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300 (film)

300 is a 2007 American epic historical action film[4][5] based on the 1998 comic book series of the same name by Frank Miller and Lynn Varley. Co-written and directed by Zack Snyder, with Miller serving as executive producer and consultant, the film is a fictionalized retelling of the Battle of Thermopylae in the Greco-Persian Wars like its source material. The plot revolves around King Leonidas (Gerard Butler), who leads 300 Spartans into battle against the Persian "God-King" Xerxes (Rodrigo Santoro) and his invading army of more than 300,000 soldiers. As the battle rages, Queen Gorgo (Lena Headey) attempts to rally support in Sparta for her husband.

300
Theatrical release poster
Directed byZack Snyder
Screenplay by
Based on
Produced by
Starring
CinematographyLarry Fong
Edited byWilliam Hoy
Music byTyler Bates
Production
companies
Distributed byWarner Bros. Pictures
Release dates
  • December 9, 2006 (2006-12-09) (Butt-Numb-A-Thon)
  • March 9, 2007 (2007-03-09) (United States)
Running time
117 minutes[1]
CountryUnited States
LanguageEnglish
Budget$65 million[2][3]
Box office$456 million[4]

The story is framed by a voice-over narrative by the Spartan soldier Dilios (David Wenham). Through this narrative technique, various fantastical creatures are introduced, placing 300 within the genre of historical fantasy. 300 was filmed mostly with a superimposition chroma key technique to replicate the imagery of the original comics.

An unfinished cut of 300 premiered at the Austin Butt-Numb-A-Thon on December 9, 2006. The completed film then premiered at the Berlin International Film Festival on February 14, 2007, before being released in both conventional and IMAX 8 in the United States on March 9, 2007 and on home media on July 31, 2007. The film received mixed-to-positive reviews from critics, who praised its visuals and style but criticizing its depiction of the Persians, which some characterized as bigoted or Iranophobic. Grossing over $456 million, the film's opening was the 24th-largest in box office history at the time. A sequel, titled Rise of an Empire, based on Miller's previously unpublished graphic novel prequel Xerxes, was released on March 7, 2014.

Plot edit

In 480 B.C., one year after the Battle of Thermopylae, Dilios, a hoplite in the Spartan army, begins his story by depicting the life of Leonidas I from childhood to kingship via Spartan doctrine. Leonidas survives being discarded for disfigurements at birth, and is trained for Agoge by his father, where his final test is to survive the harsh winter alone, during which he slays a monstrous wolf.

Dilios's story continues and a Persian herald arrives on horseback at Sparta demanding "earth and water" as a token of submission to King Xerxes. He urges Leonidas to submit and insults Queen Gorgo. In response, Leonidas kicks the Persian herald into a bottomless pit. Surrounding Spartan soldiers throw in the remaining Persian envoy as well. Leonidas then visits the Ephors, proposing a strategy to drive back the numerically superior Persians through Thermopylae in order to funnel the Persians into a narrow pass, negating the Persian advantage in numbers, and giving the Greeks' heavy infantry the advantage over the vast waves of Persian light infantry. The Ephors warn Leonidas that the sacred festival known as Carneia is approaching and that Sparta should not wage war during that time and consult the Oracle, who decrees that Sparta should honor the Carneia. As Leonidas angrily departs, an agent from Xerxes appears alongside a Spartan politician, Theron, rewarding the Ephors for their covert support.

Although the Ephors have denied him permission to mobilize Sparta's army, Leonidas gathers three hundred soldiers. Theron and the Council confront Leonidas about defying the Ephors by going to war. Leonidas suggests that they will not go, but they depart for war shortly thereafter. They are joined along the way by a force of a few thousand Arcadians and other Greeks led by Daxos. They come across a Greek village that was ravaged by the Persians and reach Thermopylae, watching a storm sinking many Persian navy ships at the Aegean Sea. The Spartans then scout out a large Persian encampment and constructed the wall, using slain Persian scouts as mortar. A Persian Emissary arrives to threaten the Greeks, and Stelios cuts off the Emissary's arm before ordering him to return to his lines and warn Xerxes that they will not surrender.

Meanwhile, Leonidas encounters Ephialtes, a deformed Spartan whose parents fled Sparta to spare him certain infanticide. Ephialtes asked to redeem his father's name by joining Leonidas' army and warning him of a secret goat path the Persians could use to outflank and surround the Spartans. Though sympathetic, Leonidas rejects him since his deformity physically prevents him from holding his shield high enough, potentially compromising the phalanx formation.

The battle begins soon after the Spartans' refusal to lay down their weapons. Because of the narrowed pathway, the Spartans repel many waves of the advancing Persian army. Xerxes personally approaches Leonidas and offers him wealth, power, and a chance to personally lead his forces in exchange for his submission. Leonidas declines and mocks the inferior quality of Xerxes' warriors. That night, Xerxes sends in his elite guard, the Immortals, accompanied by the monstrous Uber Immortal. The Uber Immortal maims Dilios's eye but is defeated by Leonidas. The Greeks are once again victorious.

On the second day, Xerxes sends in new waves of armies, including barbarians, bombardiers, an armored rhino that is killed by Artemis's son, Astinos, and war elephants with no success. Infuriated by the countless defeats, Xerxes executes his own generals. During a battle, Astinos was killed. Meanwhile, an embittered Ephialtes has defected to Xerxes, and he reveals the secret path in exchange for wealth, women, and a Persian uniform. The Arcadians retreat upon learning of Ephialtes' betrayal, but the Spartans choose to stay. Leonidas orders an injured but reluctant Dilios to return to Sparta and inform them what has happened.

In Sparta, Queen Gorgo has been attempting to persuade the Spartan Council to send reinforcements to aid the 300 Spartan soldiers making their last stand. Gorgo comes to Theron for help, and is allowed to make her plea to the council, but Theron rapes and betrays her and attempts to defame her. Gorgo kills Theron, revealing within his robe a bag of Xerxes' gold. Acknowledging his betrayal, the Council unanimously agrees to send reinforcements. On the third day, the Persians, led by Ephialtes, traverse the secret path, encircling the Spartans. Xerxes' general again demands their surrender. Leonidas appears to kneel in submission, allowing Stelios to leap over him and kill the general. Angered, Xerxes orders his troops to attack. Leonidas throws his spear at Xerxes, slicing his face to prove the God-King's mortality. Leonidas and the remaining Spartans fight to the last man until they finally succumb to an arrow barrage.

Dilios concludes his tale before the Spartan council. Inspired by Leonidas' sacrifice, the Greeks mobilize. One year later, the Persians faces an army of 30,000 Greeks led by a vanguard of 10,000 Spartans. After one final speech commemorating the 300, Dilios, now head of the Spartan army, leads them to battle against the Persians.

Cast edit

Production edit

 
Above: the film version of a panel from the graphic novel (below)

Producer Gianni Nunnari wasn't the only person planning a film about the Battle of Thermopylae, as director Michael Mann had already planned a film of the battle based on the book Gates of Fire. Nunnari discovered Frank Miller's graphic novel 300, which impressed him enough to acquire the film rights.[7][8] 300 was jointly produced by Nunnari and Mark Canton while Michael B. Gordon wrote the script.[9] Director Zack Snyder was hired in June 2004[10] as he had attempted to make a film based on Miller's novel before making his debut with the remake of Dawn of the Dead.[11] Snyder then had screenwriter Kurt Johnstad rewrite Gordon's script for production[10] and Frank Miller was retained as consultant and executive producer.[12] Frank Miller's original graphic novel 300 was inspired by the film The 300 Spartans, which Miller first saw at age six.[13]

The film is a shot-for-shot adaptation of the comic book, similar to the film adaptation of Sin City.[14] Snyder photocopied panels from the comic book, from which he planned the preceding and succeeding shots. "It was a fun process for me… to have a frame as a goal to get to," he said.[15] Like the comic book, the adaptation also used the character Dilios as a narrator. Snyder used this narrative technique to show the audience that the surreal "Frank Miller world" of 300 was told from a subjective perspective. By using Dilios' gift of storytelling, he was able to introduce fantasy elements into the film, explaining that "Dilios is a guy who knows how not to wreck a good story with truth."[16] Snyder also added the subplot in which Queen Gorgo attempts to rally support for her husband.[17]

 
Above: A scene during filming
Below: The finished scene

Two months of pre-production were required to create hundreds of shields, spears and swords, some of which were recycled from Troy and Alexander. Creatures were designed by Jordu Schell,[18] and an animatronic wolf and thirteen animatronic horses were created. The actors trained alongside the stuntmen, and even Snyder joined in. Upwards of 600 costumes were created for the film, as well as extensive prosthetics for various characters and the corpses of Persian soldiers. Shaun Smith and Mark Rappaport worked hand in hand with Snyder in pre-production to design the look of the individual characters, and to produce the prosthetic makeup effects, props, weapons and dummy bodies required for the production.[19]

