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Napoléon vu par Abel Gance

  • 1927
  • 5h 30min
CALIFICACIÓN DE IMDb
8.2/10
9.4 k
TU CALIFICACIÓN
Napoléon vu par Abel Gance (1927)
A film about the French general's youth and early military career.
Reproducir trailer1:31
1 video
99+ fotos
DocudramaEpicHistorical EpicPeriod DramaWar EpicBiographyDramaHistoryWar

Una película sobre la juventud del general francés y su carrera militar temprana.Una película sobre la juventud del general francés y su carrera militar temprana.Una película sobre la juventud del general francés y su carrera militar temprana.

  • Dirección
    • Abel Gance
  • Guionista
    • Abel Gance
  • Elenco
    • Albert Dieudonné
    • Nicolas Roudenko
    • Edmond Van Daële
  • Ver la información de producción en IMDbPro
  • CALIFICACIÓN DE IMDb
    8.2/10
    9.4 k
    TU CALIFICACIÓN
    • Dirección
      • Abel Gance
    • Guionista
      • Abel Gance
    • Elenco
      • Albert Dieudonné
      • Nicolas Roudenko
      • Edmond Van Daële
    • 89Opiniones de los usuarios
    • 51Opiniones de los críticos
  • Ver la información de producción en IMDbPro
    • Premios
      • 4 premios ganados en total

    Videos1

    Trailer
    Trailer 1:31
    Trailer

    Fotos137

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    Elenco principal99+

    Editar
    Albert Dieudonné
    Albert Dieudonné
    • Napoléon Bonaparte
    Nicolas Roudenko
    • Napoléon Bonaparte enfant
    • (as Vladimir Roudenko)
    Edmond Van Daële
    Edmond Van Daële
    • Maximilien Robespierre
    Alexandre Koubitzky
    • Georges-Jacques Danton
    Antonin Artaud
    Antonin Artaud
    • Jean-Paul Marat
    Abel Gance
    Abel Gance
    • Louis Saint-Just
    Gina Manès
    Gina Manès
    • Joséphine de Beauharnais
    Suzanne Bianchetti
    Suzanne Bianchetti
    • La reine Marie-Antoinette
    Marguerite Gance
    • Charlotte Corday
    Yvette Dieudonné
    • Élisa Bonaparte
    Philippe Hériat
    Philippe Hériat
    • Antonio Salicetti
    Pierre Batcheff
    Pierre Batcheff
    • Le général Lazare Hoche
    Eugénie Buffet
    • Laetizia Bonaparte
    Acho Chakatouny
    • Pozzo di Borgo
    Nicolas Koline
    Nicolas Koline
    • Tristan Fleuri
    Max Maxudian
    Max Maxudian
    • Barras
    • (as Maxudian)
    Annabella
    Annabella
    • Violine Fleuri et Désirée Clary
    Henri Baudin
    Henri Baudin
    • Santo-Ricci - le berger corse
    • Dirección
      • Abel Gance
    • Guionista
      • Abel Gance
    • Todo el elenco y el equipo
    • Producción, taquilla y más en IMDbPro

    Opiniones de usuarios89

    8.29.4K
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    Opiniones destacadas

    10Kirasjeri

    Vive Napoleon! Vive Abel Gance!

    January 23, 1981. Radio City Music Hall. Nearly midnight. One of the most thrilling experiences of my life. "Napoleon", restored, and reconstructed, not seen for over fifty years, was debuting in front of 6,000 people packed into the great theater with Carmine Coppolla conducting a huge orchestra rising up on the lift as lighting cast fifty foot shadows of the conductor on the walls. The score was magnificent. By the end of the film when the tryptyches stretched the size of the screen to triple size filling the glorious famous sunburst proscenium, Radio City Music Hall erupted in a standing ovation - and Kevin Brownlow, who restored the film, at that very moment from the theater had Abel Gance (soon to die) live on the phone from France to hear the ovation! Just incredible. Glorious. The film is a masterpiece of the Twentieth Century. And a must see. The best scene was the battle in the Convention between the Girondists and Jacobins superimposed on Napoleon's escape from Corsica in a sea storm. Staggering editing and camera work. It is a tragedy for us all the the remaining chapters of Napoleon's life were never put on film as Gance planned.
    8Nazi_Fighter_David

    Gance needed a figure as powerful as "Napoleon" to fulfill his dream of super cinema

    Abel Gance's 'Napoleon' was premiered on April 7, 1927, at the Paris Opera House, the first movie to be accorded such an honor… It was been shown on a triple screen and to full orchestral accompaniment, running slightly under four hours…

    Impressive as it seems, it was conceived as the first of a six-part biography running many hours and tracing the life of Napoleon from childhood to the bitter end in St Helena… Fortunately-for Abel Gance who directed and for us-the project was only completed to that moment where Napoleon enters Italy at the head of the French army, and the later and less pleasant aspects of his spectacular career were left unfilmed... The Little Corporal, after all, is a less controversial figure than the Emperor…

