Stanley’s Kubrick Napoleon: the greatest movie never made

Author(s) : CASTLE Alison (ed.)
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Stanley’s Kubrick Napoleon: the greatest movie never made
© Taschen

 
From the publishers:
For 40 years, Kubrick fans and film buffs have wondered about the director's mysterious unmade film on Napoleon Bonaparte. Slated for production immediately following the release of 2001: A Space Odyssey, Kubrick's “Napoleon” was to be at once a character study and a sweeping epic, replete with grandiose battle scenes featuring thousands of extras. To write his original screenplay, Kubrick embarked on two years of intensive research; with the help of dozens of assistants and an Oxford Napoleon specialist, he amassed an unparalleled trove of research and preproduction material, including approximately 15,000 location scouting photographs and 17,000 slides of Napoleonic imagery. No stone was left unturned in Kubrick's nearly-obsessive quest to uncover every piece of information history had to offer about Napoleon. But alas, Kubrick's movie was not destined to be: the film studios, first M.G.M. and then United Artists, decided such an undertaking was too risky at a time when historical epics were out of fashion.
 
This edition features the original script, essays examining the screenplay, Jean Tulard's essay on Napoleon in cinema, transcripts of interviews conducted by Kubrick with Oxford professor Felix Markham, costume studies and nearly 17,000 Napoleonic images (accessed via the online database).

Year of publication :
2011
Place and publisher :
Köln: Taschen
Number of pages :
2874
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