300 entered active production on October 17, 2005 in Montreal,[20] and was shot over the course of sixty days[19] in chronological order[17] with a budget of $60 million.[21] Employing the digital backlot technique, Snyder shot at the now-defunct Icestorm Studios in Montreal using bluescreens. Butler said that while he did not feel constrained by Snyder's direction, fidelity to the comic imposed certain limitations on his performance. Wenham said there were times when Snyder wanted to precisely capture iconic moments from the comic book, and other times when he gave actors freedom "to explore within the world and the confines that had been set".[22] Headey said of her experience with the bluescreens, "It's very odd, and emotionally, there's nothing to connect to apart from another actor."[23] Only one scene, in which horses travel across the countryside, was shot outdoors.[24] The film was an intensely physical production, and Butler pulled an arm tendon and developed foot drop.[25]

Post-production was handled by Montreal's Meteor Studios and Hybride Technologies filled in the bluescreen footage with more than 1,500 visual effects shots. Visual effects supervisor Chris Watts and production designer Jim Bissell created a process dubbed "The Crush,"[19] which allowed the Meteor artists to manipulate the colors by increasing the contrast of light and dark. Certain sequences were desaturated and tinted to establish different moods. Ghislain St-Pierre, who led the team of artists, described the effect: "Everything looks realistic, but it has a kind of a gritty illustrative feel."[19][26] Various computer programs, including Maya, RenderMan, and RealFlow, were used to create the "spraying blood".[27] The post-production lasted for a year and was handled by a total of ten special effects companies.[28]

Music edit

In July 2005, composer Tyler Bates began work on the film, describing the score as having "beautiful themes on the top and large choir," but "tempered with some extreme heaviness". The composer had scored for a test scene that the director wanted to show to Warner Bros. to illustrate the path of the project. Bates said that the score had "a lot of weight and intensity in the low end of the percussion" that Snyder found agreeable to the film.[29] The score was recorded at Abbey Road Studios and features the vocals of Azam Ali.[30] A standard edition and a special edition of the soundtrack containing 25 tracks was released on March 6, 2007, with the special edition containing a 16-page booklet and three two-sided trading cards.[31]

The score has caused some controversy in the film composer community, garnering criticism for its striking similarity to several other recent soundtracks, including James Horner and Gabriel Yared's work for the film Troy. The heaviest borrowings are said to be from Elliot Goldenthal's 1999 score for Titus. "Remember Us," from 300, is identical in parts to the "Finale" from Titus, and "Returns a King" is similar to the cue "Victorius Titus".[32][33][34] On August 3, 2007, Warner Bros. Pictures acknowledged in an official statement:

… a number of the music cues for the score of 300 were, without our knowledge or participation, derived from music composed by Academy Award-winning composer Elliot Goldenthal for the motion picture Titus. Warner Bros. Pictures has great respect for Elliot, our longtime collaborator, and is pleased to have amicably resolved this matter.[35]

Marketing edit

The official 300 website was launched by Warner Bros. in December 2005. The "conceptual art" and Zack Snyder's production blog were the initial attractions of the site.[36] Later, the website added video journals describing production details, including comic-to-screen shots and the creatures of 300. In January 2007, the studio launched a MySpace page for the film.[37] The Art Institutes created a micro-site to promote the film.[38]

At Comic-Con International in July 2006, the 300 panel aired a promotional teaser trailer of the film, which was positively received.[39] Despite stringent security, the trailer was subsequently leaked on the Internet.[40] Warner Bros. released the official trailer for 300 on October 4, 2006,[41] and later on it made its debut on Apple.com where it received considerable exposure. The background music used in the trailers was "Just Like You Imagined" by Nine Inch Nails. A second 300 trailer, which was attached to Apocalypto, was released in theaters on December 8, 2006,[42] and online the day before.[43] On January 22, 2007, an exclusive trailer for the film was broadcast during prime-time television.[44] The trailers have been credited with igniting interest in the film and contributing to its box-office success.[45]

In April 2006, Warner Bros. Interactive Entertainment announced its intention to make a PlayStation Portable game, 300: March to Glory, based on the film. Collision Studios worked with Warner Bros. to capture the style of the film in the video game, which was released simultaneously with the film in the United States.[46] The National Entertainment Collectibles Association produced a series of action figures based on the film,[47] as well as replicas of weapons and armor.[48]

Warner Bros. promoted 300 by sponsoring the Ultimate Fighting Championship's light heavyweight champion Chuck Liddell, who made personal appearances and participated in other promotional activities.[49] The studio also joined with the National Hockey League to produce a 30-second TV spot promoting the film in tandem with the Stanley Cup playoffs.[50]

Release edit

Theatrical edit

 
Lena Headey at the London premiere, 2007

In August 2006, Warner Bros. announced 300's release date as March 16, 2007,[51] but in October the release was moved forward to March 9, 2007.[41] An unfinished cut of 300 was shown at Butt-Numb-A-Thon film festival on December 9, 2006.[52]

Home media edit

300 was released on DVD, Blu-ray Disc, and HD DVD on July 31, 2007, in region 1 territories, in both single-disc and two-disc editions. 300 was released in single-disc and steelcase two-disc editions on DVD, BD and HD DVD in region 2 territories beginning August 2007. On July 21, 2009, Warner Bros. released a new Blu-ray Disc entitled 300: The Complete Experience to coincide with the Blu-ray Disc release of Watchmen. This new Blu-ray Disc is encased in a 40-page Digibook and includes all the extras from the original release as well as some new ones. These features include a picture-in-picture feature entitled The Complete 300: A Comprehensive Immersion, which enables the viewer to view the film in three different perspectives. This release also includes a digital copy.[53] An Ultra HD Blu-ray edition of the film was released on October 6, 2020.[54]

On July 9, 2007, American cable channel TNT bought the rights to broadcast the film from Warner Bros.[55] TNT started airing the film in September 2009. Sources say that the network paid between $17 million[56] and just under $20 million[55] for the broadcasting rights. TNT agreed to a three-year deal instead of the more typical five-year deal.[56]

Reception edit

Box office edit

300 was released in North America on March 9, 2007, in both conventional and IMAX theaters.[57] It grossed $28,106,731 on its opening day and ended its North American opening weekend with $70,885,301,[58] breaking the record held by Ice Age: The Meltdown for the biggest opening weekend in the month of March and for a spring release. Since then 300's spring release record was broken by Fast and Furious and 300's March record was broken by Tim Burton's Alice in Wonderland.[59][60] 300's opening weekend gross is the 24th-highest in box office history, coming slightly below The Lost World: Jurassic Park but higher than Transformers.[61] It was the third-biggest opening for an R-rated film ever, behind The Matrix Reloaded ($91.8 million) and The Passion of the Christ ($83.8 million).[62] The film also set a record for IMAX cinemas with a $3.6 million opening weekend.[63] The film grossed $456,068,181 worldwide.

300 opened two days earlier, on March 7, 2007, in Sparta, and across Greece on March 8.[64][65] Studio executives were surprised by the showing, which was twice what they had expected.[66] They credited the film's stylized violence, the strong female role of Queen Gorgo which attracted a large number of women, and a MySpace advertising blitz.[67] Producer Mark Canton said, "MySpace had an enormous impact but it has transcended the limitations of the Internet or the graphic novel. Once you make a great movie, word can spread very quickly."[67]

Critical response edit

The film received a standing ovation at its world premiere in front of 1,700 audience members at the Berlin International Film Festival on February 14, 2007.[68] It had been panned at a press screening hours earlier, where many attendees left during the showing and those who remained booed at the end.[69]

As of January 2021, on Rotten Tomatoes, the film had an approval rating of 61% based on 236 reviews, with an average rating of 6.10/10. The site's critical consensus reads, "A simple-minded but visually exciting experience, full of blood, violence, and ready-made movie quotes."[70] As of October 2020, on Metacritic, the film had an weighted average score of 52 out of 100, based on 42 critics, indicating "mixed or average reviews".[71] Audiences polled by CinemaScore gave the film an average grade of "A−" on an A+ to F scale.[72]

Some of the most unfavorable reviews came from major American newspapers. A. O. Scott of The New York Times described 300 as "about as violent as Apocalypto and twice as stupid," while criticizing its color scheme and suggesting that its plot includes racist undertones; Scott also poked fun at the buffed bodies of the actors portraying the Spartans, declaring that the Persian characters are "pioneers in the art of face-piercing", but that the Spartans had access to "superior health clubs and electrolysis facilities".[73] Kenneth Turan wrote in the Los Angeles Times that "unless you love violence as much as a Spartan, Quentin Tarantino or a video-game-playing teenage boy, you will not be endlessly fascinated".[74] Roger Ebert gave the film a 2 out of 4 rating, writing that "300 has one-dimensional caricatures who talk like professional wrestlers plugging their next feud."[75] Some critics employed at Greek newspapers have been particularly critical, such as film critic Robby Eksiel, who said that moviegoers would be dazzled by the "digital action" but also feel irritated by the "pompous interpretations and one-dimensional characters".[65][76]