    Gance needed a figure as emblematic and powerful as 'Napoleon' to fulfill his dream of super cinema…

    'Napoleon' is a masterpiece of excess:

    • The child Bonaparte keeps a pet eagle and wins a snow fight while at school in Brienne... In this sequence, the frame splits into nine subliminal images; as Napoleon watches his men entering Italy, the screen expands on each side to form a breathtaking panorama, then changes into three coordinated views of the scene…


    • The National Convention seems to sway and rock as Napoleon makes his escape from Corsica in a storm-tossed sailboat…


    • The Gallic of cabaret singers, Damia, leads French troops into battle personifying 'La Marseillaise'…


    'Napoleon' is like one grand musical composition. It throbs with life…

    That was Gance the great filmmaker who thought that film could do everything and who said to Kevin Brownlow: 'For me, the cinema is not just pictures. It is something great, mysterious and sublime.' Brownlow is known now not only as an English filmmaker and film historian but also as a great restorer of silent films, notably Abel Gance's 'Napoleon.'
    bowden-5

    Fantastic performance in London with Carl Davies

    At the weekend i went to see Napoleon at the Royal Festival Hall in London. I am a relative newcomer to silent moves but too see a 5 and a half hour performance with the London Philarmonic Orchestra was incredible. Loved it, there seems to be some dispute with Coppola about the rights to this production, but if it is ever done again, it is something that any serious movie goer should make an attempt to see. And to prevent others from seeing this with an orchestra would be a travesty. The music by Carl Davies added another dimension to what was a fantastic film. It would appear that the work is a lifes work for Kevin Brownlow, he should be very proud of this acheivements.
    9Bry-2

    Excellent -- but where's the DVD?

    I saw this back in '81 or '82, on the Big Screen at the Shrine Auditorium in Los Angeles, with Carmine Coppola conducting a live orchestra -- there has never been anything like that in all my movie-going experience! The closest that's come since was _Intolerance_, restored, with another live orchestra performing under the baton of the composer, Gillian Anderson (no, not the one from the X-Files). That, too, was an occasion to remember ... but where is Napoleon on DVD?

    As many other reviewers have said, Napoleon was a relevatory experience. Certainly, other films to that point had used most of the devices Gance employed so brilliantly (except, of course, his three-screen-wide "Polyvision"), but then sound came in and the requirements of the microphone killed the recently mobilized camera. The camera became very static for at least the next ten years of films -- dynamic camera movements only returned when sound mixing came in to being, and scenes could be shot MOS (mit out sound), with foley and overdubbing replacing the missed sounds.

    For this reason, Napoleon is important to see -- as a technical achievement. But Gance's artistry wasn't limited to gimmicks. His pacing, editing, and direction of the actors (including Dieudonne as Nappy -- looking amazingly Rod-Stewart-like) is excellent as well.

    Highly recommended -- and when the DVD comes out -- hopefully, with the fuller, five-hour restoration, and Coppola's music on one track, with a reconstruction of the original music on another (and perhaps Gillian Anderson has a score of her own to share?) -- you'll owe it to yourself, as a student of Film, to see it, over and over again.
    10Quibble

    Perhaps the greatest film ever made, but still being suppressed by legal battles...

    I was lucky enough to see the very latest restoration of Napoleon by silent film expert Kevin Brownlow at the Royal Festival Hall in London earlier this month (December 2004). Carl Davis was there in person to conduct the London Philharmonic Orchestra in a live performance of his own brilliant score. It was the most moving and overwhelming cinematic experience of my life and I doubt whether it can ever be bettered. The film is decades ahead of its time, the bravura editing and inspired direction reveal Gance as the true genius that he was.

    However...

    The very performance I attended was under legal threats from Coppola, who wished to ban its screening. Back in 1980-81, he and his Zoetrope Studio helped fund a restoration and he got his father to compose a score. He helped get the US audiences to recognise what a remarkable work of genius Napoleon really is, and all credit to him for trying to do so. This would all seem very well and good, but even in 1981 Coppola wasn't showing the best version of the restored film that he could have. He had cut it down from Brownlow's (then) latest version to fit the score his father had written. He also showed it at 24 fps instead of the intended (and more realistic - the movements are at a normal rate, not unnaturally sped-up) 20 fps. Throughout the 1980s, Brownlow and others in Europe kept finding better elements and more footage. Yet, Coppola's version was still being called "THE restoration" and not altered at all. Brownlow also found prints with more authentic editing, giving a much better idea of the order and number of cuts in many sequences (so many versions/reels of Napoleon have had inferior takes/editing put in by people other than Gance that it took time to discover the best and most authentic). It was becoming increasingly clear that Coppola's version was very much flawed and out-of-date with the new discoveries. In 2000, the latest and most complete version available (including the authentic tints, near-definitive editing in line with Gance's intentions, and the best print so far etc.) was screened in London. Carl Davis had altered and lengthened his magnificent score to match the latest version. Even after this showing in 2000, elements were still being improved to make the film as close as possible to Gance's intentions. The 2004 screening which I attended had a print that ran for nearly 5 and a half hours. Coppola's version runs for less than 4 hours and it hasn't been touched to include any improvements in print quality or more authentic tinting or editing.

