Battle Of Waterloo Scene | NAPOLEON (2023) Joaquin Phoenix, Movie CLIP HD

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Battle Of Waterloo Scene | NAPOLEON (2023) Joaquin Phoenix, Movie CLIP HD
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PLOT: An epic that details the checkered rise and fall of French Emperor Napoleon Bonaparte and his relentless journey to power through the prism of his addictive, volatile relationship with his wife, Josephine.
RELEASE DATE: November 22, 2023
GENRE: Action, War
STARS: Joaquin Phoenix, Vanessa Kirby
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www.fandango.com/napoleon-202...
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#napoleon #joaquinphoenix

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  • For the people saying we shouldn't complain about inaccuracies, imagine if the first scene of Saving private Ryan had been Eisenhower riding a horse charge in Omaha Beach. And Hitler showed up from behind the hills leading a flight of Apache helicopters from the Luftwaffe. This is how it feels watching this movie if you have the slightest knowledge about the Napoleonic wars 😂

    @pablogfmovil@pablogfmovil4 ай бұрын
    • That is way different and out of fetch argument you made up. Did it show Napoleon riding a car and Napoleon waterloo enemies using swords instead of guns? No so be quiet and come up with something better.

      @SpokeNyan1390@SpokeNyan13904 ай бұрын
    • history importance is surely something foreign for you @@SpokeNyan1390

      @dawidiskra733@dawidiskra7334 ай бұрын
    • ​@SpokeNyan1390 it showed the British using rifles with scopes 30years too early, napoleon firing on the pyramids which is something he would never do as he had great interest in ancient history and napoleon drowning an entire army in a frozen lake drowning thousands when in reality less than 200 drowned as they fled at the end of the battle? This scene alone is ridiculous since napoleon was quite literally incapable of riding his horse and travelled by carriage for the majority of the campaign, had to come off the feild at Waterloo as a result, never mind charging and fighting in hand to hand combat. Yeah no, it's ridiculous fantasy.

      @loyalpiper@loyalpiper4 ай бұрын
    • @@loyalpiper Ok, those are really good examples of how inaccurate this movie is. Sure. But I suppose who ever created this movie made it for people who are sheeples and NPCs, who can’t possibly see these mistakes. So you know what, those 3 or so mistakes, especially the scope rifles is bad. But what the guy comment above is trying to make it seem that the Napoleon film is beyond reality of what really happened in napoleon life. Such as cars or horses or whatever. You over here being reasonable than the guy I was replying to.

      @SpokeNyan1390@SpokeNyan13904 ай бұрын
    • wait isn't that what happened?

      @michaelforge1@michaelforge14 ай бұрын
  • Check out the 1970 movie ‘Waterloo’. A masterpiece in how to film battle scenes pre cgi. There were literally tens of thousands of extras used to film the massed ranks of the French and allied armies. One particularly shot where the camera pans from right to left along the allied line is simply breathtaking.

    @andrewstorey86@andrewstorey864 ай бұрын
    • The Gold Standard!

      @Grubnar@Grubnar3 ай бұрын
    • The aerial shots of the British squares under assault are magnificent… and the charge of the Scots Grays never ceases to hypnotize me. Even the scene where Napoleon bids his Old Guard farewell before exile is amazing (Another lost opportunity in this new film). I wish the full-length 4-hour (?) theatrical release was preserved and released on DVD at one point. But apparently, the film - in its original form - was never archived and is lost. What a shame.

      @JD0124@JD01243 ай бұрын
    • I actually stopped watching the clip halfway through. I'd like my money back 😅

      @chrisholland5138@chrisholland51383 ай бұрын
    • Correct me if I’m wrong but wasn’t the director Soviet & gained permission to use 20,000 Soviet Union soldiers as extras spending months training them on formations before even filming?

      @kaihiggins725@kaihiggins7253 ай бұрын
    • This movie is a kick in the park compared to 1970, sums up todays Hollywood no clue, Ridley Scott included

      @theend9494@theend94943 ай бұрын
  • Next thing you know Scott is going to make a movie with Abraham Lincoln fighting at Gettysburg.

    @masonreeves4775@masonreeves47754 ай бұрын
    • Either that, or a movie about the Lincoln Assignation and having Jefferson Davis sneak into the President's Box at Ford's Theater with a derringer.

      @staceyfake8303@staceyfake83034 ай бұрын
    • @@staceyfake8303 A shootout between Lincoln and his assasin, followed by a swordfight over the roofs of Washington...

      @TOFKAS01@TOFKAS014 ай бұрын
    • Everyone knows Abe Lincoln wasn't at Gettysburg.....he was too busy slaying vampires

      @andrewheaslip5785@andrewheaslip57854 ай бұрын
    • Abe going at it with Davis, while Lee and Grant face each other in an oldschool high noon gunfight.

      @masterexploder9668@masterexploder96684 ай бұрын
    • Actually factual, if you ask Scott

      @stampstock@stampstock3 ай бұрын
  • Napoleon swinging his sword and stabbing people in the midst of battle like a damn hussar is one of the most absurd things I have ever seen. What was Scott thinking? If Napoleon actually did something like that he would be dead in seconds because everyone would know who he was. Not to mention the fact that he would not be able to direct the battle.

    @Master-Mirror@Master-Mirror4 ай бұрын
    • Bare with me for you or anybody with low attention spans and who are Gen Z kids who can’t read a long comment: Literally you are complaining about one mistake from this scene. This is like people complaining why didn’t Iron Man just give the infinity gauntlet to captain marvel, why did he transport the stones to himself? Why didn’t Tony build multiple suits containing the contingency plan of teleporting the stones to the other powerful avengers? But you know why people didn’t say that during endgame? Because it just works. Now if you say that “endgame was a science fiction movie, it’s fake and not real.” Well take for example saving private ryan, that film made plenty of mistakes. Yet do you see people bi- I mean whine about those few mistakes? No because the film just works. So tell me, where is the logic that people like you are making? Because all I see is just complaining and whining.

      @SpokeNyan1390@SpokeNyan13904 ай бұрын
    • No no no. This is ONE mistake of the multitude of nonsense that i am seeing right now, i could do a god damn essay of 40 pages about every bloody thing that is wrong there because the only accurate thing are the uniforms !@@SpokeNyan1390 Someone pointed out that even the direction the Prussian are coming from is wrong godamnit

      @romainandrieux5948@romainandrieux59484 ай бұрын
    • its a movie kid. And if you were napoleon and they make a movie about you, you would like them to recreate your battles in an epic way.

      @thiagoalabat@thiagoalabat4 ай бұрын
    • So much bad faith from Ridlet simps. The battles we see even look shit with 20 people fighting in the background, even The Patriot was doing it better @@thiagoalabat

      @romainandrieux5948@romainandrieux59484 ай бұрын
    • ​@@SpokeNyan1390 Napoleon is a supposed biopic and Saving Private Ryan is not. If I made a biopic about George Washington and have him fist fight Cornwallis on the battlefield and said it just works then i am not making biopic i am making a fantasy movie inspired by George Washington. Since clearly Ridley Scott wants to focus more on Napoleons relationship with Josephine for his Biopic yet presents the simplest details wrong about Napoleon his biopic ends up as fantasy. This why people complain not because its not entertaining but that its marketed as an analysis of Napoleon yet its relying on bullshit Ridley Scott made up.

      @AngelA-mk5ty@AngelA-mk5ty4 ай бұрын
  • "Waterloo". 1970 starring Rod Steiger. NO CGI

    @rf3495@rf34954 ай бұрын
    • That movie is superb, should be remastered in 4K and re-released digitally on all platforms like Netflix, etc.

      @lyrand6408@lyrand64084 ай бұрын
    • @@lyrand6408YUP!

