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HistoryWarRomance

Napoleon

- He came from nothing. He conquered everything.

An epic that details the checkered rise and fall of French Emperor Napoleon Bonaparte and his relentless journey to power through the prism of his addictive, volatile relationship with his wife, Josephine.

Release Date : 2023-11-22

Language :EnglishFrenchGermanRussian

Adult : false

Status : Released

Production Company : Apple StudiosScott Free Productions

Production Country : United States of America

Alternative Titles : KitbagRidley Scott's NapoleonMarengoNapoleon: The Director's Cut

Cast

Joaquin Phoenix

Character Name : Napoleon Bonaparte

Original Name : Joaquin Phoenix

Gender : Male

Vanessa Kirby

Character Name : Josephine Bonaparte

Original Name : Vanessa Kirby

Gender : Female

Tahar Rahim

Character Name : Paul Barras

Original Name : Tahar Rahim

Gender : Male

Rupert Everett

Character Name : Duke of Wellington

Original Name : Rupert Everett

Gender : Male

Mark Bonnar

Character Name : Junot

Original Name : Mark Bonnar

Gender : Male

Paul Rhys

Character Name : Talleyrand

Original Name : Paul Rhys

Gender : Male

Ben Miles

Character Name : Caulaincourt

Original Name : Ben Miles

Gender : Male

Riana Duce

Character Name : Lucille

Original Name : Riana Duce

Gender : Female

Edouard Philipponnat

Character Name : Tsar Alexander

Original Name : Edouard Philipponnat

Gender : Male

Miles Jupp

Character Name : Emperor Francis I

Original Name : Miles Jupp

Gender : Male

Scott Handy

Character Name : Marshal Berthier

Original Name : Scott Handy

Gender : Male

Youssef Kerkour

Character Name : Marshal Davout

Original Name : Youssef Kerkour

Gender : Male

John Hollingworth

Character Name : Marshal Ney

Original Name : John Hollingworth

Gender : Male

Abubakar Salim

Character Name : General Dumas

Original Name : Abubakar Salim

Gender : Male

Thom Ashley

Character Name : La Bedoyere

Original Name : Thom Ashley

Gender : Male

Jannis Niewöhner

Character Name : Hippolyte Charles

Original Name : Jannis Niewöhner

Gender : Male

Julian Rhind-Tutt

Character Name : Sieyes

Original Name : Julian Rhind-Tutt

Gender : Male

John Hodgkinson

Character Name : Fouche

Original Name : John Hodgkinson

Gender : Male

Erin Ainsworth

Character Name : Hortense I

Original Name : Erin Ainsworth

Gender : Female

Isabella Brownson

Character Name : Hortense II

Original Name : Isabella Brownson

Gender : Male

Benjamin Chivers

Character Name : Eugene I

Original Name : Benjamin Chivers

Gender : Male

Sam Meakin

Character Name : Eugene II

Original Name : Sam Meakin

Gender : Male

Sinéad Cusack

Character Name : Letizia Bonaparte

Original Name : Sinéad Cusack

Gender : Female

Harriet Bunton

Character Name : Pauline Bonaparte

Original Name : Harriet Bunton

Gender : Male

Charlie Greenwood

Character Name : Caroline Bonaparte

Original Name : Charlie Greenwood

Gender : Female

Audrey Brisson-Jutras

Character Name : Elisa Bonaparte

Original Name : Audrey Brisson-Jutras

Gender : Female

Matthew Needham

Character Name : Lucien Bonaparte

Original Name : Matthew Needham

Gender : Male

Sam Crane

Character Name : Jacques-Louis David

Original Name : Sam Crane

Gender : Male

Sam Troughton

Character Name : Robespierre

Original Name : Sam Troughton

Gender : Male

Edward Bennett

Character Name : Royalist Supporter

Original Name : Edward Bennett

Gender : Male

Julian Wadham

Character Name : Jean de Cambaceres

Original Name : Julian Wadham

Gender : Male

Ludivine Sagnier

Character Name : Theresa Cabarrus

Original Name : Ludivine Sagnier

Gender : Female

Catherine Walker

Character Name : Marie Antoinette

Original Name : Catherine Walker

Gender : Female

Honor Kneafsey

Character Name : Marie Antoinette Kid #1

Original Name : Honor Kneafsey

Gender : Female

Alexander Shaw

Character Name : Marie Antoinette Kid #2

Original Name : Alexander Shaw

Gender : Male

