Film Review
Dino De Laurentiis, the celebrated Italian film producer who lent his
support to such diverse films as Fellini's
La Strada (1954) and Roger
Vadim's
Barbarella (1968), came close
to meeting his own Waterloo when he became mired in this monstrously
over-ambitious historical epic. Having failed to raise the
necessary big bucks elsewhere, he turned to the Russian film company
Mosfilm, who generously stumped up a third of the film's colossal 25
million dollar budget. As it turned out, an alliance with the
Soviets was just what De Laurentiis needed to realise his grand
design. Filming in the Ukraine would be far less costly than
elsewhere in the West and De Laurentiis could call upon the support of
the Red Army, who supplied around 16,000 soldiers (including nearly
2000 cavalrymen). Labour costs were minimal, and so a vast area
of farmland in the Ukraine could be convincingly transformed into a
muddy battlefield without bringing down the entire Italian
economy. Apparently, 5000 trees were transplanted and two hills
flattened in the name of artistic verisimilitude. The Cold War
did have its upside.
For such a grand undertaking, who better to direct it than Sergei
Bondarchuk, the acclaimed Russian cineaste who had recently helmed the
most expensive film in history, the seven hour epic that was
War and Peace (1965)?
For his first English language film, Bondarchuk was fortunate to have a
cast consisting predominately of distinguished British and American
actors, including Rod Steiger and Christopher Plummer in the lead roles
of Napoleon and the Duke of Wellington. A by now severely
overweight Orson Welles makes a brief but magnificent cameo appearance
as King Louis XVIII, whilst an impressive supporting cast offers such
familiar faces as Virginia McKenna, Rupert Davies, Michael Wilding and
Terence Alexander. Despite the abundance of acting talent at his
disposal, Bondarchuk appears to be far more preoccupied with spectacle
than drama, and so once all of the characters have been introduced
(with indecent haste) the focus soon shifts to the battlefield, where
most of them get casually slaughtered.
The only reason anyone would want to watch
Waterloo is to marvel at its
climactic battle sequence, which takes up most of the second half of
the film and cannot fail to leave a lasting impression. Most of
this sequence was shot with five Panavision cameras running
simultaneously, the footage edited together to deliver a cinematic
experience of unprecedented nerve-racking ferocity. The sheer scale of
the battle is enough to take your breath away, but it is Bondarchuk's
masterful direction that draws the spectator into the heart of the
smoking, blood-saturated conflict and drives home the gruesome reality
of a 19th century military skirmish. What the film shows us is a
scene straight out of Hell, a scene of fury and confusion, in which men
and horses charge relentlessly against canon and rifle fire, to be
butchered in a boiling cauldron of savagery. Tracking aerial
shots of the battlefield deliver a profound sense of awe and horror at
the scale of the carnage, although the biggest shock comes only when
the hostilities have ceased and we are confronted with the terrible
human cost of the battle. If nothing else,
Waterloo offers us cinema's most
authentic and ambitious depiction of a Napoleonic battle.
Unfortunately, it falls down in virtually every other respect.
The film's main failing is that it makes hardly any attempt to develop
any of the characters, so most become little more than ciphers.
The only character that is convincingly drawn is Napoleon, but his
tendency to speak in pompous epigrams, coupled with Steiger's painful
overacting, does little to endear him to the audience.
Christopher Plummer's Duke of Wellington is a more likable proposition,
although the character is underwritten and feels more like a caricature
than someone who might actually have been a real person.
Wellington's final exchange with one of his generals provides a welcome
moment of light relief (Ubridge: "By God, Sir. I've lost my leg."
Wellington: "By God, Sir. So you have.") but other than this the
writing is pretty lacklustre, and the performances likewise. Nino
Rota's score is equally below par - it sounds as if he may have
composed it in his sleep.
Despite some very favourable reviews and a great deal of press
attention,
Waterloo was only
moderately successful at the box office and failed to recoup its
massive production cost. The film's lukewarm reception led
director
Stanley Kubrick to abandon his own plans to make a film on the life of
Napoleon (reputedly the greatest film he never made). It is
believed that the film originally ran to four hours, but was
cut back to half this length just prior to its release (hence
the apparent discrepancies in the closing credits).
Waterloo received no Oscar
nominations but won two BAFTAs (for its Art Direction and Costume
Design) in 1971. Since its first release in 1970, the
film's reputation has steadily
grown and today it is well-regarded, mainly on the strength of its
magnificent battle sequence, which was virtually unsurpassed until the
advent of
computer generated effects.
Waterloo
may not be the greatest of historical epics, but it is hard not to be
impressed by the enormity of its ambition and the mindboggling effort
that went into realising this ambition.
© James Travers 2012
The above content is owned by filmsdefrance.com and must not be copied.
Film Synopsis
With Paris besieged by the armies of Austria and her allies, the
Emperor Napoleon has no option but to abdicate and he is soon living in
exile on the Mediterranean island of Elba. Ten months later,
Napoleon escapes from his island prison and, upon his arrival in
France, soon assembles a small army. Realising that the newly
restored monarchy is threatened, King Louis XVIII commands Marshal Ney
to capture the former emperor and bring him back in an iron cage.
When Ney's troops encounter their enemy's on the road to Grenoble, they
are won over to Napoleon's side. On his return to Paris, Napoleon
receives a hero's welcome from the people, but once again his country
is soon at war with the rest of Europe. Arthur Wellesley, the
first Duke of Wellington, leads the British campaign to bring Napoleon
to heel, engaging the emperor's armies on France's northern border with
Belgium. The date is 18th June 1815.
A heavy downfall of rain increases Wellington's chances
of success, allowing him to choose his own battlefield. Waterloo
will be the site of the historical battle, a battle that will change
the course of European history and bring a decisive end to Napoleon's
reign...
© James Travers
The above content is owned by filmsdefrance.com and must not be copied.