Wednesday, January 10, 2007

Kubrick's "Napoleon" - Part III



We learn from the narrator about the death of Robespierre, which had ended a “reign of terror and sent Paris headlong into a lavish whirl of pleasure seeking and sensuality, as if it were necessary to shake off the nightmare and make up for lost time.”

Napoleon enters Paul Barras’ “Salon,” a lush, elegant room where the elite of the new society are sitting around tables playing cards. Women walk around and “display their breasts completely uncovered, in the fashion of the day.”

He sees Josephine (pictured above).

A bartender whom Kubrick describes as a “friendly creep” explains how most of these people made their money through crooked war contracts and hints at the depths of their hedonism.

Everyone heads into Barras’ Music Room. There is a small stage.

“It begins to look like a musical evening until the entrance onto the stage of three very attractive girls, dressed in heavy winter costumes. The three ‘actresses’ begin to talk about being snowbound in a desolate cabin, when their conversation is interrupted by the entrance of three young desperados.”

The young men proceed to strip the girls of their clothes and have intercourse with them.

“Napoleon, still the provincial, can scarcely believe his eyes.”

“Josephine, seated next to Barras, watches the proceedings, an imperturbable study of elegance and charm. Barras takes her hand and smiles at her. She whispers something to him and he nods, gravely.” They leave.

What was the point of the scene in the Music Room?

I don't believe it was shock for the sake of shock. I’d say the point here is yet another broad stroke about how this particular portion of French history and all of its carnal decadence influenced Napoleon. The point of that scene is “Napoleon, still the provincial, can scarcely believe his eyes.”





Napoleon is made Commander of the Army of Italy. He prepares for his Italian campaign. Through a series of rather contrived circumstances, he meets Josephine. They immediately make love to each other in “a candle-lit oval bedroom that is completely encircled with floor-to-ceiling mirrored panels.”

What follows is one of my favorite sequences.

I just love the technique Stanley uses here.

They marry. Napoleon goes off and prepares for his Italian campaign. While he’s at camp, he writes a number of love letters to Josephine, which we hear in voice over. At this stage of his life, Napoleon is on the brink of worldwide fame, already proving himself to be a great symbol of strength, and yet, as he writes these letters, we see a completely different side of the man who just shot Monsieur Varlac in a town square. This is the emotionally vulnerable Napoleon Bonaparte.

He just pours his heart out onto these letters: “Sweet and incomparable Josephine, what is this bizarre effect you have upon my heart?” “By what magic have you captivated all my faculties, concentrated in yourself all my existence? It is a kind of death, my darling, since there is no survival for me except in you.”

And while we hear Napoleon pour his heart out, we watch Josephine have an affair with Captain Hippolyte Charles.

And as we move through this sequence, we slowly hear a shift in the tone of Napoleon’s words. His heart, which was so much in love at the beginning of this sequence, becomes troubled, aching, and wounded.

There’s a catch. This sequence was poorly organized in the script, because Stanley wrote out all of Napoleon’s letters first and THEN he wrote out the scenes in which we would hear the voice overs. Unless you’re paying attention, you may not realize just how powerful those scenes would actually be. So I’ve taken the liberty of rearranging this sequence and placing the voice overs into the scenes so that we might get a better idea of how it would've actually looked and sounded.



INT. JOSEPHINE'S BEDROOM – NIGHT

The candlelit, oval bedroom is completely encircled with floor-to-ceiling mirrored panels, which multiply the erotic images of Napoleon and Josephine, making love.

NAPOLEON (V.O.)
My dearest Josephine -- I awaken
full of you. Between your portrait
and the memory of our intoxicating
night, my senses have had no
respite. Sweet and incomparable
Josephine, what is this bizarre
effect you have upon my heart? What
if you were to by angry? What if I
were to see you sad or troubled?
Then my soul would be shattered by
distress. Then your lover could
find no peace, no rest. But I find
none, either, when I succumb to the
profound emotion that overwhelms me,
when I draw up from your lips, from
your heart, a flame that consumes
me. You will be leaving the city at
noon. But I shall see you in three
hours. Until then, mio dolce amor,
I send you a thousand kisses -- but
send me none in return, for they set
my blood on fire.


INT. MAYOR'S OFFICE - DAY

The marriage of Napoleon and Josephine -- a small private civil ceremony in the Mayor's officer. The only guests are Barras, Eugene, Hortense, Marmont and Junot.

JOSEPHINE (V.O.)
My dear Theresa -- I am being urged
to remarry. You have met General
Bonaparte at my house. Well, then,
it is he who wishes to serve as
father to my children. Do I love
him? You are going to ask me.
Well, no. Do I, then, find him
unattractive? Again, no -- but
worse still, I find myself in a
state of indifference, of
lukewarmness.


INT. KITCHEN - DAY

The Bonaparte kitchen in Marseilles. Letizia is cutting vegetables with a knife, the sound of which allows a disapproving punctuation of her silences. The tap-tap-tapping of the knife dicing a carrot.

NAPOLEON
Mama, I'm sorry that I didn't write
to you about this, but I thought
that it would be much better to tell
you myself.

Tap, tap, tap.

NAPOLEON
Mama, I know that when you meet her,
you will love her as much as I do.

Tap, tap, tap.


INT. HQ TENT - NIGHT

Napoleon, seated at a table in his HQ tent late at night writing a letter by candlelight.

NAPOLEON (V.O.)
My dearest Josephine, every moment
increases the distance between us,
and with every moment that passes I
feel myself less able to endure the
separation. You are the eternal
object of my thoughts, and my
imagination exhausts itself
wondering what you are doing.