Phil Cornwell

Character Name : Sanson the Bourreau

Original Name : Phil Cornwell

Gender : Male

Harry Taurasi

Character Name : Citizen Lacombe

Original Name : Harry Taurasi

Gender : Male

Edward Mercieca

Character Name : General Carteaux

Original Name : Edward Mercieca

Gender : Male

Arthur McBain

Character Name : General Marchand

Original Name : Arthur McBain

Gender : Male

Andy Burse

Character Name : Drunken British Guard

Original Name : Andy Burse

Gender : Male

Jonathan Rice

Character Name : Dealer | Victim's Ball

Original Name : Jonathan Rice

Gender : Male

Emeric Bernard-Jones

Character Name : Barras' Friend #1

Original Name : Emeric Bernard-Jones

Gender : Male

Bay Bryan

Character Name : Barras' Friend #2

Original Name : Bay Bryan

Gender : Male

Michael Twaits

Character Name : Barras' Friend #3

Original Name : Michael Twaits

Gender : Male

Michael O'Connor

Character Name : Charles Leclerc

Original Name : Michael O'Connor

Gender : Male

Dominic Coleman

Character Name : Clerk | Storage Room

Original Name : Dominic Coleman

Gender : Male

Ian McNeice

Character Name : Louis XVIII

Original Name : Ian McNeice

Gender : Male

Richard McCabe

Character Name : Lord Whitworth

Original Name : Richard McCabe

Gender : Male

Tom Godwin

Character Name : Austrian Ambassador

Original Name : Tom Godwin

Gender : Male

Gavin Spokes

Character Name : Moulin

Original Name : Gavin Spokes

Gender : Male

Catherine Harvey

Character Name : Moulin's Wife

Original Name : Catherine Harvey

Gender : Female

David Verrey

Character Name : Gohier

Original Name : David Verrey

Gender : Male

Benedict Martin

Character Name : Roger Ducos

Original Name : Benedict Martin

Gender : Male

Edward Hogg

Character Name : Citizen Gilbert

Original Name : Edward Hogg

Gender : Male

Ed Hughes

Character Name : Lucien's Associate

Original Name : Ed Hughes

Gender : Male

Jonathan Barnwell

Character Name : Bourrienne (Napoleon's Secretary)

Original Name : Jonathan Barnwell

Gender : Male

Robin Soans

Character Name : Pope Pius VII

Original Name : Robin Soans

Gender : Male

Abigail Weinstock

Character Name : Eleanore

Original Name : Abigail Weinstock

Gender : Male

Bart Lambert

Character Name : Cosack Scout (Lake)

Original Name : Bart Lambert

Gender : Male

Joshua Leese

Character Name : French Signal Man #1 (Austerlitz)

Original Name : Joshua Leese

Gender : Male

Nicholas Shaw

Character Name : French Signal Man #2 (Austerlitz)

Original Name : Nicholas Shaw

Gender : Male

Anna Mawn

Character Name : The Duchess Marie Louise

Original Name : Anna Mawn

Gender : Female

Imogen Slaughter

Character Name : Nurse | Baby Napoleon

Original Name : Imogen Slaughter

Gender : Female

Mitchell Baggott

Character Name : French Corporal

Original Name : Mitchell Baggott

Gender : Male

Ned Costello

Character Name : French Grenadier (Butcher)

Original Name : Ned Costello

Gender : Male

John Mula

Character Name : Fisherman | Golfe-Juan

Original Name : John Mula

Gender : Male

Kevin Eldon

Character Name : Dr Corvisart

Original Name : Kevin Eldon

Gender : Male

Henry Morgan

Character Name : Little Boy | Grasse

Original Name : Henry Morgan

Gender : Male

Logan Truter

Character Name : Little Boy #2 (Grasse)

Original Name : Logan Truter

Gender : Male

Saxon Fox

Character Name : Little Boy #3 (Grasse)

Original Name : Saxon Fox

Gender : Male

Richard Leeming

Character Name : Messenger | Tuileries

Original Name : Richard Leeming

Gender : Male

Billy Byers

Character Name : Napoleon's Boy Waterloo

Original Name : Billy Byers

Gender : Male

Tim Faulkner

Character Name : Blucher

Original Name : Tim Faulkner

Gender : Male

Peter Sandys-Clarke

Character Name : British Lieutenant | Waterloo

Original Name : Peter Sandys-Clarke

Gender : Male

Tim Delap

Character Name : Imperial Guard | Waterloo

Original Name : Tim Delap

Gender : Male

Charlie Barrett

Character Name : French Scout Waterloo (Horses)

