Redbrickbear said:Sam Lowry said:Redbrickbear said:Sam Lowry said:BearFan33 said:Frank Galvin said:Porteroso said:Frank Galvin said:Danielsjackson114 said:
Yeah sorry. Your woke bs doesn't work here
Neither does logic or facts, so it is in good company.
Skin color aside, casting Achilles as a stick thin transgender person seems weird, doesn't it?
So did casting a black George Washington in Hamilton. It worked. Maybe this will and maybe it won't.
Artists should see things differently, otherwise lets just watch documentaries. I am not going to pre-judge this one as a problem because Christopher Nolan is good at making movies.
I'm going to try to have an open mind and likely watch it when it is available on one of the services (not at the movies). If I cant get past a small person beating up massive dudes I'll change the channel.
Achilles is dead by the time of the Odyssey, so if he appears I'm guessing it will be in the underworld. It could be they're portraying him as a much diminished version of his former self.
If so it's still a stupid take on the story
In both the Odyssey and the Divine Comedy…Achilles is encountered in the underworld by the protagonist.
And in both he is remorseful over a life thrown away and spent on sin.
Wrath in the Odyssey. And sexual lust in the Divine comedy
But he is still shown to be a powerful masculine figure…even in death…not a deformed freakish one.
He is tormented by regret
[Achilles' Despair: When Odysseus tries to praise Achilles by saying he is still a powerful king among the dead, Achilles responds bitterly, famously stating, "I would rather be a slave on earth for another man-some dirt poor tenant farmer who scrapes to keep alive- than rule down here over all the breathless dead".] ,Book 11 of the Odyssey
[Seeing them, I asked Virgil: "My teacher, who are those souls punished in this awful wind?"
"Ah!" he answered right away, "you most likely know the story of the first one up there. She was an empress over a vast kingdom of many different cultures. But she was so corrupted with every kind of lust…The one next to her is Dido, queen of Carthage, who killed herself for love of Aeneas and thus broke faith…Next is Cleopatra in love with men's lust!
And there's Helen of Troy. That woman caused years of war and woe!
Ah, and there's Troy's greatest warrior, Achilles, who, like the others, lost his life for love. And near him is Paris, who stole Helen and thus started the Trojan War…"
He kept going, naming more than a thousand and telling me how love had cut them off from life. When he had finished naming all these famous ancient souls, I was left dazed with pity and confused.] ,Canto 5
I wouldn't call it stupid until I see what Nolan does with it. Achilles is still a kind of lord in the underworld, but he has no real power. That's why he says he'd rather be alive and a slave than rule over the lifeless dead.
A fallen super masculine war hero in the after life regretting spending his earthly life seeking revenge/fame/lust
Still not seeing how that works to have that character played by a transsexual actor born a woman who is 5'1 and like 125lbs
At one point Ellen page was actually only 84 pounds
Does not sound much like someone who could play one of the great Rambo types of the Bronze Age world.
[his 2023 memoir, Pageboy, Page shared that there were periods in his life where his weight fluctuated significantly, noting that it dropped to 84 pounds during one especially difficult period in his youth.]
The Rock would have been perfect, but next time he needs to protect his heel. His only point of vulnerability.
