yeah?”

He farted. “Oh, sorry.”

She screwed her face up and said “Stop here” to the driver.

“You must forgive my perhaps imperfect breeding,” said Cary, “Let’s have some air.” He opened his door, another car sheered it off, and it went clattering along the pavement. The driver turned to him as he watched her struggle out.

“Go ahead! Fuckin’ chicken-cluck brain o’ yours!” He handed her her purse after her. “Park that in your hangar! Lotsa room in there!” And to the driver, “Fuck are you lookin’ at?”

“It doesn’t work,” he told the Devil. “You gotta change the inner me.”

“The what?

“I don’t know anything!”

“Nobody knows anything. They’re all just pretending.”

“Make me—Make me—”

“Look, grow up! She’s an illusion! A mirage! A trick of light mounted on blood and veins! A Technicolor mist as you move through the maze. Digital! Go rub oil on your dick!”

“Please!” (Cary wept,) “Just give her to me! I want her!”

In the morning as she was looking for a taxi he approached and waited patiently while she ignored him. He put a hand in his pocket with elegant style. “I hope you can overlook what happened yesterday. I wasn’t myself.”

“That must have been a relief.”

“Perhaps we could start anew.”

A cab pulled up and she got in with a flash of thigh.

“Not even a goodbye?”

“You don’t say good-bye to something like you, you wipe yourself!” She slammed the door and the taxi screeched off.

He stood before the fire staring at his thoughts. The flames flared, the Devil appeared, but Cary didn’t even look.

“Well, I tried everything to make you human. You’re a wart! An unsqueezed pimple on the face of life!”

Cary could only nod. The Devil threw a gesture of disdain at him and pop!—he was again the wretch, still staring at his thoughts. 

Then he brightened: “Hey! Why don’t you gimme a magic spell to make her do whatever I want?!”

“Put a human soul under your power? So you can make her perform whatever foul and stinking act you want her to? I don’t know, it’s a big responsibility. What’ll ya gimme?”

“I’ll give you my soul!” 

Your soul!” The Devil laughed an echoing laugh.

“All I got is my soul! I’m givin’ it to ya!”

“Oh, all right.”

The next day as she stood at the curb the wretch came to her. She gave him a glance and looked for a taxi while he said the magic words: “Hunky-kadunky! Scoobledy-joads! Snoabledy-bloabledy hoopendy-hoads!”

Suddenly she was nude but for the heels and, shocked, covered herself with her hands as best she could. He walked away coolly and, without looking back, snapped his fingers and beckoned her over his shoulder, and she shuffled along after him, horrified.

In the alley he led her past other desperate staring men to privacy before the Devil’s burnt-out can.

“You are now under my power and will perform whatever foul and stinking act I want you to,” he smiled. 

She wept. He watched, and became sad, and turned and walked away. “Fuck! Shit Jee-yay-sus H. Jumping McFucking Christ!”

Over his shoulder he snapped his fingers and she, suddenly dressed, looked at herself in wonder.

“I don’t give a speck of fly shit!” he shouted. He turned to her, still walking away: “Shit-wise, I don’t give one! I guess I’m just a—I guess I’m just a—” He stood there, weeping.

She looked at him, then came to him. She had to bend, almost to kneel, to be his height. He bawled. She was tender.

“I guess I’m just a—”

“No you’re not!”

“Yes I am!”

She held his shoulders while he sobbed. “Let’s get to know each other first!”

“No. It doesn’t work.” He swallowed and recovered a little. “Can I touch your tits?”




A Comedy Series about an International American Gigolo

Dear Kevin,
I call you by your first name because I'm older than you are.
Call me crazy but this will dominate the streaming world for the next 20 years.
John Cleese will play Haze.
To quote Dan Reardon:
Here is something completely new and fresh.  
Packaging this with talent could be a snap - the material is that good.
Just check out the deck.
I am not officially attached to this project but I am close with the writer and know his counterpart well. Bernie and Robert have asked me to come on board and get this done.
Hope you like it as much as I do.

To quote Bernie Stampfer, “Don't be shocked. Toby is not exactly politically correct.”

And to quote Salvador Dalí, “The one thing the world will never have enough of is the outrageous.”

Bernie and I have 19 scripts for two seasons, the best service company in Greece, the best production manager, and 40% of our budget.


You have my absolute word, Kevin, you and Toby will love each other.



Robert MacLean is a bad poet and an independent filmmaker. His The Light Touch is on Amazon PrimeTubi and Scanbox, and his 7-minute comedy is an out-loud laugh. He is also a screamingly funny novelist, a playwright, a blogger, a YouTuber, a reviewer of films, a literary critic, and a stand-up comic poet. Born Toronto, PhD McGill, taught at Canadian universities, too cold, live Greece, Irish citizen. Committed to making movies that don't matter. No brains, but an intellectual snob.