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Long ago, there reigned a clan of Speedo-wearing militaristic psychopaths called the Spartans. They lived beneath a copper-colored sky, on a copper-colored land, amid copper-colored fields, in copper-colored homes made from copper-colored stone. Legend has it that they would outline their copper-colored pecs and abs with ash to enhance their manly buffness, and yet these were men of action and honor, not "philosophers and boy lovers" like their namby-pamby rivals the Athenians.
Lunatic machismo was cultivated early. From the age of seven, Spartan boys were trained in the art of humorlessness, and made to beat each other into submission. Little is known of the Spartan women, but scholars assume they were fierce.
Spartans were men of few words. They spoke in a language composed almost entirely of monosyllabic stupidities. In that strange time, among those strange people, a voice rang out perpetually from the heavens. No one knows who spoke it, but historians agree that this holy text was silly and repetitive and devoted by and large to what they now term "the totally butch awesomeness" of Spartan deed. History remembers their ethos: "Only the hard and strong may call himself Spartan. Only the hard. The strong." It remembers their war cry -- "For honor's sake, for duty's sake, for glory's sake, we march. We march" -- and the immortal words of their fateful end: "We are undone! Undone, I tell you!"
Such magnificent verbiage was memorialized by Frank Miller and incorporated into the text of 300, his graphic-novel retelling of the Battle of Thermopylae, in which the titular quantity of Spartan studs fended off a billion gazillion Persian invaders. Marshaling the full resources of high-end computer imaging and the full capacities of hard-core fanboy nerditude, writer-director Zack Snyder (he of the unexpectedly decent Dawn of the Dead remake) has now brought Miller's book to "life."
Slathering pancake makeup on its actors, then pasting them into digital backgrounds, 300 takes the synthetic blockbuster one step closer to total animation; its bland, weightless monochromatics make Sin Citylook like the grungiest neo-realism. It's a ponderous, plodding, visually dull picture, but the blame shouldn't be put on Snyder's skills, per se, and it has nothing to do with his ambition to blur the distinction between CGI and photography. Frankly, it's the slavish, frame-by-frame devotion to Miller's source material that's the problem. That explains both the risible screenplay and why the movie, for all its liberation from the real world, never takes full-winged flight into its own peculiar universe. Bogged down by respect for Miller's medium -- he's almost as faithful to 300 as Gus Van Sant was to Psycho -- Snyder seems to have forgotten that where comic-book panels indicate movement, movies can actually move.
The exception to the rule of inertia comes fitfully in certain action scenes, of which there are enough to satisfy the action-buff bloodlust the film seeks to aggravate and sate. Here and there, Snyder makes good use of the lesson of The Matrix, slowing the slices, dices and decapitations to a digitally calibrated crawl, the better to relish all 360 degrees of their stupendous ass-kickery. Tolerate the lobotomized dialogue and some half-assed political intrigues, and you'll find a good ten minutes of 300 worth posting on YouTube. You can never go wrong with rampaging battle elephants. Throw in a war rhino, some silver-masked ninja magicians and an eight-foot-tall godking who looks like RuPaul beyond the Thunderdome (Rodrigo Santoro as Xerxes), and 300 is not without its treats.
Delicacies of dismemberment aside, 300 is notable for its outrageous sexual confusion. Here stands the Spartan king, Leonidas (Gerard Butler), and his 299 buddies in nothing but leather man panties and oiled torsos, clutching a variety of phalluses they seek to thrust into the bodies of their foes by trapping them in a small, rectum-like mountain passage called the "Gates of Hell(o!)" Yonder rises the Persian menace, led by the slinky, mascara'd Xerxes. When he's not flaring his nostrils at Leonidas and demanding he kneel down before his, uh, majesty, this flamboyantly pierced crypto-transsexual lounges on chinchilla throw pillows amid a rump-shaking orgy of disfigured lesbians.
On first glance, the terms couldn't be clearer: macho white guys vs. effeminate Orientals. Yet aside from the fact that Spartans come across as pinched, pinheaded gym bunnies, it's their flesh the movie worships. Not since Beau Travailhas a phalanx of meatheads received such insistent ogling. As for the threat to peace, freedom and democracy, that filthy Persian orgy looks way more fun than sitting around watching Spartans mope while their angry children slap each other around. At once homophobic and homoerotic, 300 is finally, and hilariously, just hysterical.
Seen a trailer and was awestruck. Loved the comic, but if ot's like you say keeping to strict to the original comic I will probably get very dissapointed. I thought Sin City was too alike the comic, frame by frame. If this is worse - I shudder. Is it the respect for Frank Miller that makes it like this. I wonder what he thinks himself...
I agree with your review, but, as a student who's studied Greek and Roman history fairly in-depth, I can add that the historical aspect of this film is an utter mess. Beyond matching a one sentence description of the battle of Thermopylae, everything about this film is wrong. Notable examples are: -Sparta was ruled simulatenously by two kings. -The entire male population was a part of the army: there were no politicians. -The oracle prophesized that Sparta would lose a king in the battle with the Persians or Sparta itself would fall.
A wonderful analysis of the most irritating aspects of this film. Unfortunately, I have the feeling that too many folk will lap it up like a dog laps vomit. For them, I simply ask that they keep in mind that CGI and colour palette do not a scintillating nor worthwhile film make.
I REALLY can't wait to see this today. I've got my ticket and so do most of the dudes in my office. We are really looking forward to the violence-porn that is 300. It's simple, we're dudes and it doesn't get much better than a 2 hour battle set to heavy metal music. Throw in the war rhino, the elephants, and the ninjas and we were hooked. But I will say this: This was the most entertaining review I have ever read. I giggled like a schoolgirl. You hit the nail on the head. You are completely right. The homoeroticism is obvious and flagrant. It's funny that a group of beer drinking, flannel wearing, he-man types would be so excited to see a bunch of dudes in man panties frumping about. But we do.
Boooooo! thats your amatuer opinion.
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