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Tonight, the hubs and I went to see 300, the movie adaptation of the graphic novel by Frank Miller (Sin City). The title refers to 300 Spartans led into battle against a much more formidable Persian army (The Battle of Thermopylae, 480 B.C.) by King Leonidas of Sparta.
I wish I could do this review justice, but truth is I watched much of it with my hands over my eyes. My husband and I take turns choosing the movies and this movie was his pick. He was so happy. I am such a good wife.
The ticketers checked my ID before I was allowed to purchase tickets, and I chalked that up to the fact that it's so gory they want to make sure no underage kids see it (although there were some idiot parents in the theater with their tweens).
The ultra-violent battle scenes dragged on and on. There was the stabbing and the hacking and the hail of arrows. There were the requisite beheadings and slashings where blood flew out of wounds in slow-motion.
When regular old soldiers weren't intimidating enough, the movie makers brought out stampeding rhinos and charging elephants. I sensed the audience was tiring of all the violence. In fact, even though the audience was loaded with teenage boys, the only yelps and cheers happened in a non-battle scene when Queen Gorgo (a badass in her own right) takes swordly matters into her own hands.
The cast consisted of a bunch of unknown actors (as far as the average movie goer is concerned), and that made it boooring for me to watch. I mean, I hated Troy, too, but at least there was Eric Bana and Orlando Bloom to provide some eye candy.
The movie was shot in a high-contrast, grainy style, where the actors looked like they were sprung from the pages of a comic book. The entire movie was dark and moody, and the only vibrant colors were blood and the red of the Spartan cloaks.
If you are a fan of Frank Miller and his graphic novels you'll probably love the movie. I read that the director was very true to the novel and matched it frame-for-frame. Me? I was just happy the movie was less than two hours and there was popcorn. My pick next time.
300, directed by Zack Snyder. Rated R.
Comments
Wow, I loved 300!
I also LOVE it when a film features lesser known actors! Even some of my favorite stars lack the ability to disappear into a role, and I enjoy watching a movie when I can see the characters rather than the pretty, famous people.
I found 300 really gripping and stylized and, for what it's worth, no one in the audience I watched it with was losing interest at any point. We most definitely cheered our way through it with baited breath. Although for full-disclosure, it was a theater full of film geeks!
I'm sorry you didn't enjoy the film, but hooray for taking turns at the movies with your partner! :)
Liz Rizzo
I blog at Everyday Goddess and On The Lot.
Liz, I agree
I love movies featuring total unknowns as well, but when I'm watching a movie I don't really want to be seeing, I want *something* to grab my attention, and usually it's an actor I know that does it.
I saw the movie in a theater full of geeks (in Silicon Valley) not necessarily film geeks. I thought for sure they'd be pumped up by the Spartans' small victories, but not one person yelped or cheered until the Queen well, you know. (Don't want to spoil it.) That really surprised me.
Also, it bothered me that the actress playing the queen looked exactly like Connie Nielsen in Gladiator.
Stefania Pomponi Butler
Contributing Editor, Arts & Entertainment, BlogHer
I blog:
CityMama
Kimchi Mamas
Family Food
Not quite true to the book
Interestingly, I just read that the director decided to amp up Queen Gorgo's part. In the book, she makes a token appearance or two. But the director wanted her more involved so that the movie would appeal more to women. Supposedly this worked well - women in test audiences gave it a very high score, leading the studio to change its planned ad campaign and run commercials for it during shows like "Gray's Anatomy." (I read all this in "Entertainment Weekly" yesterday.)
I have not seen the movie, but I'm glad that they gave the queen more to do than just sit around in a frame. I've gotten in trouble before for criticizing Frank Miller's depiction (or in this case, lack thereof) of women, but it seems that he generally doesn't portray female characters in nearly as complex ways as he does male.
Suzanne, BlogHer Contributing Editor - Feminsim & Gender
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