via Wikimedia CommonsFilm & TVNewsFilm & TV / NewsRidley Scott’s Napoleon epic with Joaquin Phoenix will debut on Apple TV+Titled Kitbag, the film is scheduled to begin production in early 2022ShareLink copied ✔️January 16, 2021January 16, 2021TextThom Waite Ridley Scott’s upcoming Napoleon Bonaparte epic, Kitbag, has been picked up by Apple Studios, and is set to premiere on its streaming service, Apple TV+. Joaquin Phoenix was previously announced as the (frankly, perfectly-cast) French emperor and military leader back in October last year. It isn’t Phoenix’s first time teaming up to portray an emperor in a Ridley Scott film, either. Twenty years prior, he played the Roman emperor Commodus in the director’s Gladiator. “No actor could ever embody Napoleon like Joaquin,” Scott says in a recent interview with Deadline. “He created one of movie history’s most complex Emperors in Gladiator, and we’ll create another with his Napoleon.” “Napoleon is a man I’ve always been fascinated by,” he adds. “He came out of nowhere to rule everything – but all the while he was waging a romantic war with his adulterous wife Josephine. He conquered the world to try to win her love, and when he couldn’t, he conquered it to destroy her, and destroyed himself in the process.” Kitbag – which takes its name from the saying “there is a general’s staff hidden in every soldier’s kitbag” – will focus on this volatile relationship between Napoleon and Josephine, amid his swift and ruthless rise to power as one of history’s most famous leaders. Produced by the director’s Scott Free Films, with a screenplay by David Scarpa, the film is set to begin production in the UK in early 2022. Launched in late 2019, Apple TV+ also hosts On the Rocks, Sofia Coppola’s film starring Bill Murray and Rashida Jones, as well as Werner Herzog’s meteor documentary Fireball. Billie Eilish’s documentary The World’s a Little Blurry will also premiere via the streaming service in February, ahead of Coppola’s first major TV project. Expand your creative community and connect with 15,000 creatives from around the world.READ MOREJay Kelly is Noah Baumbach’s surreal, star-studded take on fameWatch: Owen Cooper on Adolescence, Jake Gyllenhaal and Wuthering Heights Jean Paul GaultierJean Paul Gaultier’s iconic Le Male is the gift that keeps on givingOwen Cooper: Adolescent extremesIt Was Just An Accident: A banned filmmaker’s most dangerous work yetChase Infiniti: One breakthrough after anotherShih-Ching Tsou and Sean Baker’s film about a struggling family in TaiwanWatch: Rachel Sennott on her Saturn return, turning 30, and I Love LA Mapping Rachel Sennott’s chaotic digital footprintRachel Sennott: Hollywood crushRichard Linklater and Ethan Hawke on jealousy, creativity and Blue MoonPillion, a gay biker romcom dubbed a ‘BDSM Wallace and Gromit’