      @KoolKman@KoolKman2 ай бұрын
    • Yeah, 1970 "Waterloo" is the masterpiece. Majestic music, set of great actors, filmed with actual troops, clever dialogues. Ridley Scott has no idea how these battles were fought, none

      @nicolafiliber3062@nicolafiliber30622 ай бұрын
  • Scott had a 50% chance of getting the direction of Blücher’s attack correct. He butchered that too.

    @shintownalley@shintownalley3 ай бұрын
    • Well put.

      @MartinBeddall@MartinBeddall3 ай бұрын
    • Thanks for writing Blücher and not Blucher like many non german speaking folks out there😅

      @johannesklauer3386@johannesklauer33863 ай бұрын
    • The 1970 movie "Waterloo," was better from what I have seen. It was co-produced by the Soviet Union using Soviet troops as extras!

      @iamgermane@iamgermane3 ай бұрын
    • lol true. Also don’t forget when he writes to Josephine that after the battle of Borodino he tells her he’s 200 miles or something from Moscow. When it’s actually 70 miles. I mean they couldn’t even look at a map right

      @marshalmichelney-bc8qn@marshalmichelney-bc8qn2 ай бұрын
    • Not necessarily 50%, atleast he didn't have them coming from directly behind the French or from the sky

      @user-zy8cy6hn6o@user-zy8cy6hn6o2 ай бұрын
  • Safe to say, nothing like that happened at Waterloo. The whole set up was absurd.

    @clarkewood9983@clarkewood99834 ай бұрын
    • I know because I was there. It was nothing like that

      @pikiwiki@pikiwiki4 ай бұрын
    • Agreed what a farce of a movie , napoleon charging lol so funny , he never charged at all he watched from a distance

      @bonysminiatures3123@bonysminiatures31234 ай бұрын
    • Yeah I don't remember it being like this at all. Maybe it was that cannon ball I took on the chin early doors

      @Alex88148@Alex881484 ай бұрын
    • Maybe watch a old film from the 1970s called waterloo which is 1 million times better than this shit

      @markscouler2534@markscouler25344 ай бұрын
    • @@pikiwiki you must be as old as Ridley Scott... btw there are 1000s books about the battle, bunch of them written by people who were there.

      @bdleo300@bdleo3004 ай бұрын
  • Napoleon did not charge with his cavalry that day he was ill he was told to go rest a while and I believe that’s when Marshal Ney led his cavalry charge against Wellingtons Infantry squares. Napoleon’s strategic genius was not what it once was as before. The last act of the French that day was the infantry attack of the Imperial Guard.

    @fredlandry6170@fredlandry61704 ай бұрын
    • Napoleon wouldn't have charged at all. He'd have been at his commend post directing the battle.

      @awedgewood@awedgewood4 ай бұрын
    • Yes he committed the old guard....Full scale infantry advance no cavalry, nor he lead the attack but marshall Ney.....Inaccurate completely....

      @vortigen.9098@vortigen.90984 ай бұрын
    • …and the Guard advanced in column, not line. They were decimated and broke. There was no collision of line against line.

      @michaelmclaren7373@michaelmclaren73734 ай бұрын
    • Yeah, he was suffering from hemorrhoids!

      @user-gi8pk9uc7q@user-gi8pk9uc7q4 ай бұрын
    • "Get a life!" - Ridley Scott

      @spdutahraptor777@spdutahraptor7774 ай бұрын
  • One of the worst cases of historical inaccuracy put to film. Truly disgraceful treatment of the battle which shaped Europe for the next hundred years.

    @andrewsmith3918@andrewsmith39184 ай бұрын
    • Yes Napoleon really needed to win this battle.If the French had won then maybe the Prussians would not have eventually set up the Austrian Hungarian Empire.There by creating the first World War which led to National Socialist Germany which led to the Second World War.Thanks Wellington and Blucher.

      @karlydoc@karlydoc4 ай бұрын
    • The whole film felt this way. All they managed to do was show that he was awkward and it seems, has sex like a jack rabbit... Horrible movie making IMO

      @dfrost42@dfrost424 ай бұрын
    • Pardon my ignorance, but what were some of the more glaring historical inaccuracies in this movie?

      @stoneymcneal2458@stoneymcneal24584 ай бұрын
    • . . . From the Director of Gladiator and the screenwriter of The Day The Earth Stood Still remake. Just as long as there are "Epic Battle Scenes" and "Massive Explosions," audiences don't seem to care too much about accuracy; it's a shame that the producers but out this garbage and then this garbage makes a ton of money; there's no discernment in pop culture these days.

      @gterrymed@gterrymed4 ай бұрын
    • I guess, Napoleon didn't take part in a Charge at Waterloo, die he?

      @robertgaida3749@robertgaida37494 ай бұрын
  • Mon Dieu! I had heard that the Waterloo sequence was bad, but I never dreamed it was THIS bad. Forget the fact that absolutely no attempt was made to show any real tactics (but at least they did have the Anglo-Allied troops forming squares in the face of a cavalry charge) ... but trenches/field works? A huge French camp immediately behind the ridiculously thin battle line? The two armies just running at each other and looking more like "Braveheart" than Waterloo? Napoleon himself leading a cavalry charge, and with no Marshal Ney in sight (at least no officer that in any way resembled Ney) and then personally skewering at least one Brit? A sniper with a scope taking a pot shot at Nappy and blowing a hole in his famous hat? Napoleon turning and raising his sword as if to salute Wellington across the field? The list goes on. I actually think "Abraham Lincoln: Vampire Slayer" may have been a more historically accurate movie than this... but it's a close call. Watch Rod Steiger and Chirstopher Plummer in Sergey Bondarchuk's epic 1970's "Waterloo" instead of this pile of steaming merde de cheval from Sir Ridley "Were-you-there?" Scott.

    @staceyfake8303@staceyfake83034 ай бұрын
    • Nice serve, sir!

      @KeithHays-ek4vr@KeithHays-ek4vr3 ай бұрын
    • I thought Rod Steiger and CP were brilliant in that. Steiger particularly seemed to relished the role.

      @ryanwebb5082@ryanwebb50823 ай бұрын
    • @@ryanwebb5082 - I agree. - Rod Steiger owned the role. - I couldn't take my eyes off him. His performance made it easier for the other actors to play against. - I measure all other Napoleon actors against him. None have surpassed him.

      @KeithHays-ek4vr@KeithHays-ek4vr3 ай бұрын
    • @@KeithHays-ek4vrreally? Steiger the best Napoleon? What about Terry Camilleri and his portrayal of Napoleon in “Bill and Ted’s excellent adventure”?…..

      @TheWizardOfTheFens@TheWizardOfTheFens3 ай бұрын
    • @@TheWizardOfTheFens - Yeah. - You could be right there - or Napoleon Dynamite. - Rod couldn't dance like that!........

      @KeithHays-ek4vr@KeithHays-ek4vr3 ай бұрын
  • Ive paused this twice, about to comment, and I keep telling myself "Dont be a history nerd! Leave it alone!" Even when I saw a soldiers bayonet flopping, even when I saw Napoleon shouting commands instead of sending one of his messengers on horseback, even when the cannonballs seem to "blow up." But now, Napoleon riding in front, sinking his sabre into some private??? God what a stupid movie, and I thank those of you who referenced Monty Python!!

    @Skipjack7814@Skipjack78144 ай бұрын
    • I had the same feeling. I lived in Brussels and actually led tours of the Waterloo battlefield. I cringe at all the people who will think this is how it really was. If people really want to know, direct them to the PBS documentary on Napoleon. Rod Steiger made a better Napoleon.