Variety's Todd McCarthy described the film as "visually arresting" although "bombastic"[77] while Kirk Honeycutt, writing in The Hollywood Reporter, praised the "beauty of its topography, colors and forms".[78] Writing in the Chicago Sun-Times, Richard Roeper acclaimed 300 as "the Citizen Kane of cinematic graphic novels".[79] Empire gave the film three out of five, writing, "Visually stunning, thoroughly belligerent and as shallow as a pygmy's paddling pool, this is a whole heap of style tinged with just a smidgen of substance." Comic Book Resources' Mark Cronan found the film compelling, leaving him "with a feeling of power, from having been witness to something grand".[80] IGN's Todd Gilchrist acclaimed Zack Snyder as a cinematic visionary and "a possible redeemer of modern moviemaking".[81]

Accolades edit

At the MTV Movie Awards 2007, 300 was nominated for Best Movie, Best Performance for Gerard Butler, Best Breakthrough Performance for Lena Headey, Best Villain for Rodrigo Santoro, and Best Fight for Leonidas battling "the Über Immortal",[82] but only won the award for Best Fight. 300 won both the Best Dramatic Film and Best Action Film honors in the 2006–2007 Golden Icon Awards presented by Travolta Family Entertainment.[83] In December 2007, 300 won IGN's Movie of the Year 2007,[84] along with Best Comic Book Adaptation[85] and King Leonidas as Favorite Character.[86] The movie received 10 nominations for the 2008 Saturn Awards, winning the awards for Best Director and Best Action/Adventure/Thriller Film.[87] In 2009, National Review magazine ranked 300 number 5 on its 25 "Best Conservative Movies of the Last 25 Years" list.[88]

Controversies edit

Historical accuracy edit

In the actual Battle of Thermopylae, the Spartans had already joined an alliance with other Greek poleis against the Persians. During the Battle of Thermopylae, Xerxes's invasion of Greece coincided with a Spartan religious festival, the Carneia, in which the Spartans were not permitted to make war. Still, realizing the threat of the Persians and not wanting to appear as Persian sympathizers, the Spartan government, rather than Leonidas alone, decided to send Leonidas with his personal 300-strong bodyguard to Thermopylae.[89] Other Greek poleis joined the 300 Spartan men and totaled somewhere between 5,000 and 6,000 total Greek troops. The historical consensus among both ancient chroniclers and current scholars was that Thermopylae was a clear Greek defeat, and the Persian invasion would be pushed back only in later ground and naval battles.[90]

Since few records on the actual martial arts used by the Spartans survive aside from accounts of formations and tactics, the fight choreography, led by the stunt coordinator and fight choreographer Damon Caro, was a synthesis of different weapon arts with Filipino martial arts as the base.[91]

Paul Cartledge, Professor of Greek History at Cambridge University, advised the filmmakers on the pronunciation of Greek names and said that they "made good use" of his published work on Sparta. He praised the film for its portrayal of "the Spartans' heroic code" and of "the key role played by women in backing up, indeed reinforcing, the male martial code of heroic honour", but he expressed reservations about its "'West' (goodies) vs 'East' (baddies) polarization".[92] Cartledge wrote that he enjoyed the film but found Leonidas' description of the Athenians as "boy lovers" ironic since the Spartans themselves incorporated institutional pederasty into their educational system.[93]

Ephraim Lytle, assistant professor of Hellenistic history at the University of Toronto, said that 300 selectively idealized Spartan society in a "problematic and disturbing" fashion and portrayed the "hundred nations of the Persians" as monsters and non-Spartan Greeks as weak. He suggested that the film's moral universe would have seemed "as bizarre to ancient Greeks as it does to modern historians."[94] Lytle also commented, "Ephialtes, who betrays the Greeks, is likewise changed from a local Malian of sound body into a Spartan outcast, a grotesquely disfigured troll who by Spartan custom should have been left exposed as an infant to die. Leonidas points out that his hunched back means Ephialtes cannot lift his shield high enough to fight in the phalanx. This is a transparent defense of Spartan eugenics, and convenient given that infanticide could as easily have been precipitated by an ill-omened birthmark."[94]

Victor Davis Hanson, a National Review columnist and former professor of classical history at California State University, Fresno, wrote the foreword to a 2007 reissue of the graphic novel and said that the film demonstrates a specific affinity with the original material of Herodotus in that it captures the martial ethos of ancient Sparta and represents Thermopylae as a "clash of civilizations". He remarked that Simonides, Aeschylus, and Herodotus viewed Thermopylae as a battle against "Eastern centralism and collective serfdom", which opposed "the idea of the free citizen of an autonomous polis".[95] He also said that the film portrays the battle in a "surreal" manner and that the intent was to "entertain and shock first, and instruct second."[96]

Touraj Daryaee, who is now Baskerville Professor of Iranian History and the Persian World at the University of California, Irvine, criticized the film's use of classical sources by writing:

Some passages from the Classical authors Aeschylus, Diodorus, Herodotus and Plutarch are split over the movie to give it an authentic flavor. Aeschylus becomes a major source when the battle with the "monstrous human herd" of the Persians is narrated in the film. Diodorus' statement about Greek valor to preserve their liberty is inserted in the film, but his mention of Persian valor is omitted. Herodotus' fanciful numbers are used to populate the Persian army, and Plutarch's discussion of Greek women, specifically Spartan women, is inserted wrongly in the dialogue between the "misogynist" Persian ambassador and the Spartan king. Classical sources are certainly used, but exactly in all the wrong places, or quite naively. The Athenians were fighting a sea battle during this.[97]

Robert McHenry, the former editor-in-chief of Encyclopædia Britannica and the author of How to Know, said that the film "is an almost ineffably silly movie. Stills from the film could easily be used to promote Buns of Steel, or AbMaster, or ThighMaster. It's about the romanticizing of the Spartan 'ideal', a process that began even in ancient times, was promoted by the Romans, and has survived over time while less and less resembling the actual historical Sparta."[98]

The director of 300, Zack Snyder, stated in an MTV interview that "the events are 90 percent accurate. It's just in the visualization that it's crazy.... I've shown this movie to world-class historians who have said it's amazing. They can't believe it's as accurate as it is." Nevertheless, he also said the film is "an opera, not a documentary. That's what I say when people say it's historically inaccurate."[99] He was also quoted in a BBC News story as saying that the film is, at its core "a fantasy film". He also describes the film's narrator, Dilios, as "a guy who knows how not to wreck a good story with truth."[16]

In an interview the 300 writer Frank Miller, he stated, "The inaccuracies, almost all of them, are intentional. I took those chest plates and leather skirts off of them for a reason. I wanted these guys to move and I wanted 'em to look good. I knocked their helmets off a fair amount, partly so you can recognize who the characters are. Spartans, in full regalia, were almost indistinguishable except at a very close angle. Another liberty I took was, they all had plumes, but I only gave a plume to Leonidas, to make him stand out and identify him as a king. I was looking for more an evocation than a history lesson. The best result I can hope for is that if the movie excites someone, they'll go explore the histories themselves. Because the histories are endlessly fascinating."[100]

Kaveh Farrokh, in the paper "The 300 Movie: Separating Fact from Fiction,"[101] noted that the film falsely portrayed "the Greco-Persian Wars in binary terms: the democratic, good, rational 'Us' versus the tyrannical, evil and irrational, 'other' of the ever-nebulous (if not exotic) 'Persia'". He highlighted three points regarding the contribution of the Achaemenid Empire to the creation of democracy and human rights: "The founder of the Achaemenid Empire, Cyrus the Great, was the world's first emperor to openly declare and guarantee the sanctity of human rights and individual freedom.... Cyrus was a follower of the teachings of Zoroaster, the founder of one of the world's oldest monotheistic religions.... When Cyrus defeated King Nabonidus of Babylon, he officially declared the freedom of the Jews from their Babylonian captivity. This was the first time in history that a world power had guaranteed the survival of the Jewish people, religion, customs and culture." He abolished slavery.[102]

General criticism edit

Before the release of 300, Warner Bros. expressed concerns about the political aspects of the film's theme. Snyder relates that there was "a huge sensitivity about East versus West with the studio."[103] Media speculation about a possible parallel between the Greco-Persian conflict and current events began in an interview with Snyder that was conducted before the Berlin Film Festival.[104] The interviewer remarked that "everyone is sure to be translating this [film] into contemporary politics." Snyder replied that he was aware that people would read the film through the lens of current events, but no parallels between the film and the modern world were intended.[105]