Original Name : Charlie Barrett

Gender : Male

Olivia Juno Cleverley

Character Name : Girl St Helena

Original Name : Olivia Juno Cleverley

Gender : Male

Sophie Wohlfeld

Character Name : Girl #2 St Helena

Original Name : Sophie Wohlfeld

Gender : Male

Cormac Hyde-Corrin

Character Name : Mid Shipman #1

Original Name : Cormac Hyde-Corrin

Gender : Male

Hal Gavin

Character Name : Mid Shipman #2

Original Name : Hal Gavin

Gender : Male

Michael Nardone

Character Name : Plotter (Jacobin Club)

Original Name : Michael Nardone

Gender : Male

Chris Barltrop

Character Name : Elderly Male Vagrant #1 | Moscow

Original Name : Chris Barltrop

Gender : Male

Robert Goodman

Character Name : Elderly Male Vagrant #2 | Moscow

Original Name : Robert Goodman

Gender : Male

Sophie Lund

Character Name : Nanny

Original Name : Sophie Lund

Gender : Female

Oliver Phillips

Character Name : British Express Rider

Original Name : Oliver Phillips

Gender : Male

Morgan Watkins

Character Name : Prussian Officer

Original Name : Morgan Watkins

Gender : Male

Ed Eales White

Character Name : Duke D'Enghien (uncredited)

Original Name : Ed Eales White

Gender : Male

Jacob Marshfield

Character Name : Cannon Commander (uncredited)

Original Name : Jacob Marshfield

Gender : Male

Jean-Pascal Heynemand

Character Name : 5th Musket Regiment Drummer (uncredited)

Original Name : Jean-Pascal Heynemand

Gender : Male

Reviews

M

Manuel São Bento

@msbreviews

2023-11-23

FULL SPOILER-FREE REVIEW @ https://fandomwire.com/napoleon-review-a-dispassionate-hollow-spectacle/ "Napoleon contributes to a troubling trend in cinema, transforming significant historical narratives into hollow spectacles driven by mere visual entertainment. Despite compelling performances and visually stunning battle set pieces, Ridley Scott fails to control the shockingly inconsistent tone, leading to abrupt shifts between heavy drama and spontaneous comedy. The dispassionate treatment of the millions who suffered through Napoleon's acts testifies to the dissonant messages of the movie, which ends with an unclear feeling about the status of its protagonist. Too much creative liberty leads to absurd historical inaccuracies, including a questionable lack of French accents and actors. Despite efficient pacing, the 157-minute runtime surprisingly feels rushed, but I don't believe the rumored four-hour cut will fix so many massive problems..." Rating: C-

C

CinemaSerf

@Geronimo1967

2023-11-24

I think this is one of those films, like his "Kingdom of Heaven" (2005) epic that Sir Ridley Scott has made for aficionados of grand scale historical cinema, not for historians. Indeed it may well be that for this film, the less you actually know about the subject the more you might enjoy it. We start with the demise of Marie Antoinette and see Napoleon Bonaparte (Joaquin Phoenix) watching from the baying crowd. He's a relatively junior officer but an aspirational one who manages to sell a plan to relieve the British occupied city of Toulon to his boss Barras (Tahar Rahim). This success sets him on a parabola that sees him rise, his falling in/out/in of love with the charismatic Josephine (Vanessa Kirby) and his overwhelming desire for European domination. The narrative clearly illustrates the fickleness of dynastic politics, trust and betrayal, love, lust and shrieking hypocrisy in a colourful and vibrant fashion. I didn't love Phoenix in this role, but maybe because Rod Steiger was so convincing in "Waterloo" (1970) that at times he looked a little like a mimic. That said, though, he puts his heart and soul into the role and the increasingly toxic dynamic with Kirby manages to stay on the right side of melodrama throughout. Again, as with Sir Ridley's tale of Jerusalem from eighteen years ago, he manages to pull off some spectacular battle scenes and the cinematography captures well the hostile environments - human and natural - faced by the soldiers as his empire building rose and fell. Although it's over 2½ hours long, I felt the focus was rather imbalanced. A long time spent on his rise to power then his decline and fall rather rushed. Dare I say it, but this might have worked better as a part one and a part two scenario. It looks stunning and the creative forces behind the costumes and visual effects are bound to be picking up a slew of gongs in due course. The acting, well that's less impressive and though I do enjoy the genre, I fear this may just end up being famed for some historical inaccuracies rather than being for an outstanding biopic of one of the world's most enigmatic and flawed megalomaniacs.

