Troy: It's, like, Totally Trojan!

Author: TamaPublished: May 16, 2004 at 9:24 pm 0 comments

I think the most surprising element of Troy is that Brad Pitt is Achilles. His characterisation is perfect and shows the Achilles I had in my head when reading the Iliad (albeit, perhaps, that this Achilles' sexuality is a bit too straightforward!). Indeed, the leads in this ensemble cast all perform admirably: Eric Bana is stirring as the noble Hector; Saffron Burrows plays a moving Andromache; Brian Cox makes a wonderful egomaniac king as Agamemnon; and Sean Bean more than lives up to the epithet Crafty Odysseus! Orlando Bloom as Paris and newcomer Diane Kruger as Helen are both hopeless romantics whose actions give Agamemnon an excuse to wage war, but their sugary characterisation is again pretty close to the story. The sets are sparse, but admirably evoke (what we know of) the era. And, although it's pinched from The Odyssey, the Trojan Horse actually looks like it could have been built by the Greeks on the shore of Troy. However, the fight scene between Achilles and Hector which concludes The Iliad is still the climax of the film and this is a truly amazing fight scene, worthy of top ten lists for decades to come. And if there is one sure Academy Award to come from Troy, it is for sound editing: I've never heard sound carry a fight so convincingly or dramatically before and my hat is off to those responsible. That's the good, now on to the bad.

While Troy ends pretty well, it's first half is poorly edited and lacking in structure. It's almost like director Wolfgang Petersen was nervous the epic battles in Troy wouldn't stand out if there was anything memorable in the first half, so he seems to have purposefully dulled them down. And while it's a common complaint, Diane Kruger did the best she could with Helen, but I really don't think that the face that launched a thousand ships was Barbie! Of most concern, was the complete absence of the Gods. Sure, to a contemporary audience the bitching, scheming Olympians might seem bizarre, but they are the key motivation in the story. What does Achilles' desecration of Apollo's temple achieve when there are no Gods to anger? And, most annoyingly, Troy's King Priam (perhaps a little over-acted by an aging Peter O'Toole) is made out to be a doddering old fool due to his actions being based on the advice of the head priest! Priam was torn by these decisions in the Iliad; in Troy he seems like a foolish own man who causes his own country's downfall. That said, O'Toole does regain dignity for the character in the confrontation with Achilles to recover Hector's body.

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  • The Iliad / The Odyssey The Iliad / The Odyssey

    A beautiful gift set of Robert Fagles' award-winning translations of HomerGripping listeners and readers for more than 2,700 years, The Iliad is the story of the Trojan War and the rage of Achilles. ...

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