Outside current political parallels, some critics have raised more general questions about the film's ideological orientation. The New York Post's Kyle Smith wrote that the film would have pleased "Adolf's boys,"[106] and Slate's Dana Stevens compared the film to The Eternal Jew "as a textbook example of how race-baiting fantasy and nationalist myth can serve as an incitement to total war. Since it's a product of the post-ideological, post-Xbox 21st century, 300 will instead be talked about as a technical achievement, the next blip on the increasingly blurry line between movies and video games."[107] Roger Moore, a critic for the Orlando Sentinel, relates 300 to Susan Sontag's definition of "fascist art".[108] Indeed, the Lambda sign on the Spartans' shields in 300 formed the inspiration for the official symbol of the far-right Identitarian movement.[109][110]

Newsday critic Gene Seymour, on the other hand, stated that such reactions are misguided, writing that "the movie's just too darned silly to withstand any ideological theorizing."[111] Snyder himself dismissed ideological readings, suggesting that reviewers who critique "a graphic novel movie about a bunch of guys... stomping the snot out of each other" using words like "'neocon,' 'homophobic,' 'homoerotic' or 'racist'" are "missing the point".[112] Snyder, however, also admitted to fashioning an effeminate villain specifically to make young straight males in the audience uncomfortable: "What's more scary to a 20-year-old boy than a giant god-king who wants to have his way with you?"[113] The Slovenian critic Slavoj Žižek pointed out that the story represents "a poor, small country (Greece) invaded by the army of a much large[r] state (Persia)" and suggested the identification of the Spartans with a modern superpower to be flawed.[114]

The writer Frank Miller said: "The Spartans were a paradoxical people. They were the biggest slave owners in Greece. But at the same time, Spartan women had an unusual level of rights. It's a paradox that they were a bunch of people who in many ways were fascist, but they were the bulwark against the fall of democracy. The closest comparison you can draw in terms of our own military today is to think of the red-caped Spartans as being like our special-ops forces. They're these almost superhuman characters with a tremendous warrior ethic, who were unquestionably the best fighters in Greece. I didn't want to render Sparta in overly accurate terms, because ultimately I do want you to root for the Spartans. I couldn't show them being quite as cruel as they were. I made them as cruel as I thought a modern audience could stand."[100]

Michael M. Chemers, author of "'With Your Shield, or on It': Disability Representation in 300" in the Disability Studies Quarterly, said that the film's portrayal of the hunchback and his story "is not mere ableism: this is anti-disability."[115] Frank Miller, commenting on areas in which he lessened the Spartan cruelty for narrative purposes, said: "I have King Leonidas very gently tell Ephialtes, the hunchback, that they can't use him [as a soldier], because of his deformity. It would be much more classically Spartan if Leonidas laughed and kicked him off the cliff."[100]

Iranian criticism edit

 
Some interpreted the portrayal of King Xerxes (right) as homosexual. Snyder said of Xerxes, "What's more scary to a 20-year-old boy than a giant god-king who wants to have his way with you?"[113]

From its opening, 300 also attracted controversy over its portrayal of Persians. Officials of the Iranian government[116] denounced the film.[117][118][119] Some scenes in the film portray demon-like and other fictional creatures as part of the Persian army, and the fictionalized portrayal of Persian King Xerxes I has been criticized as effeminate.[120][121] Critics suggested that it was meant to stand in stark contrast to the portrayed masculinity of the Spartan army.[122] Steven Rea argued that the film's Persians were a vehicle for an anachronistic cross-section of Western aspirational stereotypes of Asian and African cultures.[123]

The film's portrayal of ancient Persians caused a particularly strong reaction in Iran. Various Iranian officials condemned the film.[124][125][126] The Iranian Academy of the Arts submitted a formal complaint against the film to UNESCO that called it an attack on the historical identity of Iran.[127][128] The Iranian mission to the UN protested the film in a press release,[129] and Iranian embassies protested its screening in France,[130] Thailand,[131] Turkey,[132] and Uzbekistan.[133] The film was banned within Iran as "hurtful American propaganda".[134] Reviewers in the United States and elsewhere "noted the political overtones of the West-against-Iran story line and the way Persians are depicted as decadent, sexually flamboyant and evil in contrast to the noble Greeks."[135] With illegal versions of the film already available in Tehran with the film's international release and news of the film's surprising success at the US box office, the film prompted widespread anger in Iran. Azadeh Moaveni of Time reported, "All of Tehran was outraged. Everywhere I went yesterday, the talk vibrated with indignation over the film."[136] Newspapers in Iran featured headlines such as "Hollywood declares war on Iranians" and "300 Against 70 Million", the latter being the size of Iran's population. Ayende-No, an independent Iranian newspaper, said, "The film depicts Iranians as demons, without culture, feeling or humanity, who think of nothing except attacking other nations and killing people."[136] Four Iranian Members of Parliament have called on Muslim countries to ban the film,[137] and a group of Iranian film makers submitted a letter of protest to UNESCO regarding the film's misrepresentation of Iranian history and culture.[138] The cultural advisor to Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad called the film an "American attempt for psychological warfare against Iran."[139]

Moaveni identified two factors that may have contributed to the intensity of Iranian indignation over the film. Firstly, she described the timing of the film's release, on the eve of Nowruz, the Persian New Year, as "inauspicious". Secondly, Iranians tend to view the era depicted in the film as "a particularly noble page in their history." Moaveni also suggested that "the box office success of 300, compared with the relative flop of Alexander (another spurious period epic dealing with Persians), is cause for considerable alarm, signaling ominous U.S. intentions."[136]

According to The Guardian, Iranian critics of 300, ranging from bloggers to government officials, described the movie "as a calculated attempt to demonise Iran at a time of intensifying U.S. pressure over the country's nuclear programme."[137] An Iranian government spokesman described the film as "hostile behavior which is the result of cultural and psychological warfare."[137] Moaveni reported that the Iranians with whom she interacted were "adamant that the movie was secretly funded by the U.S. government to prepare Americans for going to war against Iran."[136]

In popular culture edit

300 has been spoofed in film, television, and other media, and spawned the "This is Sparta!" internet meme.[140] Skits based upon the film have appeared on Saturday Night Live[141] and Robot Chicken, the latter of which mimicked the visual style of 300 in a parody set during the American Revolutionary War, titled "1776".[142] Other parodies include an episode of South Park named "D-Yikes!",[143] the short film United 300 which won the 2007 MTV Movie Spoof Award,[144] and "BOO!" by Mad magazine in its September 2007 issue #481, written by Desmond Devlin and illustrated by Mort Drucker.[145] 20th Century Fox released Meet the Spartans, a spoof directed by Jason Friedberg and Aaron Seltzer. Universal Pictures once planned a similar parody, titled National Lampoon's 301: The Legend of Awesomest Maximus Wallace Leonidas.[146] Samurai Jack, an American animated series by Genndy Tartakovsky, also paid homage to the Battle of Thermopylae in the 12th episode of its second season, but instead used minotaur robots as the antagonists.[147]

300, particularly its pithy quotations, has been "adopted" by the student body of Michigan State University (whose nickname is the Spartans), with chants of "Spartans, what is your profession?" becoming common at sporting events starting after the film's release, and Michigan State basketball head coach Tom Izzo dressed as Leonidas at one student event.[148][149] Nate Ebner, a football player with the New England Patriots in the National Football League and formerly with the Ohio State Buckeyes, was nicknamed "Leonidas," after the Greek warrior-king hero of Sparta acted by Gerard Butler in the movie 300, because of his intense workout regimen, and his beard.[150]

Sequel edit

In June 2008, producers Mark Canton, Gianni Nunnari and Bernie Goldmann revealed that work had begun on a sequel to 300, 300: Rise of an Empire.[151] Legendary Pictures had announced that Frank Miller had started writing the follow-up graphic novel and that Zack Snyder was interested in directing the adaptation but moved on to develop and direct the Superman reboot Man of Steel.[152][153] Noam Murro directed instead, while Zack Snyder produced. The film focused on the Athenian admiral, Themistocles, as portrayed by Australian actor Sullivan Stapleton. The sequel, 300: Rise of an Empire, was released on March 7, 2014 and grossed $337 million worldwide.[154]

