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:: Thursday, May 27, 2004 ::

I went to the theater for the first time in months last Saturday. I want to see the upcoming summer releases: "The Day After Tomorrow", "The Stepford Wives", "Spiderman II" and went this past weekend to see "Shrek 2" but the theaters were packed, mostly with kids, so I bought a ticket (Matinee prices at the AMC are now $8:00 a ticket, it's getting ridiculous to think I get the used DVD's a few months later for $9.99 at Hollywood Video.) for "Troy" a movie I didn't really care to see.
I was pleasantly surprised.
Even though the "gods" are not represented, they are mentioned. Wolfgang Petersen ("Das Boot" , "The Perfect Storm") directs. The cast is tremendous, and the dialogue does Homer proud. Brad Pitt plays Achilles. Sean Bean (from the first "Lord of the Rings" movie) plays Odysseus. Brian Cox (the "original" Hannibal Lecter) plays Agamemnon. Paris is played by Orlando Bloom (also "Lord of the Rings" and "Pirates of the Carribean") Saffron Burrows , Brendan Gleeson, are also in the cast. Hector is played by Eric Bana (last year's "Hulk") Helen is newcomer Diane Kruger.
At first I didn't think she was beautiful enough to "launch a thousand ships" but I warmed to her after a while.
The set design and production values are befitting for a 200 million dollar movie, and both the individual fight scenes and the battle scenes are beautifully photographed. Roger Pratt ("Harry Potter and the Chamber of Secrets", "The Fisher King" and "Twelve Monkeys" for Terry Gilliam) lensed the film. Nigel Phelps, who did a similarly good job on "Pearl Harbor" did the production design.
I can't get over how much I love this movie.
It is long, but not boring. It plays as if it is historical drama, and the principals do mention the gods but they don't make an appearance. Petersen is not going for a Ray Harryhausen ancient Greece. Each bit of business is historically accurate, and the folks who made this movie are well versed in the mythology, and the history.
Brad Pitt, who hasn't starred in a movie since "Ocean's 11" which was an ensemble piece, is magnificent as Achilles, and some poeple in the audience were actually shocked when he dies in the end, and it is with an arrow through his ankle. All the nunaces of the epic poem "The Illiad" are touched upon, and people who know the mythology will not be disappointed, but people who don't will be able to follow the story.
9 of 10 on the Mikometer.
Only trouble with not personifying the Gods, is that the sequel has already been written, Homer's "Oddysey", and it is filled with beasts like the Cyclops and mermaids like the Sirens, so I don't see how they can turn that story into a historical drama.
The Trojan Horse makes a fantastic appearance, and the city of Troy and it's sacking are similarly fantastic.
I don't think I have been so pleasantly surprised by a film since I saw "The Fifth Element".
Next week": Roland Emmerich's "The Day After Tomorrow", the "global warming film". Previews are magnificent.
:: Michael Nyiri 9:37 PM Leave a Comment on this Post ::
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