      @barraindymacneil6256@barraindymacneil62564 ай бұрын
    • the bayonet thing is just the soft ones used by extras in combat scenes its not ideal but like.. it makes SENSE, you dont want metal ones being stabbed around i combat scenes fun ffact, in the battle of gaugamela scene in oliver stones 'alexander' for a brief moment you can see the white, tape covered balls on the end of sticks as safety heads for the spears you see it... as the left flank gets hit hard by persian infantry and the camera focuses on the close brutal fighting between the two sides right before it zooms out and focus on alexander right before he did the

      @elgostine@elgostine4 ай бұрын
    • To be fair, during the Napoleonic wars, in addition to round shot, various forms of ball were fitted with fuses to detonate in the air. Amongst the British developments was the implementation of Shrapnel. A ball filled with explosive and metal bits which had a fuse and detonated over the enemy to inflict injury to the infantry and gunners. Named after its inventor Colonel Shrapnel.

      @user-um1xo9ed1x@user-um1xo9ed1x4 ай бұрын
    • I can overlook the floppy rubber bayonets as just a technical "blooper". I can't overlook the sheer stupidity of the way this sequence was written / scripted.

      @staceyfake8303@staceyfake83034 ай бұрын
    • Wel said sir ! 👍

      @TheConfederate1863@TheConfederate18634 ай бұрын
  • Wait wait wait.... is that a British "sharpshooter", armed with a flintlock rifle that has a *SCOPE* like a modern day sniper rifle, taking a shot at Napoleon?! *WHAT THE ACTUAL SHIT, RIDLEY SCOTT?!*

    @doublep1980@doublep19803 ай бұрын
    • Uh huh. And it looks like a modern scope as well. Don't ask.

      @wayneantoniazzi2706@wayneantoniazzi27063 ай бұрын
    • I SIMPLY CAN'T BELIEVE IT. TO MASSACRE A GODLY MAN LIKE NAPOLEON WITH SUCH A RIDICULOUS WORK OF "ART"!

      @rayGuha1111@rayGuha11113 ай бұрын
    • Well, what did you expect after D-Day landing crafts in "Robin Hood"?

      @panthergraf9630@panthergraf96303 ай бұрын
    • Scope is about 150 years ahead of time.

      @artemusp.folgelmeyer4821@artemusp.folgelmeyer48213 ай бұрын
    • @@artemusp.folgelmeyer4821 They did exist, but they were completely inpractical, expensive and useless because the weapons at that time were too inaccurate and had an effective range of about 700 meters max..

      @articueilacoryphaeusdux5941@articueilacoryphaeusdux59413 ай бұрын
  • There looks to be a bout two thousand men in the entire battle field and the grass is green and as dry as a bowling green. Napolean swinging his sword in battle and then the shocking acting by the so called Duke of Wellington as Blucher suddenly emerges from nowhere is Monty Pythonesque. This is truly hideous!

    @markmooroolbark252@markmooroolbark2524 ай бұрын
    • Right! It seems so paltry compared to "Waterloo". Glad I didn't shell out money to see "Napoleon" at the theater.

      @samuelglover7685@samuelglover76854 ай бұрын
    • I'm even wondering why I wasted 5 min of my time on this video. Thank God I didn't pay for a ticket and waste 2+ hours of this in the theater on this.

      @staceyfake8303@staceyfake83034 ай бұрын
    • It’s so inaccurate I was waiting for some storm troopers off Star Wars to arrive! 😂 absolute crap 💩

      @thomaspickard4138@thomaspickard41383 ай бұрын
    • They couldn't even be bothered to get someone who vaguely looked like Wellington. And there's no gravitas to the man. A mere shadow of Christopher Plummer.

      @grailchaser@grailchaser2 ай бұрын
  • Lashing a spyglass to your Baker rifle... Now that's soldiering.

    @EagleEyeM4@EagleEyeM43 ай бұрын
    • Even Sharps short cameo of Waterloo was better than this rubbish...

      @brianperry@brianperry2 ай бұрын
  • That sniper must have been grinding all night to unlock that scope

    @nicoospina9639@nicoospina96394 ай бұрын
    • 😂hahahahahaha

      @manuelalejandro8935@manuelalejandro8935Ай бұрын
  • Napoleon was not in the thick of the fighting at waterloo. And the battle did not turn into a disorganized melee. Glad I didn't waste my money on this at the cinema.

    @Northman1963@Northman19634 ай бұрын
    • You and me both. Ridley Scott is now incapable of making a decent movie.

      @headshot6959@headshot69594 ай бұрын
    • You guys would hate Inglorious Basterds then

      @marvies5959@marvies59593 ай бұрын
    • Sadly I wasted $ on 5 tickets !

      @user-uf2pd1cz1z@user-uf2pd1cz1z3 ай бұрын
    • ​@@marvies5959 I haven't watched Napoleon movie, but I don't like historical mistakes like those.

      @El_Gungas@El_GungasАй бұрын
  • Imagine George W Bush was charging at the frontline and shooting enemy soldiers in a movie about the Iraq War.

    @DaVynciPro@DaVynciPro4 ай бұрын
    • Look, I like fiction as much as the next guy, but you're asking the audience to imagine Bush the Lesser risking his own precious skin. Nobody's gonna buy that, it's way too implausible for a good story.

      @samuelglover7685@samuelglover76854 ай бұрын
    • @@samuelglover7685 lol true, atleast Napoleon actually used to charge from the front with his men when he was just a lowly officer (got bayonetted in the thigh as well)

      @guardiadecivil6777@guardiadecivil67774 ай бұрын
    • With time, battles were starting to get really huge, and Napoleon was a lot about multitasking and trying to micromanage every little thing, which simply got impossible with increasing scope of the battlefield. This ended up on him relying on his various generals and marshalls and was one of the reasons how he could be defeated after retreating from Russia. Coalition did receive some serious asskicking before but you can observe how over the years his victories became closer and more bloodier. He wasn't very "economic" with troop conservation, though he did produce results. In following campaings, coalition went to focus more on directly fighting Napoleon's generals who were varied in terms of their quality. Personally charging into the fray did happen in history, but it was a dangerous venture - you could die, you lose sight of the battle, usually it was done when were in dire straits for that extra morale boost and hoping that a scary cavalry charge would cause a mass rout.

      @masterexploder9668@masterexploder96684 ай бұрын
    • yes but napoleon was on the field and already fough fight in italy and in toulon and in others battles.

      @red-one5923@red-one59234 ай бұрын
    • LMAO that's hilarious to think about hahahaha

      @ladistar@ladistar3 ай бұрын
  • "Ridley, how should we shoot this climactic battle, to really do justice to the characters and real historical figures?" "Just...have them run at each other on horses. I don't know, it worked for Peter Jackson." "Are you sure?" "Excuse me, mate, were you there? No? Then fuck off. Also, give the green bloke a sniper scope, he needs a sniper scope so that we'll know he's a sniper." "What role does he play in the film?" "He doesn't play any role at all. Just shoots at Napoleon in a throwaway bit." "That seems like poor directing-" "Excuse me, mate, were you there when I directed this film? No? Then fuck off."

    @sociallyinept1079@sociallyinept10794 ай бұрын
    • I'm jealous that I didn't come up with this! As far as "the green bloke"... So according to Sir Ridley, Marshal Ney was not at Waterloo, but (fictional) Richard Sharpe was?

      @staceyfake8303@staceyfake83034 ай бұрын
    • @@staceyfake8303 95th rifles were present at Waterloo. But the movie has this single man, using a sniper scope, with an officer spotting for him and requesting permission to fire like a modern sniper, rather than what the rifles were. I'd rather they'd got Sharpe in, to be perfectly honest.

      @sociallyinept1079@sociallyinept10794 ай бұрын
    • Just imagine if this battle was extensively documented by both the French and the British and even the Prussians. This was so bad and if I could I would ask my money back from the ticket. This movie is quite a fine example that it's not (always) a question of money to make a good product.