See also edit

References edit

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film, this, article, about, 2007, film, 2014, sequel, rise, empire, 2007, american, epic, historical, action, film, based, 1998, comic, book, series, same, name, frank, miller, lynn, varley, written, directed, zack, snyder, with, miller, serving, executive, pr. This article is about the 2007 film For the 2014 sequel see 300 Rise of an Empire 300 is a 2007 American epic historical action film 4 5 based on the 1998 comic book series of the same name by Frank Miller and Lynn Varley Co written and directed by Zack Snyder with Miller serving as executive producer and consultant the film is a fictionalized retelling of the Battle of Thermopylae in the Greco Persian Wars like its source material The plot revolves around King Leonidas Gerard Butler who leads 300 Spartans into battle against the Persian God King Xerxes Rodrigo Santoro and his invading army of more than 300 000 soldiers As the battle rages Queen Gorgo Lena Headey attempts to rally support in Sparta for her husband 300Theatrical release posterDirected byZack SnyderScreenplay byZack Snyder Kurt Johnstad Michael B GordonBased on300by Frank MillerLynn VarleyProduced byGianni Nunnari Mark Canton Bernie Goldmann Jeffrey SilverStarringGerard Butler Lena Headey David Wenham Dominic WestCinematographyLarry FongEdited byWilliam HoyMusic byTyler BatesProductioncompaniesLegendary Pictures Virtual Studios Atmosphere Entertainment MM Hollywood Gang Productions Cruel and Unusual FilmsDistributed byWarner Bros PicturesRelease datesDecember 9 2006 2006 12 09 Butt Numb A Thon March 9 2007 2007 03 09 United States Running time117 minutes 1 CountryUnited StatesLanguageEnglishBudget 65 million 2 3 Box office 456 million 4 The story is framed by a voice over narrative by the Spartan soldier Dilios David Wenham Through this narrative technique various fantastical creatures are introduced placing 300 within the genre of historical fantasy 300 was filmed mostly with a superimposition chroma key technique to replicate the imagery of the original comics An unfinished cut of 300 premiered at the Austin Butt Numb A Thon on December 9 2006 The completed film then premiered at the Berlin International Film Festival on February 14 2007 before being released in both conventional and IMAX 8 in the United States on March 9 2007 and on home media on July 31 2007 The film received mixed to positive reviews from critics who praised its visuals and style but criticizing its depiction of the Persians which some characterized as bigoted or Iranophobic Grossing over 456 million the film s opening was the 24th largest in box office history at the time A sequel titled Rise of an Empire based on Miller s previously unpublished graphic novel prequel Xerxes was released on March 7 2014 Contents 1 Plot 2 Cast 3 Production 4 Music 5 Marketing 6 Release 6 1 Theatrical 6 2 Home media 7 Reception 7 1 Box office 7 2 Critical response 7 3 Accolades 8 Controversies 8 1 Historical accuracy 8 2 General criticism 8 3 Iranian criticism 9 In popular culture 10 Sequel 11 See also 12 References 13 External linksPlot editIn 480 B C one year after the Battle of Thermopylae Dilios a hoplite in the Spartan army begins his story by depicting the life of Leonidas I from childhood to kingship via Spartan doctrine Leonidas survives being discarded for disfigurements at birth and is trained for Agoge by his father where his final test is to survive the harsh winter alone during which he slays a monstrous wolf Dilios s story continues and a Persian herald arrives on horseback at Sparta demanding earth and water as a token of submission to King Xerxes He urges Leonidas to submit and insults Queen Gorgo In response Leonidas kicks the Persian herald into a bottomless pit Surrounding Spartan soldiers throw in the remaining Persian envoy as well Leonidas then visits the Ephors proposing a strategy to drive back the numerically superior Persians through Thermopylae in order to funnel the Persians into a narrow pass negating the Persian advantage in numbers and giving the Greeks heavy infantry the advantage over the vast waves of Persian light infantry The Ephors warn Leonidas that the sacred festival known as Carneia is approaching and that Sparta should not wage war during that time and consult the Oracle who decrees that Sparta should honor the Carneia As Leonidas angrily departs an agent from Xerxes appears alongside a Spartan politician Theron rewarding the Ephors for their covert support Although the Ephors have denied him permission to mobilize Sparta s army Leonidas gathers three hundred soldiers Theron and the Council confront Leonidas about defying the Ephors by going to war Leonidas suggests that they will not go but they depart for war shortly thereafter They are joined along the way by a force of a few thousand Arcadians and other Greeks led by Daxos They come across a Greek village that was ravaged by the Persians and reach Thermopylae watching a storm sinking many Persian navy ships at the Aegean Sea The Spartans then scout out a large Persian encampment and constructed the wall using slain Persian scouts as mortar A Persian Emissary arrives to threaten the Greeks and Stelios cuts off the Emissary s arm before ordering him to return to his lines and warn Xerxes that they will not surrender Meanwhile Leonidas encounters Ephialtes a deformed Spartan whose parents fled Sparta to spare him certain infanticide Ephialtes asked to redeem his father s name by joining Leonidas army and warning him of a secret goat path the Persians could use to outflank and surround the Spartans Though sympathetic Leonidas rejects him since his deformity physically prevents him from holding his shield high enough potentially compromising the phalanx formation The battle begins soon after the Spartans refusal to lay down their weapons Because of the narrowed pathway the Spartans repel many waves of the advancing Persian army Xerxes personally approaches Leonidas and offers him wealth power and a chance to personally lead his forces in exchange for his submission Leonidas declines and mocks the inferior quality of Xerxes warriors That night Xerxes sends in his elite guard the Immortals accompanied by the monstrous Uber Immortal The Uber Immortal maims Dilios s eye but is defeated by Leonidas The Greeks are once again victorious On the second day Xerxes sends in new waves of armies including barbarians bombardiers an armored rhino that is killed by Artemis s son Astinos and war elephants with no success Infuriated by the countless defeats Xerxes executes his own generals During a battle Astinos was killed Meanwhile an embittered Ephialtes has defected to Xerxes and he reveals the secret path in exchange for wealth women and a Persian uniform The Arcadians retreat upon learning of Ephialtes betrayal but the Spartans choose to stay Leonidas orders an injured but reluctant Dilios to return to Sparta and inform them what has happened In Sparta Queen Gorgo has been attempting to persuade the Spartan Council to send reinforcements to aid the 300 Spartan soldiers making their last stand Gorgo comes to Theron for help and is allowed to make her plea to the council but Theron rapes and betrays her and attempts to defame her Gorgo kills Theron revealing within his robe a bag of Xerxes gold Acknowledging his betrayal the Council unanimously agrees to send reinforcements On the third day the Persians led by Ephialtes traverse the secret path encircling the Spartans Xerxes general again demands their surrender Leonidas appears to kneel in submission allowing Stelios to leap over him and kill the general Angered Xerxes orders his troops to attack Leonidas throws his spear at Xerxes slicing his face to prove the God King s mortality Leonidas and the remaining Spartans fight to the last man until they finally succumb to an arrow barrage Dilios concludes his tale before the Spartan council Inspired by Leonidas sacrifice the Greeks mobilize One year later the Persians faces an army of 30 000 Greeks led by a vanguard of 10 000 Spartans After one final speech commemorating the 300 Dilios now head of the Spartan army leads them to battle against the Persians Cast editGerard Butler as Leonidas King of Sparta David Wenham as Dilios narrator and Spartan soldier Lena Headey as Queen Gorgo Queen of Sparta Gorgo has a larger role in the film than she does in the comic book where she only appears in the beginning 6 Giovanni Cimmino as Pleistarchus son of Leonidas and Gorgo Pleistarchus does not feature in the comic book 6 Dominic West as Theron a fictional corrupt Spartan politician Theron is not featured in the comic book 6 Vincent Regan as Captain Artemis Leonidas loyal captain and friend Tom Wisdom as Astinos Captain Artemis s eldest son In the film Astinos has a constant presence until he dies In the comic book the captain s son is only mentioned when he dies 6 Andrew Pleavin as Daxos an Arcadian leader who joins forces with Leonidas Andrew Tiernan as Ephialtes a deformed Spartan outcast and traitor Rodrigo Santoro as King Xerxes the powerful and ruthless god like supreme king of Persia Stephen McHattie as the Loyalist a loyal Spartan politician Michael Fassbender as Stelios a young spirited and highly skilled Spartan soldier Peter Mensah as a Persian messenger who gets kicked into the well by Leonidas Kelly Craig as Pythia an Oracle to the Ephors Eli Snyder as young Leonidas 7 8 years old Tyler Neitzel as young Leonidas 15 years old Robert Maillet as Uber Immortal giant a muscular and deranged Immortal who battles Leonidas during the Immortal fight Patrick Sabongui as the Persian General who tries to get Leonidas to comply at the end of the battle Leon Laderach as Executioner a hulking clawed man who executes Xerxes s own men Tyrone Benskin as the whip wielding Persian Emissary Production edit nbsp Above the film version of a panel from the graphic novel below Producer Gianni Nunnari wasn t the only person planning a film about the Battle of Thermopylae as director Michael Mann had already planned a film of the battle based on the book Gates of Fire Nunnari discovered Frank Miller s graphic novel 300 which impressed him enough to acquire the film rights 7 8 300 was jointly produced by Nunnari and Mark Canton while Michael B Gordon wrote the script 9 Director Zack Snyder was hired in June 2004 10 as he had attempted to make a film based on Miller s novel before making his debut with the remake of Dawn of the Dead 11 Snyder then had screenwriter Kurt Johnstad rewrite Gordon s script for production 10 and Frank Miller was retained as consultant and executive producer 12 Frank Miller s original