    The Coppola version of Napoleon, with a run time of 223 minutes (3 hours and 43 minutes) is out on DVD in Australia. I do not know when or even if it will come out on DVD in the US. Rest assured, it will NOT be the best version of this great film, or anything close to it. Coppola and Zoetrope sold rights to their version of the film to Universal in the 1980s and so now the issue of rights has become entangled with a major studio (Universal Studios, incidentally, destroyed all their silent film negatives in 1947 - a very (in)appropriate choice of distributor for a film whose failure and subsequent neglect was mainly due to a horrendous re-editing by studios (MGM) in 1927).

    The Australian DVD, released by Universal, is filled with faults. Apart from inferior image quality (unlike the 2004 print, which was superb and scarcely a speck of dirt was visible any time during the whole 5 and a half hours), the final triptych sequence is horrendously cropped from 3.99:1 to 2.55:1 and isn't even adjusted for widescreen televisions. It's also exactly the same version from 1981 which, even back then, wasn't the best there was available. The music, admirable though it is, cannot compare to Davis' score (he has worked on many other silent film scores with great acclaim) - especially now that Davis has reworked the score for the latest version.

    Coppola's efforts to suppress the latest restoration are a dreadful example of precisely the kind of money-driven censorship and selfishness that Napoleon has been dogged by for eighty years. Not just the 90+ minutes of extra footage, but the score and print quality itself, makes the latest print by the BFI/BFA/Brownlow indispensable. Anyone who claims to have rescued this film (as Coppola did in 1981, even though Brownlow had been working for decades before then, alongside Gance himself, to remaster the film) and yet tries to ban a closer version to the original film is monstrously hypocritical. As much as I welcome any hope of seeing Napoleon on DVD, I recoil at the thought of thousands of people being forced to watch a terribly flawed and inferior version of this masterpiece. Even as I type, there are rumours of even more lost footage from Napoleon being found in Denmark - with any luck this will lead to an even better restoration than the 2004 one.

    This ongoing saga of restoration (and much credit is due to the person who seems to have the least legal rights out of the whole cast of those involved in the restored film: Kevin Brownlow) means that a DVD release of the Coppola version, with its many flaws, seems absurd and remarkably selfish and damaging. This film desperately needs to be released on DVD, but only in as close a form as possible to Gance's original masterpiece of 1927, seen by far too few people. That US rights-holders are trying to ban better versions with over 90 minutes extra in them is just another sad chapter in the story of this much-abused wonder of cinema. This is a magnificent film and deserves better than the shoddy and selfish treatment it has been given in America.

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    Argumento

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    ¿Sabías que…?

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    • Trivia
      Abel Gance remembered one scene that was removed by the censors--that of the execution of civilians by soldiers. The camera is used like a bullet, zooming towards one human target, then another, then another. The sequence is lost, although a still photograph does survive.
    • Errores
      Junoit makes a comment about not needing sand when an artillery shell dumps soil on the sign he is painting. This is based on an actual incident, but Junot was writing a letter for Napoleon not painting a sign.
    • Versiones alternativas
      There are apparently at least 19 different versions of this film, starting with the original 6-hours cut (in a "triptych" format, requiring three projectors on three screens, called Polyvision). It has been shown in various formats and different running times, including a 1934 version re-edited by director Abel Gance and featuring an added soundtrack.
    • Conexiones
      Edited into Napoléon Bonaparte (1935)
    • Bandas sonoras
      The Thrill of Being In Love (Love Theme of Napoleon and Josephine)
      Music by Carmine Coppola

      Lyrics by Italia Coppola (USA version)

      UK version: score by Carl Davis (based largely on works by Beethoven)

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    Preguntas Frecuentes17

    • How long is Napoleon?Con tecnología de Alexa

    Detalles

    Editar
    • Fecha de lanzamiento
      • 7 de abril de 1927 (Francia)
    • País de origen
      • Francia
    • También se conoce como
      • Napoleon
    • Locaciones de filmación
      • Environs d'Ajaccio, Corse, Francia
    • Productoras
      • Ciné France
      • Films Abel Gance
      • Isepa-Wengeroff Film GmbH
    • Ver más créditos de la compañía en IMDbPro

    Taquilla

    Editar
    • Presupuesto
      • FRF 20,000,000 (estimado)
    • Total a nivel mundial
      • USD 39,448
    Ver la información detallada de la taquilla en IMDbPro

    Especificaciones técnicas

    Editar
    • Tiempo de ejecución
      5 horas 30 minutos
    • Color
      • Black and White
    • Mezcla de sonido
      • Mono
      • Silent
    • Relación de aspecto
      • 1.33 : 1

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