1812-1821
- Episode aired Oct 28, 2002
- 1h 33m
A masterful soldier, tactician and statesmen, Napoleon Bonaparte's courage and love for his country sees him rise from an unpaid general consumed with ambition to the most powerful man in Eu... Read allA masterful soldier, tactician and statesmen, Napoleon Bonaparte's courage and love for his country sees him rise from an unpaid general consumed with ambition to the most powerful man in Europe.A masterful soldier, tactician and statesmen, Napoleon Bonaparte's courage and love for his country sees him rise from an unpaid general consumed with ambition to the most powerful man in Europe.
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Did you know
- GoofsAccording to the plot Talleyrand is warning Louis XVIII of Napoleon advancing to Paris. In reality, Talleyrand was at that time at the Congress of Vienna and not in Paris.
- Quotes
Napoléon: You are the traitor. Stab me in the heart with this. It would be more loyal than anything you've done.
Joseph Fouché: Calm down. Worse things can happen than falling from power. You have been through this once before.
Napoléon: But I rose again. In triumph. Called back by the people.
Joseph Fouché: It only lasted 100 days. Should that be called rising again, or just a last desperate leap?
Napoléon: Get out, Fouche.
Joseph Fouché: Your humble servant, sire... for the next 45 minutes, at which time I shall have to ask you to leave.
As I have just finished a biography about his last days in St Helena ("terrible exile"), that explains why i only watch the last episode and how I can express a lot of expectations: After this reading, here the following unavoidable highlights that this show must propose:
1) his courageous surrender to England as he trust wrongly his longtime enemy, the perfidy Albion -> just evoked as the boat trip isn't filmed
2) His farewell to France as he is on board of the ship because he knew that he will never come back there -> cut
3) His true charisma and leadership because the English settlers and troops tend to appreciate him -> we have a glimpse with the Betsy character
4) His Longwood home that is a shame with damp, wind and rats on a highly rocky island: we see a rat but we don't have the feeling that the house is derelict
5) His relation with the Governor Lowe as he dismissed his authority after just a few meetings -> this is the first scene of the first episode
6) His private life on his island as he has come with only four male friends and has big urges -> not evoked
7) Two of them being a bit deceitful: Las Cazes as a ghoul for his memoirs and Gourgaud as his lover -> not evoked
8) His death with rumored assassination and his burial like a Russian puppet -> not evoked
9) His ultimate return trip with his splendid tomb at the Invalides -> this is the ending credits and the last shot, beautiful done but lacking of pump and grand music.
Finally, the show underachieves. It's true that the cast is good, starting with Clavier as Bonny, that the production does the maximum to grasp the subject (a thirty years period show!) but it lacks mastery and inspiration of a true author behind the camera. The filming is flat, soulless and without passion. As we have seen for his last days, all the pain that Bonny has lived is throw away because the show is told non chronologically: thus, we have the absurdity of when Bonny dies old, we have moments of him young.
My verdict claims that this ins't the definitive movie about Napoleon's last days.
- leplatypus
- May 27, 2012