“If you wish to be a success in the world, promise everything, and deliver nothing.” It sounds like something Donald Trump might say. But, no, it was Napoleon Bonaparte. And, just like with other charismatic world leaders – your Hitlers, Caesars and Trumps – it’s hard not to be fascinated by Napoleon. A revolutionary soldier with revolutionary ideas, Napoleon conquered Europe in a devastating manner while also ushering in many progressive economic, religious and educational reforms.
Despite meeting his Waterloo just over 200 years ago, he still permeates culture on many levels – everything from psychological complexes dealing with height and delusions of grandeur to Russian cakes to Boogeyman nursery rhymes, and pop songs from Coldplay, Dire Straits and ABBA.
So you won’t be surprised to learn that Napoléon, starring Gerard Depardieu, John Malkovich, Christian Clavier and Isabella Rossellini, is one of the most expensive European productions ever. And so it should be. The scale of the story is epic – let’s remember, the Napoleonic wars lasted nearly two decades, millions perished and Europe (and beyond) was ravaged from Lisbon and Egypt to Austria and Moscow.
The behind-the-scenes political machinations were just as Shakespearian. Then, there is the torrid fashion that "Bony" conducted his romantic affairs.
For those intrigued by France’s grand European empire and the mindset of an ambitious revolutionary dictator, here’s what you need to know...
Did Napoleon suffer from small man syndrome or was it all a tall tale?
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Not tonight, Josephine’s busy
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In Napoléon, Isabella Rossellini stars as Josephine while Anouk Aimée plays Napoleon’s mother, who doesn’t exactly approve of her son’s choice of paramour. “I don’t want that woman coming between us,” she warns. “I wish you had never mentioned her.”
There’s plenty of plotting in the Parisian passages of power
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Napoleon loves a Parma
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And you must contend with Gerard Depardieu: the nose that knows
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Keep in mind, the "Nightmare of Europe" REALLY hated cats
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And he always exhibited a genius for carnage
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In Napoléon, grand battles like his stunning victory against the Russians at Austerlitz and ultimate defeat by the Brits (and others) at Waterloo are savagely depicted. You get a whiff of the grapeshot; sense the fear and the carnage. You can certainly feel the rifle balls as they rip at skin and bone. “Victory is not always winning every battle,” Napoleon says, “but rising when you fall.”
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