      @fmvgomes@fmvgomes4 ай бұрын
    • Ridley "Just a get life, mate and stop nitpicking everything" Scott. Lol.

      @masterexploder9668@masterexploder96684 ай бұрын
  • I get that a Hollywood films has to make a film exciting, but with the Napoleonic wars you really don't have to make anything up to make it exciting to watch.

    @JGG3345@JGG33454 ай бұрын
    • Very good point.

      @samuelglover7685@samuelglover76854 ай бұрын
    • Hollywood writers do this for everything, give them a beloved video game with an already great story and they will figure out a way to mess it up with their "professional" retelling

      @SmokeDog1871@SmokeDog18714 ай бұрын
    • I know right! Especially if its about one of the most important era in history. This is like a ww2 movie with Italians surrendering after Americans killed Hitler in the battle of Berlin.

      @thylacine6922@thylacine69223 ай бұрын
    • To be fair Hollywood does the same when making anything to do with WW2... Did you know that only American forces were in WW2... according to Mr Spielberg...

      @brianperry@brianperry2 ай бұрын
  • I was half expecting Wellington to charge as well and personally engage Napoleon in an epic 30 minute one-on-one sword fight where Napoleon is eventually disarmed and toppled off his horse. Wellington points his sword to Napoleon’s throat and demands surrender to which Napoleon says “Merde! Va te faire foutres ”. Being sporting and in recognition of a gallant foe (and not understanding French) Wellington allows him to honourably retire from the field of battle whereupon all hostilities cease. My understanding is that most British casualties resulted from forming squares to repulse cavalry attacks - ten or eleven of them. This was successful but it meant that between each cavalry attack squares were subjected to artillery fire which, although not always well coordinated, could not fail to kill and maim many in the densely packed formations. After the capture of La Haye Sainte French gunners fired into central squares from close range with canister to devastating effect, such that reduced squares had to amalgamate.

    @santodomingo1605@santodomingo16054 ай бұрын
    • And then Barbie and Captain Marvel and Galadriel defeat them both and all their soldiers in the ultimate triumph against Patriarchy!

      @bdleo300@bdleo3004 ай бұрын
    • Yeh like a scene out of Star Wars 😂

      @thomaspickard4138@thomaspickard41383 ай бұрын
    • LMAO this would fit Scott's weird thing about slightly altering historical quotes or moments for no reason whatsoever. Maybe when Wellington asks Napoleon to surrender he goes, "Napoleon dies, but he does not surrender." lolol

      @NixonRules963@NixonRules9633 ай бұрын
    • Scott actually planned an epic sword duel between Napoleon and Wellington but scrapped the scene since he was concerned with criticism of historical innacuracy.

      @shahmatsimplex4144@shahmatsimplex41443 ай бұрын
    • You made me laugh 😂😂😂😂

      @waverider8549@waverider85493 ай бұрын
  • if only the movie had been about him, the battles, the achievements, the history ..... but its a love story :(

    @dreddythomas3514@dreddythomas35144 ай бұрын
    • Ridley Scott didn't know what he was doing. If he had wanted to make a movie about Napoleon and Josephine, he should have made that movie and not also try and depict Napoleon's entire career.

      @Master-Mirror@Master-Mirror4 ай бұрын
    • Brando as Napoleon? Not familiar with that one. Are you thinking of Rod Steiger as Napoleon in "Waterloo?" (1970)?

      @staceyfake8303@staceyfake83034 ай бұрын
    • @@staceyfake8303 No Marlon Brando played Napoleon in a 1960s movie called "Desiree".

      @TOFKAS01@TOFKAS014 ай бұрын
    • Its not a love story, its a fuck story

      @SmokeDog1871@SmokeDog18714 ай бұрын
    • You can't easily compress Napoleon's entire career, rise and downfall into one movie, at best you only get some bullet points.

      @masterexploder9668@masterexploder96684 ай бұрын
  • I'll never understand why Ridley Scott decided to make a fairy tale of Napoleon

    @arhickernell@arhickernell4 ай бұрын
    • I think he likes to start projects before the script is finished, just kind of wings it and trusts in his genius direction and good acting to pull off another big hit

      @SmokeDog1871@SmokeDog18714 ай бұрын
    • Especially when the actual story is so incredibly interesting and doesn't need to be exaggerated for it to be engaging

      @thegaminglizard7053@thegaminglizard70533 ай бұрын
    • Were u there sir?

      @memergas740@memergas7402 ай бұрын
    • @@memergas740 this argument is stupid. There is a lot of books telling what happened. Not just the life of Napoleon is well documented, but his marshals as well.

      @luizclaudioaltenburg3761@luizclaudioaltenburg37612 ай бұрын
    • @@memergas740 "Your honor, you weren't there, so how can you charge this man guilty? Checkmate!"

      @haltingultraman7147@haltingultraman714711 күн бұрын
  • Even the side where the prussians are comming is wrong.....From Wellingtons point of view, it would have been on the left....

    @TOFKAS01@TOFKAS014 ай бұрын
    • Not to mention there would have been alot more. It’s so depressing that the filmmakers of 1970 were much more aware of how many extras were needed. That film was done with CGI and STILL captured the true nature of the battle.

      @TotallyNotCountDooku@TotallyNotCountDooku3 ай бұрын
  • Napoleon himself would laugh at this!😂

    @marshallmerritt7500@marshallmerritt75004 ай бұрын
    • I can imagine both Napoleon and the Duke of Wellington watching this, laughing and shaking their heads. Wellington says "by God what nonsense" whilst Napoleon laughs "pauvres imbéciles"

      @Apollo890@Apollo8904 ай бұрын
    • @@Apollo890 No doubt😆

      @marshallmerritt7500@marshallmerritt75004 ай бұрын
    • Never knew he led the attack at the Battle of Waterloo 1815. According to History book, he wasn’t feeling he had some sort of tummy ache.

      @christophermichaelclarence6003@christophermichaelclarence60033 ай бұрын
    • I nearly choked on my cornflakes when I saw the unbelievable, how does Ridley Scott sleep at night

      @theend9494@theend94942 ай бұрын
    • Then why don't all of you critics go make a movie ?!? 😂

      @nickroberts-xf7oq@nickroberts-xf7oqАй бұрын
  • “SIR! BLUCHER!” *Every horse on the battlefield rears up on its hind legs and whinnies*

    @davidjunker2772@davidjunker27722 ай бұрын
  • A Year ago i went to a small museum in Sens, France. To my surprise in the middle of it is a very dark room with Napoleon‘s hat on display, which he supposedly wore during the battle of Waterloo. No bullet holes in it. It still sent chivers down my spine because it was so unexpected to see that object there.

    @gerhardschirlo2220@gerhardschirlo22204 ай бұрын
    • "On the field of battle, his hat is worth forty thousand men!" - the Duke of Wellington. Insane that the reverence Napoleon's hat can induce in people is still around til this day.

      @NixonRules963@NixonRules9633 ай бұрын
    • @@NixonRules963 Even though he didn't win all the time and lost the "Big One" in the end Napoleon for most of his career was a winner, and people admire a winner.

      @wayneantoniazzi2706@wayneantoniazzi27063 ай бұрын
  • Napoleon was ill and had a lot of stomach pain that day (and days prior). Has it ever been established whether or not there was any possible case of either food poisoning or attempts at poisoning him in the days before the battle? Because based on all accounts from that time, there's one apparently very consistent report in that Napoleon was unequivocally ill (especially the very day of the battle, of all things).

    @lyrand6408@lyrand64084 ай бұрын
    • I think it was more constant stress and the beginning cancer.

