The late works of Sir Ridley Scott mock the mass going movie public. Ridicule their lack of sophistication. Their incapability of possessing discerning taste. The result is a joy to behold. Taking my cue off the 205 minute director’s cut as an excuse to write a new piece about Napoleon (2023, Ridley Scott) it might be something like the most perfect film I’ve ever seen. It’s everything wrong with Hollywood. And it works so well.
First of all historical subjects who took over the world are way more accessible to root for than comic book characters. Napoleon especially. And when I speak of men who took over the world I’m talkin big 3. We already got Oliver Stone’s polyamorous boy rockstar with long blond hair Alexander (2004, Stone). I’m a fan of the film. Mostly because of its scale. And its military scenes. Battle scenes. Testosterone hubris feuds. Napoleon’s in the middle. And the romantic epic nobody asked for about the life of Hitler ain’t gonna happen.
Napoleon in terms of Goldilocks selection has a darker side than Alexander and not quite as evil as Hitler. He’s a nasty little tyrant. Hell they even named the Napoleon complex after him. Is that in the DSM? I’m not actually curious enough to research it. Anyway as far as antiheroes go I love this guy as played by Phoenix. If you’ll allow me to spoiler skip to the ending my refined reading of Napoleon ultimately rests on some of the scenes from the very end of the film. When he’s talking to children. First when the little boys are granting him audience and he says those lines of dialogue that he’s the first to admit when he makes a mistake but he never does; it’s simple geometry where he puts the [camera] is Ridley Scott breaking through. And finally when Napoleon’s teaching those two little girls to fence and he asks the one who burned Moscow and she doesn’t know he points to himself to say he did but the other says “I believe the Russians burned it sir. To get rid of the French,” Bonaparte cooly inquires “Who told you that?” “It’s common knowledge sir.” Napoleon having little regard for the facts of history is Ridley Scott not caring either. Screw accuracy. This isn’t a documentary. I whole heartedly applaud and support Scott’s reasoning. His reckoning with the material. If you want a detached from the action and drama of Hollywood spectacle documentary with a neutral robot faux British cultured educational narrator over instructive images get lost.
Everybody knows the cinema feeds off of our salacious voracious appetites for sex and death (alt. violence). And that’s what Napoleon gives us instead of history. The violence is Scott’s talent. Large scaled battle. And he lives for it as does Bonaparte. When Napoleon returns from exile and asks his Fifth Army to join him they do because they love to fight. And miss it. Side note why does Gen. Wellington tell that conscript who asks if he can shoot Napoleon no and if he does it will be punishable by death later take his shot anyway? It doesn’t really make sense. But we get to see him miss and blow that hole through Napoleon’s hat. That’s what I get excited about. Emotion over logic. In this case specifically in the context of a war movie escapist entertaining cartoon genre film okay. There’s a time and a place for everything.
But the love story is its own beast. Josephine is one of the worst characters written for women ever made. Yet despite this I love her so. The forbidden fruit of archetypes. As in we're not supposed to write this kind of character as in we're not supposed to like this kind of character as in it's wrong to. She’s a slut whore who only exists to serve Napoleon’s objectification of her. The letters we hear through her voiceover are product of Napoleon’s obsessive delusion. She haunts him like she haunts me which effectively depicts the pain of memory. The peril of looking back. The allure of regret. Amorphous infatuation.
Josephine is introduced as a prostitute Barras is involved with whom he procures for Napoleon. Politics. Josephine’s life is bleak. You know. She’s lost her husband her kids she’s in prison awaiting the guillotine having sex with men just because pregnant women aren’t executed until they have their child. So she’s only into Napoleon out of convenience. Necessity. Desperation. Vanessa Kirby in the sex scenes plays them so bored it’s sad tragic hilarious matter of fact definitive. But she finds her satisfaction with other men. The anachronistic language of the tabloid papers make headlines of her doing so. Okay I can’t prove that the papers weren’t in fact as depicted in the film. Either way I think they’re great.
But yeah I’m a man who would rather be known as a cuckold than a fool too. Not Napoleon. The vindictive spite she induces in him fuels his ambition. He’s such an infant. He only lives to take over the world and have sex with Josephine. The man knows his passions. Can I blame him? Josephine’s line “If you look down you’ll see a surprise and once you see it you’ll always want it” made the trailers. This goes to my heart. It’s the meaning of life. But what makes it so particularly compelling in Napoleon and for me is of the utmost romantic sentiment. She never wants him to leave her. My mind knows the fatal codependent relationship is toxic but my heart yearns for its survival. In movies anyway. Its passion lies in its resilience.
This film takes the unashamedly pop repurposing of period French culture pioneered by Marie Antoinette (2006, Sofia Coppola) and gives it the Scott veneer of luxury goods. I prefer the baroque piano passages that sound like some inventions by Bach. I haven’t bothered to research which composers are attributed to which pieces and which are original yet but it’s one of the biggest factors contributing to my enjoyment of the large canvas of it all.
And like Coppola’s pop dessert Napoleon above all hones its anachronistic setting through its dialogue. Its attitude. Like right before the coup Lucien is talking mad shit and when Napoleon mentions those ladies in waiting lines about Sieyes and Ducos Lucien says something like “those fucking idiots can tend my balls. Tongue bath? Only for me to let them wipe my ass.” But I’ve probably got it wrong. Whatever he says it's funny baffles me.
The director’s cut indulges in Ridley Scott’s madcap riffing in the way House of Gucci (2021, Scott) allowed with Jared Leto. It’s shockingly questionable regarding taste. Like most of all Napoleon's bashful whimper mumble signal to Josephine another mounting invasion is imminent and her keen sense of deciphering it. What were they thinking? Finally. Ridley Scott has gone completely nuts and I think it’s the best thing to happen to his style. From House of Gucci through as of this writing Gladiator II (2024, Scott) gimme more. Rewatchability activated.