Apologies if this double posts I sent this over eight hours ago and it failed to appear: A sort of synchronicity, I viewed Woody Allen's "Love and Death" released in 1975, which I always wanted to see. There are some funny scenes somewhat re-enacted from the time of the Emperor Napoleon and are quite interesting. They required fairly large groups of re-enactors, filmed in Hungary, and I was delighted by the picture. Although putting comedy and a battlefield a difficult action, it has some very funny moments, almost a warning about old weapons and the challenge of authenticity. The main plot involves Woody Allen and Diane Keaton's role in the assassination of the Emperor Napoleon's double, events in Russia before and events after the attempted murder. A legend in New Orleans, Louisiana, holds that a relative of Thomas Jefferson's wife, of the LaFite family, with the President's knowledge, arranged the seashore exchange of a double for Napoleon in exile and that he is buried in the Lafitte cemetery after a heart attack off the Yucatan, according to a Sunday supplement of the Times-Picayune a number of years ago. In 1974 the Scottish Medical Association reviewed the official autopsy and found some disagreement in the "P.I" report and the attending physicians performing it. However I think it was agreed they had been looking at Napoleon. I have read these years ago and as I recently read of a a call for some DNA testing, thought to inform the list as perhaps there is more to the story. George Myers