      @TOFKAS01@TOFKAS014 ай бұрын
    • Actually, truth be told, Joaquin Phoenix loooks really ill and reluctant at the start of this scene which reflects some reality. Napoleon was very poorly on the day of Waterloo, unable to take the field and lead his cavalry (early stomach cancer? acute stress and worry?) and so does Mr Phoenix. He looks as though he is walking in a lot of pain and discomfort. Kudos to the makeup people.

      @xj900uk@xj900uk4 ай бұрын
    • Piles.

      @timkeiley1068@timkeiley10684 ай бұрын
    • He had a bad case of the "Farmer Giles" or piles lol

      @paulmorrison-hs4lw@paulmorrison-hs4lw4 ай бұрын
    • The most recent study done of his death back in 2021 suggested Napoleon died of gastric cancer, so he was very likely suffering from it (or at least suffering from ulcers) at Waterloo.

      @Ugh-Fudge_Bwana@Ugh-Fudge_Bwana4 ай бұрын
  • 132.000 against French Army... 45.000 Prussians, 43.000 Belgian, Dutch, Germans and only 24.000 British. But I see only British troops again.

    @stefanocamoni229@stefanocamoni2292 ай бұрын
    • Bro even sharpe did it better we get to see dutvh troops.

      @Malcio@MalcioАй бұрын
    • what ? i believe this is one thing the movie got right. Blucher arrived late at the battle because he was defeated a few days before, the ''germans'' are the Kings German Legion, which is seen here and the brits suffered most of the casulties (also shown here). Only troops not shown are a few Duche, which doesnt matter since there were very little soldiers from these.

      @Peter-xg1ol@Peter-xg1ol3 күн бұрын
  • This is stupidly inaccurate. At this stage of the battle, the imperial guard were the ones advancing. They would have advanced in column, not in the line depicted in this scene. This is incredibly important - since this is how british infantry were able to defeat them. The kind of free-for-all depicted in this scene seems in-accurate. British volleys devastated those French columns, and the Imperial guards broke and ran. This is also significant - as it was the first time they had ever failed an assault, and because of this, the rest of the french line tucked and ran too.

    @energy_matters@energy_matters4 ай бұрын
    • Napoleon himself did not participate.

      @jeffpotipco736@jeffpotipco7364 ай бұрын
    • While your synopsis of what happened is correct, don't even waste your breath trying to compare what actually happened to the fictional account that Sir Ridley "Were-you-there?" Scott dreamed up.

      @staceyfake8303@staceyfake83034 ай бұрын
    • @@staceyfake8303 Ah, yes. The 57th Trans brigade, with the 124th African wheelchair regiment in support really turned the tide that day.

      @jeffpotipco736@jeffpotipco7364 ай бұрын
    • @@jeffpotipco736he certainly didn’t go poking his sword in a cavalry charge, no. 😂

      @sybren7797@sybren77974 ай бұрын
    • The British infantry were partially obscured behind a reverse slope, as well. - They weren't standing out in the open, exposed. Wellington used deception as one of his tactics. - That is important as well.

      @KeithHays-ek4vr@KeithHays-ek4vr3 ай бұрын
  • I cannot believe Napoleon ever made a charge into the thick of battle at Waterloo.

    @jenniturtleburger3708@jenniturtleburger37084 ай бұрын
    • He didn't. This movie is garbage.

      @timothystan2430@timothystan24304 ай бұрын
    • @@timothystan2430 Yeah, I figured.

      @jenniturtleburger3708@jenniturtleburger37084 ай бұрын
    • He was suffering with thrombosed hemorrhoids at Waterloo.

      @cpurssey982@cpurssey9823 ай бұрын
    • Oh no Napoleon actually did lead a cavalry charge at Waterloo. You guys for real? He charged in dual wielding his light sabers. Only Wellington calling in his tanks and spitfires saved him from certain defeat.

      @marshalmichelney-bc8qn@marshalmichelney-bc8qn2 ай бұрын
    • The film has Napoleon in a cavalry charge at the Battle of Waterloo. This never happened.@@marshalmichelney-bc8qn

      @gary1477@gary14772 ай бұрын
  • "I'm a history!" in the voice of Ralph Wiggum of the Simpsons is how this movie should be regarded. I'm surprised that the British sniper shooting at Napoleon wasn't wearing a ghillie suit.

    @gordonmacdowell8117@gordonmacdowell81173 ай бұрын
  • Yeah, no. Where's Hougement and La Haye Sainte? Also, where's the strategy here? Just throw your infantry and cavalry at the enemy and you win, NO. As a result it feels cheep and rushed. Also the fact that the french speak english, it really stings for people who expect historical accuracy like me, it sounds really weird and destroyed the immersion for me.

    @lukethomas.125@lukethomas.1254 ай бұрын
    • My point exactly! I did a presentation on this in college, and this scene disappointed me.

      @daguroswaldson257@daguroswaldson257Ай бұрын
  • 4:01 Someone please CGI Sean Bean's face onto this guy.

    @elxaime@elxaime4 ай бұрын
    • Sharpe eh?😏 Great series.

      @RaidenTheRipper950@RaidenTheRipper9504 ай бұрын
    • ​@@RaidenTheRipper950 sharpe's waterloo is better than this nightmare

      @wykaegis@wykaegis3 ай бұрын
    • Now that's soldiering!

      @robertgeddes5417@robertgeddes54173 ай бұрын
  • Ah yes, nothing like using World War and Medieval military advisors to show you how Napoleonic warfare went down.

    @dastemplar9681@dastemplar96814 ай бұрын
  • The Godzilla scene was fortunately cut out.

    @mikey29211@mikey292113 ай бұрын
  • They had the budget and actors to make a great historical movie, but instead we got this.

    @JohnnyRico118@JohnnyRico1184 ай бұрын
    • Yeah I liked it. Braveheart also wasnt historically accurate either. Vikings the TV series definitely wasnt historically accurate.... god damned entertaining though.

      @jaredc.8849@jaredc.88494 ай бұрын
    • @@jaredc.8849not enough BBC on the battlefield i wanted to see some black azz

      @russiasvechenaya58@russiasvechenaya584 ай бұрын
  • They should have had at least one platoon of Cheyenne Warriors, for added "Realism!" Oh: and Napoleon should have stood in the stirrups and yelled "I FART IN YOUR GENERAL DIRECTION!!"

    @Skipjack7814@Skipjack78144 ай бұрын
  • Are we sure this was not a reenactment by Monty Python's Batley Townswomen's Guild. I am sure the battle of Waterloo was a lot longer and Napoleon never fought at the battle.

    @sunjamm222@sunjamm2224 ай бұрын
    • Either the ladies re-enactment of Waterloo or their re-enactment of Pearl Harbor. Really can't tell the difference... Sir Ridley's sequence doesn't look anything even remotely close to either.

      @staceyfake8303@staceyfake83034 ай бұрын
    • Well Borodino lasted all of 5 seconds apparently so you're lucky to get 5 minutes

      @ExVeritateLibertas@ExVeritateLibertas3 ай бұрын
  • Who's Waterloo was it? Napoleon's or ridley Scott's?

    @rontruocchio5744@rontruocchio57443 ай бұрын
    • BROOO😂😂😂😂

      @EpicHistoryTVFAN@EpicHistoryTVFAN3 ай бұрын
    • What

      @kjp.7714@kjp.77142 ай бұрын
  • The historical accuracy of this film was simply breathtaking, almost as good as Abraham Lincoln, the Vampire Hunter.

    @tvgerbil1984@tvgerbil19843 ай бұрын
  • There's only one battle of Waterloo and that's in the 1970 film version which catpures the vast scale and horror of that encounter. Scott's version (all be it cramped into an already overfull attempt at Napoleon's life) looks like a minor battle and sadly the lack of numbers tell.