J

janeyee

@janeyee

2023-12-27

"Napoleon" ambitiously sets out to condense the colossal life of the French emperor into a single film but ends up biting off more than it can chew. The movie, while visually stunning and energetically directed, suffers from an overly ambitious script and a plethora of historical inaccuracies that distract rather than enhance. Joaquin Phoenix's portrayal of Napoleon is inconsistent, struggling to meld the complex dichotomy of the character's reputed brilliance and egotism with a more vulnerable, human side. The film's pacing is erratic, attempting to navigate through two decades of dense European history and personal drama within a limited runtime. Key events feel rushed or underexplored, leaving viewers longing for the depth and development that a miniseries format could provide. Vanessa Kirby's Josephine provides a glimmer of intrigue and depth, yet even her story feels truncated and secondary to the hurried historical epic. Overall, "Napoleon" exemplifies a missed opportunity to deeply explore one of history's most enigmatic figures, hinting that a more expansive, serialized approach might have better served such a monumental story

P

PaoloG13

@PaoloG13

2024-05-16

Not worth the subject: the movie neglects completely how innovative Napoleon has been, just focusing on his relation with his wife. Written for English public that ignores history. A mistake. The movie is worth for battle reconstruction, even though in Austerlitz, now Vyskov in Check Republic, there are no latest. Joakim is great as always as some sights give the sense of power.

R

r96sk

@r96sk

2024-01-05

Impressive battle sequences aside, 'Napoleon' fails to deliver. Just my own opinion, of course, but this Ridley Scott movie just didn't click. I didn't feel attached to what I was watching, I wasn't hooked on the events that were occurring onscreen. Joaquin Phoenix gives a solid enough performance, I don't have any complaints with him - nor Vanessa Kirby. It's just the film in general that disappointed. None of the non-battle scenes did anything for me, it's all so heavily forgettable. The added humour/quirkiness from the titular character felt out of place, or at least wasn't blended with the more serious stuff all that well. The long run time, whilst certainly overdone, isn't actually all that much of a hindrance - it's moreso how poorly the run time is utilized. I, fwiw, have zero issue with historical inaccuracies. Judging it solely as a film, I highly doubt I'll want to rewatch this anytime soon unfortunately.

C

Chandler Danier

@chandlerdanier

2024-01-08

I'm afraid Napoleon is a little boring. Josephine is the best part of the whole project. Amazing cannon stuff, though. Just blew their load a bit early... 10/10 if it was over after they shot the citizenry...but the horse. Damn. That was a rush worth filming. All told, the film left me wishing Napoleon had died before another hour and a half could get tacked on. Was somewhat like watching a tiny old man die in exile on an island.

P

pimpskitters

@pimpskitters

2024-01-09

Didn't really get much of a read on this movies take on Napoleon the person. He walks around, is terrible at fucking, and does not appear to be as short as history had made him out to be. As for historical accuracy, I doubt he really wore the hat so often, and I did not see him jam his hands into his armpits a single time. French Braveheart goes through all the beats these giant war epics go through [yawns uncontrollably], it does it well enough [farts loudly], and has some fun blowing apart flesh with cannons [gets slightly hard].

M

MovieGuys

@MovieGuys

2024-01-14

I had high hopes for Napoleon but the final product was, for me, disappointing. Lets start by saying this feels more like a cinematic biography than sweeping saga. The approach taken is to move from set piece to set piece through the passage of this famous figures life. Regrettably, the handling, like Napoleons tryst with Josephine, is quick and crude. Set piece gives way to yet more set pieces,with no real contextual cohesion. There are a number of historical inaccuracies too. The most glaring being the absence of a younger actor in the earlier part of Napoleons career. This could have worked better with Joaquin Phoenix playing Napoleon in his latter years, married up to a actor of similar appearance, playing the younger Napoleon. Napoleon did change markedly over the years, why not take this approach? I will say too, I think the American accent that's pretty hard to ignore, does not sit well, with a production set in this era.Brit accents are more believable because they were a well established presence on the world stage, at the time. I wasn't always sure if I was watching a film about Napoleon or Washington. A role I think Phoenix would be fabulous in, BTW. This is not to say this film is "all negatives". A ton of money has been spent on this lavish production and it shows. Sets are amazing, as are costumes and locations. The gruesomeness of warfare be it domestic, Royalists dispatched by cannon in the streets of Paris or enemies on the battlefield, is laid bare. This really brings home the fact that warfare and imperialism, which we still see today, is ultimately an ugly, sinister, destructive thing. In summary, issues with the handling of this historical production are its biggest shortcoming. From the choice of approach, with almost obsessive set pieces, the use of an older actor in a younger role and other aspects of how the character is presented. On the upside, lavish and at times, brutally frank, especially the bloody spectacle of conflict. There are no hero's in war, including Napoleon himself. NOTE: For anyone interested Napoleon was not short. He was around 5.7" tall which was the male French average height for the century he was born in (height of people varied century to century based on factors like food availability). The reason people think he was short, was propaganda from his enemies. I guess propaganda does work, after all!