graphic novel 300 was inspired by the film The 300 Spartans which Miller first saw at age six 13 The film is a shot for shot adaptation of the comic book similar to the film adaptation of Sin City 14 Snyder photocopied panels from the comic book from which he planned the preceding and succeeding shots It was a fun process for me to have a frame as a goal to get to he said 15 Like the comic book the adaptation also used the character Dilios as a narrator Snyder used this narrative technique to show the audience that the surreal Frank Miller world of 300 was told from a subjective perspective By using Dilios gift of storytelling he was able to introduce fantasy elements into the film explaining that Dilios is a guy who knows how not to wreck a good story with truth 16 Snyder also added the subplot in which Queen Gorgo attempts to rally support for her husband 17 nbsp Above A scene during filmingBelow The finished sceneTwo months of pre production were required to create hundreds of shields spears and swords some of which were recycled from Troy and Alexander Creatures were designed by Jordu Schell 18 and an animatronic wolf and thirteen animatronic horses were created The actors trained alongside the stuntmen and even Snyder joined in Upwards of 600 costumes were created for the film as well as extensive prosthetics for various characters and the corpses of Persian soldiers Shaun Smith and Mark Rappaport worked hand in hand with Snyder in pre production to design the look of the individual characters and to produce the prosthetic makeup effects props weapons and dummy bodies required for the production 19 300 entered active production on October 17 2005 in Montreal 20 and was shot over the course of sixty days 19 in chronological order 17 with a budget of 60 million 21 Employing the digital backlot technique Snyder shot at the now defunct Icestorm Studios in Montreal using bluescreens Butler said that while he did not feel constrained by Snyder s direction fidelity to the comic imposed certain limitations on his performance Wenham said there were times when Snyder wanted to precisely capture iconic moments from the comic book and other times when he gave actors freedom to explore within the world and the confines that had been set 22 Headey said of her experience with the bluescreens It s very odd and emotionally there s nothing to connect to apart from another actor 23 Only one scene in which horses travel across the countryside was shot outdoors 24 The film was an intensely physical production and Butler pulled an arm tendon and developed foot drop 25 Post production was handled by Montreal s Meteor Studios and Hybride Technologies filled in the bluescreen footage with more than 1 500 visual effects shots Visual effects supervisor Chris Watts and production designer Jim Bissell created a process dubbed The Crush 19 which allowed the Meteor artists to manipulate the colors by increasing the contrast of light and dark Certain sequences were desaturated and tinted to establish different moods Ghislain St Pierre who led the team of artists described the effect Everything looks realistic but it has a kind of a gritty illustrative feel 19 26 Various computer programs including Maya RenderMan and RealFlow were used to create the spraying blood 27 The post production lasted for a year and was handled by a total of ten special effects companies 28 Music editMain article 300 Original Motion Picture Soundtrack In July 2005 composer Tyler Bates began work on the film describing the score as having beautiful themes on the top and large choir but tempered with some extreme heaviness The composer had scored for a test scene that the director wanted to show to Warner Bros to illustrate the path of the project Bates said that the score had a lot of weight and intensity in the low end of the percussion that Snyder found agreeable to the film 29 The score was recorded at Abbey Road Studios and features the vocals of Azam Ali 30 A standard edition and a special edition of the soundtrack containing 25 tracks was released on March 6 2007 with the special edition containing a 16 page booklet and three two sided trading cards 31 The score has caused some controversy in the film composer community garnering criticism for its striking similarity to several other recent soundtracks including James Horner and Gabriel Yared s work for the film Troy The heaviest borrowings are said to be from Elliot Goldenthal s 1999 score for Titus Remember Us from 300 is identical in parts to the Finale from Titus and Returns a King is similar to the cue Victorius Titus 32 33 34 On August 3 2007 Warner Bros Pictures acknowledged in an official statement a number of the music cues for the score of 300 were without our knowledge or participation derived from music composed by Academy Award winning composer Elliot Goldenthal for the motion picture Titus Warner Bros Pictures has great respect for Elliot our longtime collaborator and is pleased to have amicably resolved this matter 35 Marketing editMain article 300 March to Glory The official 300 website was launched by Warner Bros in December 2005 The conceptual art and Zack Snyder s production blog were the initial attractions of the site 36 Later the website added video journals describing production details including comic to screen shots and the creatures of 300 In January 2007 the studio launched a MySpace page for the film 37 The Art Institutes created a micro site to promote the film 38 At Comic Con International in July 2006 the 300 panel aired a promotional teaser trailer of the film which was positively received 39 Despite stringent security the trailer was subsequently leaked on the Internet 40 Warner Bros released the official trailer for 300 on October 4 2006 41 and later on it made its debut on Apple com where it received considerable exposure The background music used in the trailers was Just Like You Imagined by Nine Inch Nails A second 300 trailer which was attached to Apocalypto was released in theaters on December 8 2006 42 and online the day before 43 On January 22 2007 an exclusive trailer for the film was broadcast during prime time television 44 The trailers have been credited with igniting interest in the film and contributing to its box office success 45 In April 2006 Warner Bros Interactive Entertainment announced its intention to make a PlayStation Portable game 300 March to Glory based on the film Collision Studios worked with Warner Bros to capture the style of the film in the video game which was released simultaneously with the film in the United States 46 The National Entertainment Collectibles Association produced a series of action figures based on the film 47 as well as replicas of weapons and armor 48 Warner Bros promoted 300 by sponsoring the Ultimate Fighting Championship s light heavyweight champion Chuck Liddell who made personal appearances and participated in other promotional activities 49 The studio also joined with the National Hockey League to produce a 30 second TV spot promoting the film in tandem with the Stanley Cup playoffs 50 Release editTheatrical edit nbsp Lena Headey at the London premiere 2007In August 2006 Warner Bros announced 300 s release date as March 16 2007 51 but in October the release was moved forward to March 9 2007 41 An unfinished cut of 300 was shown at Butt Numb A Thon film festival on December 9 2006 52 Home media edit 300 was released on DVD Blu ray Disc and HD DVD on July 31 2007 in region 1 territories in both single disc and two disc editions 300 was released in single disc and steelcase two disc editions on DVD BD and HD DVD in region 2 territories beginning August 2007 On July 21 2009 Warner Bros released a new Blu ray Disc entitled 300 The Complete Experience to coincide with the Blu ray Disc release of Watchmen This new Blu ray Disc is encased in a 40 page Digibook and includes all the extras from the original release as well as some new ones These features include a picture in picture feature entitled The Complete 300 A Comprehensive Immersion which enables the viewer to view the film in three different perspectives This release also includes a digital copy 53 An Ultra HD Blu ray edition of the film was released on October 6 2020 54 On July 9 2007 American cable channel TNT bought the rights to broadcast the film from Warner Bros 55 TNT started airing the film in September 2009 Sources say that the network paid between 17 million 56 and just under 20 million 55 for the broadcasting rights TNT agreed to a three year deal instead of the more typical five year deal 56 Reception editBox office edit 300 was released in North America on March 9 2007 in both conventional and IMAX theaters 57 It grossed 28 106 731 on its opening day and ended its North American opening weekend with 70 885 301 58 breaking the record held by Ice Age The Meltdown for the biggest opening weekend in the month of March and for a spring release Since then 300 s spring release record was broken by Fast and Furious and 300 s March record was broken by Tim Burton s Alice in Wonderland 59 60 300 s opening weekend gross is the 24th highest in box office history coming slightly below The Lost World Jurassic Park but higher than Transformers 61 It was the third biggest opening for an R rated film ever behind The Matrix Reloaded 91 8 million and The Passion of the Christ 83 8 million 62 The film also set a record for IMAX cinemas with a 3 6 million opening weekend 63 The film grossed 456 068 181 worldwide 300 opened two days earlier on March 7 2007 in Sparta and across Greece on March 8 64 65 Studio executives were surprised by the showing which was twice what they had expected 66 They credited the film s stylized violence the strong female role of Queen Gorgo which attracted a large number of women and a MySpace advertising blitz 67 Producer Mark Canton said MySpace had an enormous impact but it has transcended the limitations of the Internet or the graphic novel Once you make a great movie word can spread very quickly 67 Critical response edit The film received a standing ovation at its world premiere in front of 1 700 audience members at the Berlin International Film Festival on February 14 2007 68 It had been panned at a press screening hours earlier where many attendees left during the showing and those who remained booed at the end 69 As of January 2021 on Rotten Tomatoes the film had an approval rating of 61 based on 236 reviews with an average rating of 6 10 10 The site s critical consensus reads A simple minded but visually exciting experience full of blood violence and ready made movie quotes 70 As of October 2020 on Metacritic the film had an weighted average