    @timothypoulter8285@timothypoulter82852 ай бұрын
  • They cut the lightsabre duel between Napoleon and Wellington. Might as well have left that in.

    @jetuber@jetuber3 ай бұрын
  • I miss Rod Steiger.

    @funkyalfonso@funkyalfonso4 ай бұрын
    • and Christopher Plummer even more.

      @joegatt2306@joegatt23063 ай бұрын
  • Except for one British Square, I saw nothing that resembled Waterloo.

    @roderickreilly9666@roderickreilly96664 ай бұрын
  • the battle scene of this movie is such a huge disappointment. If Steven Spielberg was given a chance to make a film about Napoleonic war, it would be so brutal and memorable.

    @akkeut1324@akkeut13244 ай бұрын
    • Mel Gibson would have killed it. It wouldn’t be historically accurate either, but it would be exciting and entertaining.

      @cockoffgewgle4993@cockoffgewgle49933 ай бұрын
  • Note to self Don't be a drummer boy in Ridley Scott's movies

    @colleen9026@colleen90264 ай бұрын
    • OUW

      @belgeld@belgeldАй бұрын
  • napoleon personally fighting in waterloo? never happened.

    @ristosorri301@ristosorri3014 ай бұрын
    • Yeah. This movie is trash bro.

      @EpicHistoryTVFAN@EpicHistoryTVFAN3 ай бұрын
  • На счет фильма Наполеон могу сказать следующее: В фильме ОТЛИЧНЫЙ визуал и изумительная актëрская игра. Батальные сцены самобытны и реалистичны, так что зритель не теряется в происходящем. Сценарий хорошо раскрывает исторический контекст и взаимоотношения между персонажами. Фильм чередует события между сражениями, политическими интригами и любовными линиями, таким образом, заскучать во время просмотра НЕВОЗМОЖНО физически. Главный герой вовсе не ничтожество, а рассудительный, исполнительный, целиустремленный, расчетливый, холоднокровный и амбициозный человек. Наполеон не из тех, кто легко сдаëтся. Он из бедной семьи и поэтому знает, что удача не достанется человеку, если тот не возьмëт еë в свои руки. Он отлично командует артиллерией и хорошо разбирается в тактике. В битве за Тулон в его лошадь попадает пушечное ядро, но Наполеон не колеблясь ведëт солдат в атаку, что очень многое говорит о его силе воли. Многие люди упустили основную мысль фильма, а именно, что не бывает всесильных людей, Наполеон талантливый, но всё же человек, и следовательно - неидеален. Он решает судьбы тысяч людей, меняет карту Европы, но в то же время режется бритвой и забывает шляпу перед свиданием. Ему не чужды эмоции и романтика, и как любой человек, герой Хоакина Феникса снидаем страстями: похотью, гордыней, высокомерием, ревностью. Добравшись до невиданных высот, Наполеон забыл о главном, а именно о том, что он такой же человек как все, и даже его возможностям есть предел. Наполеон подлетел слишком близко к солнцу, и оно сожгло его. Наполеон очерствел из-за власти и стал жертвой своих амбиций. Основная мысль фильма лучше всего прослеживается в битве под Ватерлоо, где Наполеон с сарказмом приказывает солдатам остановить дождь. Вот, что я имею ввиду, когда говорю, что Наполеон 2023 - воистину Великое Кино. Тем, кому кажется, что Хоакин Феникс лишен харизмы Наполеона скажу следующее: Когда герой Хоакина Феникса оказывается на острове Эльба, то он бросает вызов своей судьбе и берëт своë по праву. Его возвращение во Францию не увенчалось успехом, но Наполеон не бездействовал. Герой Хоакина Феникса не стал мириться с унижением и хотя бы попытался что-то изменить. Таким образом герой Хоакина Феникса в очередной раз проявляет силу воли и стойкость своего характера. С исторической точки зрения картина очень недоставерна, но основную суть тех событий создатели передали довольно точно. Сама же личность Императора Франции перенесена на экран без изменений. Все те жизненные трудности с которыми столкнулся Наполеон Бонапарт и черты его характера нашли воплощение в актëрской игре Хоакина Феникса. Как я уже сказал, в картине много исторических неточностей, но это ХУДОЖЕСТВЕННОЕ произведение, а не документальное. Я настоятельно рекомендую посмотреть этот фильм каждому здравомыслящему человеку, уделите ему всë нужное для этого внимание, оно того стоит. Я просмотрел этот фильм за один вечер и ни о чем не жалею. 👍👍👍👍👍👍👍👍👍👍👍👍👍👍👍👍👍👍👍👍👍👍👍👍👍👍👍👍👍👍

    @mushikamysh840@mushikamysh8408 күн бұрын
  • Considering this battle shaped the world , it's a terrible display of real events.

    @wwallace0071@wwallace00714 ай бұрын
  • That sickly glazed over look is so inspiring.

    @highwind8124@highwind81244 ай бұрын
    • Yeah, you can see why Napoleon was considered so charismatic, the charisma is so well done with the monotone, dead eyed look in every scene.

      @jasontibbetts9981@jasontibbetts99814 ай бұрын
    • @@jasontibbetts9981 😂 its so true

      @TheOrientalNightFish@TheOrientalNightFish4 ай бұрын
    • It didn't really work in this movie, but I could buy it at Waterloo - Napoleon wasn't in a good condition there and it could show how he literally falls apart just like his empire.

      @masterexploder9668@masterexploder96684 ай бұрын
    • I can’t tell whether you’re talking about Phoenix or the cinematography, or both.

      @cockoffgewgle4993@cockoffgewgle49933 ай бұрын
  • This movie was more about my own Napoleon Total War online battles than the real Napoleon 😂

    @francoisclouatre7464@francoisclouatre74645 күн бұрын
  • Then the Winged Hussars arrived, coming down the mountainside.

    @henrick_the_lover@henrick_the_lover4 ай бұрын
  • Ridley Scott really mess up Napoleon i glad i didn't went to see it in theatre. ,now how good it is Waterloo in 1970 that is a master piece.

    @jeanchaillou2532@jeanchaillou25324 ай бұрын
  • I SIMPLY CAN'T BELIEVE IT. TO MASSACRE A GODLY MAN LIKE NAPOLEON WITH SUCH A RIDICULOUS WORK OF "ART"! The concept of rifle scopes were first even thought of in around 1840s. And at 4:00, we see a man trying to snipe out Napoleon with a scoped musket. JUST, WOW....

    @rayGuha1111@rayGuha11113 ай бұрын
  • Wow napoleon was fighting too! This is like when Hitler was battling in Stalingrad, very memorable and very true!

    @hughjayn1s@hughjayn1s2 ай бұрын
  • Since Wellington was facing South, wouldn't the Prussians have approached from his left (the East)?

    @djolley61@djolley614 ай бұрын
    • yes

      @martinthevegFFC@martinthevegFFC4 ай бұрын
    • I do believe

      @anthonyehling3732@anthonyehling37324 ай бұрын
    • This is the leastest least of inaccuracies but it is true nonetheless 😂 But it's like a small stain of ketchup in a table full of blood

      @pablogfmovil@pablogfmovil3 ай бұрын
    • And more to the rear

      @garylovatt8177@garylovatt81773 ай бұрын
  • I always thought the British line was lying down as the French advanced. Then they stood surprising the French cutting them down with volley fire , the French line was broken and they retreated and the battle was won.

    @martinmoore7279@martinmoore72794 ай бұрын
    • Yes. This is a case where history is more interesting than its cinematic dramatization.

      @Philmoscowitz@Philmoscowitz4 ай бұрын
    • The British infantry line was on a reverse slope to conceal their numbers. When the French came over the rise the British lines stood up and fired taking the French by surprise. Oh, and there were no 'trenches' at Waterloo.