INT. JOSEPHINE'S BEDROOM - DAY

It is a bright, sunny morning in Josephine's bedroom at Rue de Chanterine. There is a letter from Napoleon leaning against the teapot on her breakfast tray. She picks up the envelope, sees who it is from, puts it down, pours her tea, adds milk and sugar, stirs it carefully, sighs, looks outside at the tall trees rustling in the breeze, then idly picks up the letter and opens it.

NAPOLEON (V.O.)
By what magic have you captivated
all my faculties, concentrated in
yourself all my existence? It is a
kind of death, my darling, since
there is no survival for me except
in you.
* * *
I ask of you neither eternal love
nor fidelity, but only truth, utter
honesty. The day upon which you
should say "I love you less," would
be the last day of my love -- or the
last day of my life. And if I should
not die of sorrow, then, my heart,
maimed for life, would never again
trust itself to respond to any
sentiments of tenderness or rapture.


INT. HQ TENT - NIGHT

A close shot of Napoleon's hand, writing on his official stationary which has printed, under a large illustration symbolizing liberty and equality, "Headquarters of the Commander in Chief, Army of Italy."

NAPOLEON (V.O.)
You let many days go without writing
to me. What, then, are you doing?


INT. JOSEPHINE'S SALON - DAY

General Le Clerc presents his aide, Captain Hippolyte Charles. [Note: probably dual dialogue here.]

NAPOLEON (V.O.)
When you write, dearest, assure me
that you realize that I love you
with a love that is beyond the
limits of imagination. That you,
you alone, and all of you, as I see
you, as you are -- only you can
please me, absorb the faculties of
my soul; that there is no corner of
my heart into which you do not see,
no thought of mine which is not
subordinate to you. That my arms,
my strength, my mind are all yours.
That my soul lives in your body.
That the world is beautiful only
because you inhabit it.

GENERAL LE CLERC
I should like you to meet my aidede-
camp, Captain Hippolyte Charles
-- Madame Bonaparte.

CAPTAIN CHARLES
I am delighted to meet you, Madame
Bonaparte.

JOSEPHINE
Thank you, Captain. Won't you both
please sit down?

Love at first sight.

GENERAL LE CLERC
Thank you very much, Madame
Bonaparte. I have come at the
instruction of General Bonaparte to
bring this letter from his mother in
Nice.


INT. TENT - NIGHT

Napoleon lying awake in the early hours of the morning, in his camp bed.

NAPOLEON (V.O.)
No letters from you -- only once
every four days do I receive one,
whereas if you loved me you would
write me twice a day. Absence
relieves minor attachments but it
intensifies love. A kiss upon your
mouth, upon your heart, everywhere.
There is no one else, no one but me,
is there?


EXT. JOSEPHINE'S GARDEN - NIGHT

Moonlight. Josephine and Charles walk slowly in the garden. They stop. She is still. He touches his lips to her shoulders and neck. She slowly turns, looks into his eyes and kisses him, long and languorously.

NAPOLEON (V.O.)
Your letter is brief, sad and
written in a trembling hand. What
is wrong with you, my darling?
* * *
My misfortune is to have known you
so little; yours, to have judged me
by the men you have known, who
surrounded you.
* * *
You have inspired in me a limitless
passion, and an intoxication that is
degrading. Josephine, you have made
me wretched. But I have never
believed in happiness. Is life
really worth making such a fuss?


EXT. CAMPFIRE - DAY

Napoleon standing at a camp fire in the rain, staring vacantly into the flames.

NAPOLEON (V.O.)
Four hours ago, there came that
scrap of a letter to break the news
that you are not coming, that you
are ill, that there are three
doctors in attendance, that you
cannot write yourself. My life is
now a perpetual nightmare. A fatal
premonition stops me from breathing.
I am ill of your illness, burning
with your fever.


INT. JOSEPHINE'S BEDROOM - NIGHT

Josephine and Charles making love in her mirrored bedroom at the Rue de Chanterine. Maximum erotica.

NAPOLEON (V.O.)
In a month I have received only two
notes of three lines each. Good
God, tell me how you know so well
how to inspire love in other's
hearts, without feeling it in your
own? Make mock of me, stay on in
Paris, take lovers, let all the
world know it, never write to me --
and then? And then, I shall love
you ten times more than I did
before!
* * *
But don't go on telling me that you
are ill; don't go on trying to
justify your behavior. You are
forgiven.
* * *
Your letters are as cold as
friendship. What is left for you to
do to make me more wretched? Stop
loving me? That's already done.
Hate me? Perhaps I should hope for
that. Hatred, at least, is not
humiliating. But, oh, indifference
-- the pulse of marble, the vacant
glance, the distracted air.

7 comments:

wcdixon said...

Nice work, MM. When does the class begin...?

Mickey Lee said...

MM re-writing Kubrick?! Perish the thought!

Mystery Man said...

Hey, Dix! There's a test next week. Just kidding.

Mickey Lee - Hehehe... He would've loved working with me.

-MM

Carl S said...

Good work MM. That list bit "Hatred, at least, is not
humiliating. But, oh, indifference..." reall shows how tortured he was.

Unknown said...

Hey I recognize that technique MM! I was reading the script and noticed how Kubrick had it and it did take away from the drama. I'm sure in his head it was connected, but if you couldn't read Kubrick's mind it wouldn't play as well.

Mystery Man said...

Ya know, when I first read this script, I thought it was incredibly dry. But, like so many Kubrick films, I'm drawn back to it for seconds and thirds and fifths and tenths and...

I don't know what it is about this script. It just sucks you in.

Wait until we get to the sequence in Russia and his downfall. Just breathtaking.

-MM

Mim said...

"...as cold as friendship..." That's a good line. It encompasses a world of meaning in four words.