score of 52 out of 100 based on 42 critics indicating mixed or average reviews 71 Audiences polled by CinemaScore gave the film an average grade of A on an A to F scale 72 Some of the most unfavorable reviews came from major American newspapers A O Scott of The New York Times described 300 as about as violent as Apocalypto and twice as stupid while criticizing its color scheme and suggesting that its plot includes racist undertones Scott also poked fun at the buffed bodies of the actors portraying the Spartans declaring that the Persian characters are pioneers in the art of face piercing but that the Spartans had access to superior health clubs and electrolysis facilities 73 Kenneth Turan wrote in the Los Angeles Times that unless you love violence as much as a Spartan Quentin Tarantino or a video game playing teenage boy you will not be endlessly fascinated 74 Roger Ebert gave the film a 2 out of 4 rating writing that 300 has one dimensional caricatures who talk like professional wrestlers plugging their next feud 75 Some critics employed at Greek newspapers have been particularly critical such as film critic Robby Eksiel who said that moviegoers would be dazzled by the digital action but also feel irritated by the pompous interpretations and one dimensional characters 65 76 Variety s Todd McCarthy described the film as visually arresting although bombastic 77 while Kirk Honeycutt writing in The Hollywood Reporter praised the beauty of its topography colors and forms 78 Writing in the Chicago Sun Times Richard Roeper acclaimed 300 as the Citizen Kane of cinematic graphic novels 79 Empire gave the film three out of five writing Visually stunning thoroughly belligerent and as shallow as a pygmy s paddling pool this is a whole heap of style tinged with just a smidgen of substance Comic Book Resources Mark Cronan found the film compelling leaving him with a feeling of power from having been witness to something grand 80 IGN s Todd Gilchrist acclaimed Zack Snyder as a cinematic visionary and a possible redeemer of modern moviemaking 81 Accolades edit At the MTV Movie Awards 2007 300 was nominated for Best Movie Best Performance for Gerard Butler Best Breakthrough Performance for Lena Headey Best Villain for Rodrigo Santoro and Best Fight for Leonidas battling the Uber Immortal 82 but only won the award for Best Fight 300 won both the Best Dramatic Film and Best Action Film honors in the 2006 2007 Golden Icon Awards presented by Travolta Family Entertainment 83 In December 2007 300 won IGN s Movie of the Year 2007 84 along with Best Comic Book Adaptation 85 and King Leonidas as Favorite Character 86 The movie received 10 nominations for the 2008 Saturn Awards winning the awards for Best Director and Best Action Adventure Thriller Film 87 In 2009 National Review magazine ranked 300 number 5 on its 25 Best Conservative Movies of the Last 25 Years list 88 Controversies editHistorical accuracy edit In the actual Battle of Thermopylae the Spartans had already joined an alliance with other Greek poleis against the Persians During the Battle of Thermopylae Xerxes s invasion of Greece coincided with a Spartan religious festival the Carneia in which the Spartans were not permitted to make war Still realizing the threat of the Persians and not wanting to appear as Persian sympathizers the Spartan government rather than Leonidas alone decided to send Leonidas with his personal 300 strong bodyguard to Thermopylae 89 Other Greek poleis joined the 300 Spartan men and totaled somewhere between 5 000 and 6 000 total Greek troops The historical consensus among both ancient chroniclers and current scholars was that Thermopylae was a clear Greek defeat and the Persian invasion would be pushed back only in later ground and naval battles 90 Since few records on the actual martial arts used by the Spartans survive aside from accounts of formations and tactics the fight choreography led by the stunt coordinator and fight choreographer Damon Caro was a synthesis of different weapon arts with Filipino martial arts as the base 91 Paul Cartledge Professor of Greek History at Cambridge University advised the filmmakers on the pronunciation of Greek names and said that they made good use of his published work on Sparta He praised the film for its portrayal of the Spartans heroic code and of the key role played by women in backing up indeed reinforcing the male martial code of heroic honour but he expressed reservations about its West goodies vs East baddies polarization 92 Cartledge wrote that he enjoyed the film but found Leonidas description of the Athenians as boy lovers ironic since the Spartans themselves incorporated institutional pederasty into their educational system 93 Ephraim Lytle assistant professor of Hellenistic history at the University of Toronto said that 300 selectively idealized Spartan society in a problematic and disturbing fashion and portrayed the hundred nations of the Persians as monsters and non Spartan Greeks as weak He suggested that the film s moral universe would have seemed as bizarre to ancient Greeks as it does to modern historians 94 Lytle also commented Ephialtes who betrays the Greeks is likewise changed from a local Malian of sound body into a Spartan outcast a grotesquely disfigured troll who by Spartan custom should have been left exposed as an infant to die Leonidas points out that his hunched back means Ephialtes cannot lift his shield high enough to fight in the phalanx This is a transparent defense of Spartan eugenics and convenient given that infanticide could as easily have been precipitated by an ill omened birthmark 94 Victor Davis Hanson a National Review columnist and former professor of classical history at California State University Fresno wrote the foreword to a 2007 reissue of the graphic novel and said that the film demonstrates a specific affinity with the original material of Herodotus in that it captures the martial ethos of ancient Sparta and represents Thermopylae as a clash of civilizations He remarked that Simonides Aeschylus and Herodotus viewed Thermopylae as a battle against Eastern centralism and collective serfdom which opposed the idea of the free citizen of an autonomous polis 95 He also said that the film portrays the battle in a surreal manner and that the intent was to entertain and shock first and instruct second 96 Touraj Daryaee who is now Baskerville Professor of Iranian History and the Persian World at the University of California Irvine criticized the film s use of classical sources by writing Some passages from the Classical authors Aeschylus Diodorus Herodotus and Plutarch are split over the movie to give it an authentic flavor Aeschylus becomes a major source when the battle with the monstrous human herd of the Persians is narrated in the film Diodorus statement about Greek valor to preserve their liberty is inserted in the film but his mention of Persian valor is omitted Herodotus fanciful numbers are used to populate the Persian army and Plutarch s discussion of Greek women specifically Spartan women is inserted wrongly in the dialogue between the misogynist Persian ambassador and the Spartan king Classical sources are certainly used but exactly in all the wrong places or quite naively The Athenians were fighting a sea battle during this 97 Robert McHenry the former editor in chief of Encyclopaedia Britannica and the author of How to Know said that the film is an almost ineffably silly movie Stills from the film could easily be used to promote Buns of Steel or AbMaster or ThighMaster It s about the romanticizing of the Spartan ideal a process that began even in ancient times was promoted by the Romans and has survived over time while less and less resembling the actual historical Sparta 98 The director of 300 Zack Snyder stated in an MTV interview that the events are 90 percent accurate It s just in the visualization that it s crazy I ve shown this movie to world class historians who have said it s amazing They can t believe it s as accurate as it is Nevertheless he also said the film is an opera not a documentary That s what I say when people say it s historically inaccurate 99 He was also quoted in a BBC News story as saying that the film is at its core a fantasy film He also describes the film s narrator Dilios as a guy who knows how not to wreck a good story with truth 16 In an interview the 300 writer Frank Miller he stated The inaccuracies almost all of them are intentional I took those chest plates and leather skirts off of them for a reason I wanted these guys to move and I wanted em to look good I knocked their helmets off a fair amount partly so you can recognize who the characters are Spartans in full regalia were almost indistinguishable except at a very close angle Another liberty I took was they all had plumes but I only gave a plume to Leonidas to make him stand out and identify him as a king I was looking for more an evocation than a history lesson The best result I can hope for is that if the movie excites someone they ll go explore the histories themselves Because the histories are endlessly fascinating 100 Kaveh Farrokh in the paper The 300 Movie Separating Fact from Fiction 101 noted that the film falsely portrayed the Greco Persian Wars in binary terms the democratic good rational Us versus the tyrannical evil and irrational other of the ever nebulous if not exotic Persia He highlighted three points regarding the contribution of the Achaemenid Empire to the creation of democracy and human rights The founder of the Achaemenid Empire Cyrus the Great was the world s first emperor to openly declare and guarantee the sanctity of human rights and individual freedom Cyrus was a follower of the teachings of Zoroaster the founder of one of the world s oldest monotheistic religions When Cyrus defeated King Nabonidus of Babylon he officially declared the freedom of the Jews from their Babylonian captivity This was the first time in history that a world power had guaranteed the survival of the Jewish people religion customs and culture He abolished slavery 102 General criticism edit Before the release of 300 Warner Bros expressed concerns about the political aspects of the film s theme Snyder relates that there was a huge sensitivity about East versus West with the studio 103 Media speculation about a possible parallel between the Greco Persian conflict and current events began in an interview with Snyder that was conducted before the Berlin Film Festival 104 The interviewer remarked that everyone is sure to be translating this film into contemporary politics Snyder replied that he was aware that people would read the film through the lens of current