      @russelldutton8117@russelldutton81174 ай бұрын
    • Yep.

      @KroMagnum4@KroMagnum44 ай бұрын
    • ​@@russelldutton8117I've heard the story that that day it rained heavily, and Napoleon's artillery was heavy, it sank in the mud, while England was light and had the advantage to win the battle

      @alexsandrohbyyhygodoydelim930@alexsandrohbyyhygodoydelim9304 ай бұрын
    • @@alexsandrohbyyhygodoydelim930 It certainly rained but mostly the night before. Napoleon acceded to his Marshals requests and delayed the start of the battle to 11:30 for the reasons you mentioned. On the artillery, both sides had varying sizes of artillery denoted by the weight of shot. The French infantry actually had guns used in the same fashion as the skirmishers, which were obviously lighter pieces. But the most interesting thing I found was, while the French used the new metric system, the old imperial system of pounds and ounces did not mean the same weight of shot for different countries. A pound was a different weight in Britain, Prussia, Austria and Russia to name a few. Anyway, by commencement of the battle the ground was firm if heavy for most things. Though I imagine Napoleons Daughters would have been awkward to move. The heaviest field guns in Europe.

      @user-um1xo9ed1x@user-um1xo9ed1x4 ай бұрын
  • Bro why is everyone complaining about a sniper scope 💀

    @brickalry@brickalry3 ай бұрын
  • Napoleon crossing the Alps in a Mule 32 years old Josephine was married with 26 years old Napoleon in March 9,1796 49 years old Joaquín and 35 Vanessa 14 years OLDER than her The battle in the ice lake never happened Napoleon didn't see Maria Antonieta Napoleon spoke Corso an Italian language and French Joaquín spoke English with an American accent Green papers with arsenic in his wall in his bedroom in Elba Island. Stomach ulcers

    @zv3456u-@zv3456u-4 ай бұрын
    • "Napoleon crossing the Alps in a Mule" Thats in fact correct. He crossed it on a white horse only on the picture.... "The battle in the ice lake never happened" Well, it was an episode during the Battle of Austerlitz during the russian retreat. But of course the real battle was totaly different. "Napoleon didn't see Maria Antonieta" Instead they didnt show the realy thing Napoleon witnessed: The storming of the Tullerie-palace and the massacer of the royal swiss-guard. This errupion of brutality deeply traumatised him. He had a panic towards uncontrolled civil uprisings during his reign because of that. "Green papers with arsenic in his wall in his bedroom in Elba Island. Stomach ulcers" Not because of that, but because of a genetical disposition. Several members of the Bonapart-family had stomac-cancer.

      @TOFKAS01@TOFKAS014 ай бұрын
    • @@TOFKAS01 arsenic in Napoleon's hair according with analysis

      @zv3456u-@zv3456u-4 ай бұрын
    • @@zv3456u- Yes, but not in a critical level.

      @TOFKAS01@TOFKAS014 ай бұрын
    • is the language/accent in an English language film really that critical? I can't think of too many films/tv shows (historical) where the French, Italian/Roman, Spanish, Viking etc characters spoke EXACTLY as they would have done at the time being portrayed.

      @Invinciblez18@Invinciblez184 ай бұрын
    • @@TOFKAS01Great exposition of proving some of that guy points wrong. Now let me add on to that exposition. Below is me explaining how some mistakes of the film should not mean the film is bad overall. Of me explaining to these people who say “napoleon is inaccurate” is mostly wrong. So bare with me for you or anybody with low attention spans and who are Gen Z kids who can’t read a long comment: Literally people are complaining about one or a few mistakes from this scene. This is like people complaining why didn’t Iron Man just give the infinity gauntlet to captain marvel, why did he transport the stones to himself? Why didn’t Tony build multiple suits containing the contingency plan of teleporting the stones to the other powerful avengers? But you know why people didn’t say that during endgame? Because it just works. Now if people say that “endgame was a science fiction movie, it’s fake and not real.” Well take for example saving private ryan, that film made plenty of mistakes. Yet do you see people bi- I mean whine about those few mistakes? No because the film just works. So tell me, where is the logic that these people are making? Because all I see is just complaining and whining. Just like you pointed out. Like damn these people make no sense.

      @SpokeNyan1390@SpokeNyan13904 ай бұрын
  • Despite all of these inaccuracies, I can say: At least, they didn't make Napoleon black

    @edvinparmeza1298@edvinparmeza12983 ай бұрын
    • You missed the scene where Ridley has Napoleon going through transition to Nancy Bonaparte?

      @user-uf2pd1cz1z@user-uf2pd1cz1z3 ай бұрын
    • No, but they did have a black population in France at the time, which never happened either. All the slaves went to the French West Indies.

      @daguroswaldson257@daguroswaldson257Ай бұрын
  • The soldier that shot Napoleon's cap had a scope on his flintlock tied on with rags.

    @rontruocchio5744@rontruocchio57443 ай бұрын
  • Ce poate fi mai groaznic decăt un Napoleon vorbind engleză! Cred că împăratul se răsucește în mormănt!

    @danielpaval6453@danielpaval6453Ай бұрын
  • its a nice detail to actually see a sergeant use his pike to keep the men in formation

    @danielhall6354@danielhall63543 ай бұрын
  • Things this movie got incorrectly: The prussians arrival was at the right side. Not left! (French Perspective) You can't put a spyglass onto a musket! Napoleon and Wellington never met in the battlefield! Didn't Napoleon also send the imperial Guard?

    @Xarotmix@Xarotmix4 ай бұрын
    • 95th rifles the bloke in green didn't use muskets they used baker rifles which were technical sharp shooters but they never used a scope

      @markscouler2534@markscouler25344 ай бұрын
  • It would have been nice if it even made half an attempt at historical accuracy. Rod Steiger was much better as was the film.

    @johngallagher8775@johngallagher87754 ай бұрын
  • This scene is a crime against historical accuracy. Really can't believe anyone would have the balls to portray Waterloo like this

    @OnHighway61@OnHighway613 ай бұрын
  • Napoleão em cima de um cavalo, no meio de uma batalha corpo a corpo? Simplesmente impossível.

    @thiagoelazzi@thiagoelazzi4 ай бұрын
  • The worst part is that this actually looks really good

    @danielhall6354@danielhall63543 ай бұрын
    • That's the whole point. It doesn't have to look right, it just has to look good. And put butts in seats.

      @wayneantoniazzi2706@wayneantoniazzi27063 ай бұрын
    • @@wayneantoniazzi2706 But it didn't really did it?

      @stevem2323@stevem23233 ай бұрын
    • @@stevem2323 Good question! I have no idea. From what I gather people who know next to nothing about Napoleon like the movie and those who DO know about Napoleon hate it. So how much money it's making is open to question.

      @wayneantoniazzi2706@wayneantoniazzi27063 ай бұрын
    • @@wayneantoniazzi2706 That too, but i was referring to putting buts in seats results, he disappointed i think, financially.

      @stevem2323@stevem23233 ай бұрын
    • @@stevem2323 I believe that's the case. I just took a quick look (Honestly I don't care how much money a movie makes since I'm not going to get any of it anyway!) and it looks like it's only made 137 million at the box office which doesn't cover its 200 million budget. Not good.

      @wayneantoniazzi2706@wayneantoniazzi27063 ай бұрын
  • This scene made it look like the ant-Napoleonic forces had thin lines and not too many cavalry were in the charge. The filming made it look like the anti-napoleon forces should have been overwhelmed.