B

BornKnight

@BornKnight

2024-01-15

Based on a screenplay by David Scarpa (that is writing the screenplay for Gladiator 2 too... oh oh) rather than a history book this is as epic as Ridley Scott makes his movies technically.... and that's it. After Ridley's Scott last movie (the magnificent and accurate "The Duel" of 2021) went under the radar on its year my expectation bar was set too high for this one. I can't dismiss all technical work because I just love all Ridley Scott movies because of his singular style, and the movie is truly breathtaking in the major battles parts. But as a whole it simplifies the real personality of the character (that Joaquin Phoenix plays) as a commander and personality of the time (maybe the most famous of that era) and minimizes the intrincancy of his relations with Empress Joséphine (played by Vanessa Kirby). Joaquin plays Napoleon role very well, even with the limitations of being just a caricature here. The gaps and errors in historically accuracy and battle scenes tactics are just fathomless deep, and history is compressed as it where from a history book name and resume of chapter to another, loosing the chance to achieve something grandiose here. I can just dream on a well made screenplay and accurate movie here with the same quality of Ridley's work - nevertheless that it would take more than just one movie to get that chapter of Europe's history. Maybe it will get one or two nominations at Academy for production, costume or cinematography here but that's it. If it was a historical movie of a lesser known character or just focused on one part of his life it the score could be higher but here I just can get a 6.0 out of 10.0 / B - (but with a A for the technical side). It seems thar a version with 92 plus minutes will be released on Apple, but without a final director's cut version date.

H

hamfaceman

@hamfaceman

2024-01-19

Hearing over and over on the internet about how Napoleon led his army to die in the cold Russian winter, I always assumed he just died there along with them. Turns out, he didn't, and what an unfortunate turn of events that was because it resulted in another hour of movie to watch! I liked the cannon stuff. I would have liked to see more cannons. Getting pretty tired of the whole mumbling Joaquin Phoenix act. If you put this ham on your face, be sure to turn on subtitles!

B

Brent Marchant

@Brent_Marchant

2024-03-09

When it comes to making what’s touted as being a grand, sweeping epic, a filmmaker had better have his or her ducks in a row before beginning. Unfortunately, in the case of director Ridley Scott’s latest, that’s only half true. This account of power-hungry 18th Century French emperor/dictator Napoleon Bonaparte (Joaquin Phoenix) does a fine job of getting the picture’s technical aspects down pat, with its excellent production design, costuming, makeup, cinematography and visual effects (especially in the well-orchestrated battle sequences, even if they border on the gratuitous at times). However, the film sorely misses the mark on virtually everything else. The biggest problem here is its poorly composed script, which provides almost no back story about the European politics of the day (both inside and outside of France), leaving viewers who know little about the period puzzled beyond belief. The screenplay is also weak on character development, portraying the autocrat as a monodimensional buffoon, someone whom it’s hard to believe could have accomplished so much (for what it’s worth) by being a loutish dolt. And then there’s Phoenix’s hammy overacting, coming across like a tantrum-prone spoiled little kid than a head of state. It could be that tactic was intentional, perhaps to make a statement about the current political climate and one of its chief players, but falling back on ambition alone as a defining character trait is overly simplistic, even if it’s meant to resonate symbolically. In light of the foregoing, it seems like this project could have used some more in-depth development beyond its production aspects, and perhaps the best way to accomplish that would have been to expand the scope of the story. At a current runtime of 2:41:00, though, the only way to realistically achieve that would have been to grow the story by at least another hour, which means that this venture would likely have worked better as a miniseries than a standalone film. It’s rare for director Scott to drop the ball as much as he has with this offering, but I suppose it’s not too surprising when it comes to tackling something as big as this, an epic that ends up being anything but.