Less a fact-based
recitation of historical events and more a poetic meditation on power, Eagle in a Cage explores the final phase
of Napoleon Bonaparte’s extraordinary life. Granted asylum by the British
Empire following his legendary defeat at Waterloo, Napoleon was exiled to the
small island of St. Helena, where he died six years later. Millard Lampell’s
script, a version of which was first produced for television in 1965 with
Trevor Howard starring, condenses the early days of the St. Helena
incarceration into a tight drama filled with political machinations and sexual
intrigue. Lampell’s version of Napoleon is not a man resigned to ignominy, bur
rather a virile conqueror scheming to reclaim his position as Emperor of
France. Among the many liberties that Lampell takes is suggesting that Napoleon
made a brazen escape attempt, even though history indicates that Napoleon
suffered debilitating health problems throughout his time on St. Helena.
Its
relationship to the truth notwithstanding, Eagle
in a Cage bursts with energy, ideas, and lofty language. Furthermore, UK
actor Kenneth Haigh gives a lusty performance in the leading role, imbuing Napoleon
with ego, lyricism, and malice. (The fact that Haigh doesn’t even
attempt a French accent is distracting, and so is the unexplained casting of
African-American actor Moses Gunn as Napoleon’s principal aide.)
Much of the
story concerns Napoleon’s friction with Sir Hudson Lowe (Ralph Richardson), the
haughty soldier charged with supervising Napoleon’s incarceration. Emboldened by the opportunity to humiliate a legendary figure, Lowe represents
the effect that proximity to greatness has on weak people. Conversely, Lord
Sissal (John Gielgud), the British aristocrat who arrives late in the story to
tempt Napoleon with the offer of a return to limited power, represents the
sadistic application of leverage, since he’s a callous snob. Shown in contrast
to these two characters, Napoleon occupies complicated middle ground. He evaluates everyone he meets on merit, belittling the craven and embracing the
bold, and yet he succumbs to avarice whenever the promise of reclaiming lost
glory appears.
Haigh captures all of those nuances well, even when Lampell’s
script wanders into such discursive bits as long scenes involving Madame
Bertrand (Billie Whitelaw), a companion of Napoleon’s whose relationship with
the deposed monarch is never clearly articulated. Scenes with Betty Balcombe
(Georgina Hale), essentially a groupie infatuated by Napoleon’s charisma, are
more pointed. Ultimately, Eagle in a Cage
is an odd sort of a picture, because it has the iffy production values and
jumpy editing of a low-budget production even though it also has the grown-up
subject matter and sophisticated dialogue of a prestige film. One can’t help
but wonder if plans to recruit a leading actor of greater notoriety, perhaps
Richard Burton or someone of his ilk, ran aground. Whatever the backstory, Eagle in a Cage is consistently
intelligent and thoughtful, a mannered study on the afterglow of conquest, with
the specter of death never far away.
Eagle in a Cage: GROOVY
3 comments:
I never heard of this film before reading your review, but now I plan to stream it from Amazon.
Thanks.
If you want to combine a historical figure with fictional behavior, it's better just to make up a character *like* the historical figure, and let the audience draw the association. Otherwise it's just made up nonsense.
Cool review. I've never heard of this one.
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