    @mturner89@mturner894 ай бұрын
  • If this did happen which would be ridiculous but image being a line infantry soldier and the emperor of France himself slices you with a saber

    @playboypaul420@playboypaul42025 күн бұрын
  • I saw a more accurate representation of the battle last time I checked my blocked toilet.

    @martiansoldier@martiansoldier3 ай бұрын
  • Why couldn't Scott at least find someone who remotely looks like Bonaparte?

    @thomaswalsh3570@thomaswalsh35703 ай бұрын
  • Even if you don't care about historical accuracy, why spend all that time showing people in careful formations only for them to go into a mosh pit?

    @Tiger74147@Tiger741474 ай бұрын
  • The more i watch this the more i appreciate the 1970 Waterloo movie.

    @tugsahyorgozlu107@tugsahyorgozlu10716 күн бұрын
  • Everybody gangsta till Cap'n Crunch put his hat on.

    @PrinceFlynnRider@PrinceFlynnRider2 ай бұрын
  • Ya missed the stirrup there Napoleon.

    @Wandering_Alabama1819@Wandering_Alabama18193 ай бұрын
  • Napoleonic armies would avoid hand to hand combat as much as possible for the following reasons: a. they had guns b. soldiers don't want to charge into into metal spikes with no armour

    @Luke_Sandy_High_Ground@Luke_Sandy_High_Ground4 ай бұрын
    • c. they were terrified of the Redcoats at close-quarter fighting. "Well posted, and Wellington knows how to post it, and attacked from the front, I consider the English infantry to be impregnable, owing to its calm tenacity, and its superior aim in firing." - General Reille "The English infantry in close combat is the very devil!’" - General Foy.

      @headshot6959@headshot69594 ай бұрын
    • ​@@headshot6959😂😂😂

      @adelaidesngan604@adelaidesngan604Ай бұрын
  • Ah yes the good old iconic Napoleonic Era Sniper

    @P4Tri0t420@P4Tri0t4202 ай бұрын
  • I am sure Ridley is having a bit of a laugh here.

    @johnminshull6309@johnminshull63094 ай бұрын
  • Watch the 1970 film, Waterloo with Rod Stiger and Christopher Plummer.

    @davidg2247@davidg22473 ай бұрын
  • It fact that the Imperial Guard marched up the hill and near the top wellington's redcoats stood up and fired volley after volley (a red coat line could fire 4 volleys a minute and they where line up 3 deep and one line fired one was always relaoding and one was shooting and one preparing to shoot), eye witness accounts said the imperial guard took 18 volleys before they broke.

    @gregheuston5826@gregheuston58264 ай бұрын
    • Incorrect, british drill always used 2 lines, not 3

      @loyalpiper@loyalpiper3 ай бұрын
    • The British were on the reverse slope. One of the earliest uses of a reverse slope defense, which is a staple of modern armies.

      @scottsmith8381@scottsmith83812 ай бұрын
  • This Waterloo is a fantasy.

    @DonTitoNYC@DonTitoNYC2 ай бұрын
  • Napoleon was like Hannibal Barca who lost at Zama

    @Brekisigurdsson2000@Brekisigurdsson20003 ай бұрын
  • Waterloo movie from the 70s is so much better, what is this nonsense?

    @willthfc@willthfc4 ай бұрын
  • Что ж, можно точно сказать, что у Ридли Скотта получился первый ТикТок-фильм. Буквально нарезка сцен (в том числе и батальных), которые теперь можно полностью заливать на ютуб и смысл фильма от этого не потеряется никак. В общем, кинематограф можно описать фразой "Он эволюционирует, но назад".

    @user-ob1hz8bi3b@user-ob1hz8bi3b4 ай бұрын
    • В советской истории из Наполеона сделали..." Гитлера", но если посмотреть в глубь, что можно сейчас сделать, а не было возможности в советские годы, то можно узнать, что Наполеон не шёл войной на Россию, его Провоцировали...Англия и нажимали на Александра1.!!!😢😮

      @YTEIUTOIY@YTEIUTOIY4 ай бұрын
    • Absolutely brilliant comment

      @welcelebrateourredemption@welcelebrateourredemption4 ай бұрын
  • Heehee, Nappy charging with the cavalry at Waterloo. I visited the site (in Belgium) a few years back. A huge portrait of Nappy in the visitor centre. Wellington?, Blucher?.....who are those guys?!!

    @user-yf7gj4xz1s@user-yf7gj4xz1s4 ай бұрын
  • i didn't see this movie.Ty for sparing me the torture.

    @kyndjal3118@kyndjal31182 ай бұрын
  • Why did they use this terrible filter camera work

    @pc3983@pc39833 ай бұрын
  • Was Ridley put up to this failure against his will? Is it not like him, or did he just quit trying?

    @joecoupon8299@joecoupon82994 ай бұрын
  • At this point i expected Napoleon and Wellington to do a duel on horses and then even a mexican standoff after some brutal fist fight in the midst of the battle. 🤦🏻‍♂️

    @lyndonferaud3965@lyndonferaud39652 ай бұрын
  • Hollywood has frequently fumbled the ball when dealing with the spectrum from historical accuracy to box office appeal. Meaning criticism no matter where the lines are drawn. Napolean is a visually stunning and entertaining movie. Joaquin Phoenix is a journeyman actor and did an excellent job.

    @reddiver7293@reddiver7293Ай бұрын
  • LMAO! Napoleon didn't lead any charges at Waterloo! I'm all for artistic license when it adds to the story, but this is just ridiculous. Ridley Scott has made many wonderful films, but this isn't one of them. Really, he hasn't made a good movie since Black Hawk Down (2001).

    @Philmoscowitz@Philmoscowitz4 ай бұрын
    • ブラックホークダウンは完璧な戦争映画だが、 これを見せられると、あれも史実とどれほど食い違った演出が入っているのかと不安になる

      @shundiver1048@shundiver10484 ай бұрын
    • The film has Napoleon in a cavalry charge at the Battle of Waterloo. This never happened.@@shundiver1048

      @gary1477@gary14772 ай бұрын
  • I feel like the one made from the soviet union during the cold war was better

    @unknown4o8er@unknown4o8er4 ай бұрын
  • “The end of Napoleon.” -The Duke Of Wellington

    @danieltondorf-dick6083@danieltondorf-dick60833 ай бұрын
  • I don't know of any real history buffs who think that this is a good movie. Several of my friends who were looking forward to it will not even bother seeing it.

    @TR-mg1eq@TR-mg1eqАй бұрын
  • What the hell was that!? Who was the director because he turned up at the wrong battle.

    @user-um1xo9ed1x@user-um1xo9ed1x4 ай бұрын
  • And then after all this, Napolean gets exiled to Helena, where he eventually meets Edmond Dantes and asks him to deliver a letter to a Monsiour Clarion when he gets back to France.

    @somerandom7458@somerandom74584 ай бұрын
    • That was on Elba during his first exile, not the second exile to St Helena

      @horatiohuskisson5471@horatiohuskisson54714 ай бұрын
    • @@horatiohuskisson5471 I'm some random internet commenter, not a saint.

      @somerandom7458@somerandom74584 ай бұрын
    • @@somerandom7458 prove it

      @horatiohuskisson5471@horatiohuskisson54714 ай бұрын
    • @@horatiohuskisson5471 never mind, I thought we were on the same page 🫤

      @somerandom7458@somerandom74584 ай бұрын
  • A musket with a scope, are they having a giggle ?

    @snowflakemelter1172@snowflakemelter11723 ай бұрын
  • Why is Napoleon leading a cavalry charge? Also, why was Wellington English when he was born and raised in Dublin, Ireland, and even educated in Ireland ??

    @paulmorrison-hs4lw@paulmorrison-hs4lw4 ай бұрын
  • Where’s his joker suit

    @endeend1@endeend14 ай бұрын
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