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Napoléon
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Directed by Abel Gance
The chef d'ouevre of legendary French filmmaker Abel Gance, the 235-minute Napoleon was supposed to have been the first installment in a multipart film study of the French military hero. Each of the film's set pieces is treated like a movie in itself: the opening pillow fights and snowball battles, staged while Napoleon is still a schoolboy (played by Russian youth Vladimir Roudenko), are choreographed on a scale worthy of D.W. Griffith. The plot proper begins with Napoleon's adult years. From home island of Corsica, Lt. Napoleon (played as an adult by Albert Dieudonné, and old friend of Gance's) decides to side with the Republic during the French Revolution. He quickly proves his mettle in a preliminary skirmish with the British. Offered the office of commander of Paris, Napoleon declines: he does not subscribe to Reign of Terror, nor does he believe in doing battle against Frenchmen. He is thrown in prison, where he meets his wife-to-be Josephine; thanks to a series of governmental upheavals, both are set free. For the next few years, France's bureaucratic bean-counters and pencil-pushers constantly thwart Napoleon's dreams of glory. The film's climax is Napoleon's rallying of the dispirited French troops and his subsequent advance into Italy. Beyond its patriotic content, Napoléon was largely designed as a showcase for the revolutionary "Polyvision" process. Simply put, Polyvision utilized multiple images for dramatic effect. Sometimes this was accomplished in a fragmentary manner similar to the multiscreen techniques utilized in such 1960s films as The Thomas Crown Affair and The Boston Strangler. Polyvision could also manifest itself into a Cinerama-like "triptych": three screens, side by side, sometimes offering a panorama, sometimes displaying three separate but thematically linked images. Napoleon's spectacular triptych finale was the crowning touch to the remarkable camera pyrotechnics seen throughout the film; Gance hated static scenes, so he mounted his camera on pendulums, horses, gyroscopes, et al., masterfully placing the spectator in the thick of the action. The film also boasts some of the silent era's best color tinting, with special emphasis on the red, white, and blue of the French flag. Except for limited European showings, Napoleon has not been displayed in its original form since its 1927 Paris premiere. At least 19 different versions of the film exist, some horribly mutilated (cut from 17 reels to eight) and scrambled, others haphazardly reedited by Gance himself. Filmmaker/historian Kevin Brownlow's 1968 book The Parade's Gone By renewed public interest in Gance's lost masterpiece, sparking a 15-year campaign to restore Napoleon, spearheaded by Brownlow and American director Francis Ford Coppola. The resultant restoration job is not perfect -- the triptych scenes had to be reduced to postage-stamp size because no existing screen can accommodate them -- but this Napoleon is probably the closest we'll get ever get to the original. The music for the restored version was composed by Francis Ford Coppola's father Carmine Coppola. ~ Hal Erickson, All Movie Guide
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Review by All Movie Guide
All Movie Guide
loved it.
Abel Gance's multi-camera, multi-projector masterpiece has been through so many versions that it's almost impossible to know where to start. Originally completed in 1927, the film was then shot and re-shot, with new material in sound in the '30s and '50s, and issued in a variety of versions that mixed old and new material with disconcerting abandon, nearly destroying the integrity of the original work. At long last, Kevin Brownlow stepped in and completed the definitive reconstruction of the film, which then premiered at the 1979 Telluride Film Festival. Gance, who was then 89, attended the festival, and had the once-in-a-lifetime chance to see his 50-year-old film in something close to its original version. The restoration of the film was partly funded by Francis Ford Coppola, and the film was shown in New York to unanimous acclaim. More than 50 years ahead of its time, Gance's use of multiple cameras interlocked to produce a three-screen image dazzled audiences. Gance died shortly after the New York premiere at the age of ninety-two. Napoléon remains perhaps Gance's finest, and certainly his most ambitious work, and demonstrates that Gance's control of the medium was both sweeping and autocratic. More than any other narrative filmmaker of the period, Gance let his visuals rule his story, and his use of multiple screen imagery prefigures the tame experimentations of the Cinerama process by a quarter of a century. Gance's epic vision can only be appreciated on a theater screen; the epic scale of his cinematic canvas demands that viewer be completely immersed in the experience. Gance was a complete and uncompromising original as a filmmaker, and Napoléon is a unique work of art, such as one rarely sees in cinema. For such an epic production, it is ultimately a deeply personal film, in which the scale of the epic never threatens to overshadow the figure of its famed protagonist. ~ Wheeler Winston Dixon, All Movie Guide
 

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