events but no parallels between the film and the modern world were intended 105 Outside current political parallels some critics have raised more general questions about the film s ideological orientation The New York Post s Kyle Smith wrote that the film would have pleased Adolf s boys 106 and Slate s Dana Stevens compared the film to The Eternal Jew as a textbook example of how race baiting fantasy and nationalist myth can serve as an incitement to total war Since it s a product of the post ideological post Xbox 21st century 300 will instead be talked about as a technical achievement the next blip on the increasingly blurry line between movies and video games 107 Roger Moore a critic for the Orlando Sentinel relates 300 to Susan Sontag s definition of fascist art 108 Indeed the Lambda sign on the Spartans shields in 300 formed the inspiration for the official symbol of the far right Identitarian movement 109 110 Newsday critic Gene Seymour on the other hand stated that such reactions are misguided writing that the movie s just too darned silly to withstand any ideological theorizing 111 Snyder himself dismissed ideological readings suggesting that reviewers who critique a graphic novel movie about a bunch of guys stomping the snot out of each other using words like neocon homophobic homoerotic or racist are missing the point 112 Snyder however also admitted to fashioning an effeminate villain specifically to make young straight males in the audience uncomfortable What s more scary to a 20 year old boy than a giant god king who wants to have his way with you 113 The Slovenian critic Slavoj Zizek pointed out that the story represents a poor small country Greece invaded by the army of a much large r state Persia and suggested the identification of the Spartans with a modern superpower to be flawed 114 The writer Frank Miller said The Spartans were a paradoxical people They were the biggest slave owners in Greece But at the same time Spartan women had an unusual level of rights It s a paradox that they were a bunch of people who in many ways were fascist but they were the bulwark against the fall of democracy The closest comparison you can draw in terms of our own military today is to think of the red caped Spartans as being like our special ops forces They re these almost superhuman characters with a tremendous warrior ethic who were unquestionably the best fighters in Greece I didn t want to render Sparta in overly accurate terms because ultimately I do want you to root for the Spartans I couldn t show them being quite as cruel as they were I made them as cruel as I thought a modern audience could stand 100 Michael M Chemers author of With Your Shield or on It Disability Representation in 300 in the Disability Studies Quarterly said that the film s portrayal of the hunchback and his story is not mere ableism this is anti disability 115 Frank Miller commenting on areas in which he lessened the Spartan cruelty for narrative purposes said I have King Leonidas very gently tell Ephialtes the hunchback that they can t use him as a soldier because of his deformity It would be much more classically Spartan if Leonidas laughed and kicked him off the cliff 100 Iranian criticism edit nbsp Some interpreted the portrayal of King Xerxes right as homosexual Snyder said of Xerxes What s more scary to a 20 year old boy than a giant god king who wants to have his way with you 113 From its opening 300 also attracted controversy over its portrayal of Persians Officials of the Iranian government 116 denounced the film 117 118 119 Some scenes in the film portray demon like and other fictional creatures as part of the Persian army and the fictionalized portrayal of Persian King Xerxes I has been criticized as effeminate 120 121 Critics suggested that it was meant to stand in stark contrast to the portrayed masculinity of the Spartan army 122 Steven Rea argued that the film s Persians were a vehicle for an anachronistic cross section of Western aspirational stereotypes of Asian and African cultures 123 The film s portrayal of ancient Persians caused a particularly strong reaction in Iran Various Iranian officials condemned the film 124 125 126 The Iranian Academy of the Arts submitted a formal complaint against the film to UNESCO that called it an attack on the historical identity of Iran 127 128 The Iranian mission to the UN protested the film in a press release 129 and Iranian embassies protested its screening in France 130 Thailand 131 Turkey 132 and Uzbekistan 133 The film was banned within Iran as hurtful American propaganda 134 Reviewers in the United States and elsewhere noted the political overtones of the West against Iran story line and the way Persians are depicted as decadent sexually flamboyant and evil in contrast to the noble Greeks 135 With illegal versions of the film already available in Tehran with the film s international release and news of the film s surprising success at the US box office the film prompted widespread anger in Iran Azadeh Moaveni of Time reported All of Tehran was outraged Everywhere I went yesterday the talk vibrated with indignation over the film 136 Newspapers in Iran featured headlines such as Hollywood declares war on Iranians and 300 Against 70 Million the latter being the size of Iran s population Ayende No an independent Iranian newspaper said The film depicts Iranians as demons without culture feeling or humanity who think of nothing except attacking other nations and killing people 136 Four Iranian Members of Parliament have called on Muslim countries to ban the film 137 and a group of Iranian film makers submitted a letter of protest to UNESCO regarding the film s misrepresentation of Iranian history and culture 138 The cultural advisor to Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad called the film an American attempt for psychological warfare against Iran 139 Moaveni identified two factors that may have contributed to the intensity of Iranian indignation over the film Firstly she described the timing of the film s release on the eve of Nowruz the Persian New Year as inauspicious Secondly Iranians tend to view the era depicted in the film as a particularly noble page in their history Moaveni also suggested that the box office success of 300 compared with the relative flop of Alexander another spurious period epic dealing with Persians is cause for considerable alarm signaling ominous U S intentions 136 According to The Guardian Iranian critics of 300 ranging from bloggers to government officials described the movie as a calculated attempt to demonise Iran at a time of intensifying U S pressure over the country s nuclear programme 137 An Iranian government spokesman described the film as hostile behavior which is the result of cultural and psychological warfare 137 Moaveni reported that the Iranians with whom she interacted were adamant that the movie was secretly funded by the U S government to prepare Americans for going to war against Iran 136 In popular culture edit300 has been spoofed in film television and other media and spawned the This is Sparta internet meme 140 Skits based upon the film have appeared on Saturday Night Live 141 and Robot Chicken the latter of which mimicked the visual style of 300 in a parody set during the American Revolutionary War titled 1776 142 Other parodies include an episode of South Park named D Yikes 143 the short film United 300 which won the 2007 MTV Movie Spoof Award 144 and BOO by Mad magazine in its September 2007 issue 481 written by Desmond Devlin and illustrated by Mort Drucker 145 20th Century Fox released Meet the Spartans a spoof directed by Jason Friedberg and Aaron Seltzer Universal Pictures once planned a similar parody titled National Lampoon s 301 The Legend of Awesomest Maximus Wallace Leonidas 146 Samurai Jack an American animated series by Genndy Tartakovsky also paid homage to the Battle of Thermopylae in the 12th episode of its second season but instead used minotaur robots as the antagonists 147 300 particularly its pithy quotations has been adopted by the student body of Michigan State University whose nickname is the Spartans with chants of Spartans what is your profession becoming common at sporting events starting after the film s release and Michigan State basketball head coach Tom Izzo dressed as Leonidas at one student event 148 149 Nate Ebner a football player with the New England Patriots in the National Football League and formerly with the Ohio State Buckeyes was nicknamed Leonidas after the Greek warrior king hero of Sparta acted by Gerard Butler in the movie 300 because of his intense workout regimen and his beard 150 Sequel editMain article 300 Rise of an Empire In June 2008 producers Mark Canton Gianni Nunnari and Bernie Goldmann revealed that work had begun on a sequel to 300 300 Rise of an Empire 151 Legendary Pictures had announced that Frank Miller had started writing the follow up graphic novel and that Zack Snyder was interested in directing the adaptation but moved on to develop and direct the Superman reboot Man of Steel 152 153 Noam Murro directed instead while Zack Snyder produced The film focused on the Athenian admiral Themistocles as portrayed by Australian actor Sullivan Stapleton The sequel 300 Rise of an Empire was released on March 7 2014 and grossed 337 million worldwide 154 See also edit nbsp Ancient Greece portal nbsp Film portal nbsp United States portalList of historical films set in Near Eastern and Western civilizationReferences edit 300 15 British Board of Film Classification February 22 2007 Archived from the original on September 16 2016 Retrieved September 6 2016 Corliss Richard March 14 2007 7 Reasons Why 300 Is a Huge Hit Time Archived from the original on October 15 2008 Retrieved November 18 2008 300 2007 The Numbers Retrieved December 29 2020 a b 300 Box Office Mojo Archived from the original on March 13 2009 Retrieved March 8 2009 Snyder Zack 300 2007 AllMovie Archived from the original on January 27 2019 Retrieved January 26 2019 a b c d 300 Comic To Movie Comparison About com 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Rotten Tomatoes 300 at Metacritic nbsp 300 at Box Office Mojo Miller Gerri March 2 2007 Inside 300 HowStuffWorks 300 production notes Miller Neil February 14 2007 Interview Director Zach Snyder talks 300 Archived from the original on May 15 2008 Hanson Victor Davis March 28 2007 300 Fact or Fiction Private Papers Archived from the original on January 3 2010 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title 300 film amp oldid 1184003055, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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