
Food for the Soul: Napoleon’s Loot
Become a member: Subscribe
- Money & Markets
- Weekly Solari Reports
- Cognitive Liberty
- Young Builders
- Ask Catherine
- News Trends & Stories
- Equity Overview
- War For Bankocracy
- Digital Money, Digital Control
- State Leader Briefings
- Food
- Food for the Soul
- Future Science
- Health
- Metanoia
- Solutions
- Spiritual Science
- Wellness
- Building Weatlh
- Via Europa
Solari’s Building Wealth materials are organized to inspire and support your personal strategic and financial planning.

Missing Money
Articles and video discussions of the $21 Trillion dollars missing from the U.S. government
No posts
Your cart is currently empty!
- LATEST
- TOP SECTIONS
- SERIES
- Money & Markets
- Weekly Solari Reports
- Ask Catherine
- News Trends & Stories
- Equity Overview
- Cognitive Liberty
- Building Wealth
- The War for Bankocracy
- Digital Money, Digital Control
- State Leader Briefings
- Food
- Food for the Soul
- Future Science
- Health
- Metanoia
- Solutions
- Spiritual Science
- Wellness
- Via Europa
- BLOGS
- RESOURCES
- COMMUNITY
- My Account
- Log In
- Subscribe
- Search
- Shop
- Support
- Donate
- Log Out
Food for the Soul: Napoleon’s Loot

By Nina Heyn
Ridley Scott, the man who over half a century has given us Gladiator, Alien, Blade Runner, and The Martian, has not stopped making big movies. His latest is Napoleon—you do not get any grander than that in terms of subject matter. It is an ambitious biography of the emperor’s rise to power, his many battles, and his apparent obsession with Josephine. However, this being a movie where an English director directs an American actor (Joaquin Phoenix), the film has already garnered some negative reviews. Not surprisingly, it has been panned in France, and it is indeed flawed by some historical inaccuracies, the strange casting of an older, tall actor with a brooding countenance to portray a young, small Frenchman, and an Anglo-Saxon point of view on both the emperor and French history. On the other hand, the French film industry has produced few major Napoleon pictures since Abel Gance’s silent film from 1927 and Sacha Guitry’s biopic in 1951, so perhaps Ridley Scott’s movie will have to do for contemporary generations.
Our mission is to help you live a free and inspired life. This includes building wealth in ways that build real wealth in the wider economy. We believe that personal and family wealth is a critical ingredient of both individual freedom and community, health and well-being.
Nothing on The Solari Report should be taken as individual investment, legal, or medical advice. Anyone seeking investment, legal, medical, or other professional advice for his or her personal situation is advised to seek out a qualified advisor or advisors and provide as much information as possible to the advisor in order that such advisor can take into account all relevant circumstances, objectives, and risks before rendering an opinion as to the appropriate strategy.
Be the first to know about new articles, series and events.





































































































