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If a studio is going to spend close to $200
million on a movie, they could do worse than adapting The Iliad, the epic
granddaddy of western literature. Still, on the heels of Peter Jacksons The Lord of the Rings,
director Wolfgang Petersen has some excessively large footsteps to follow in the epic
adaptation genre. The inclusion of Sean Bean and Orlando Bloom (and even having his
character specialize in bow-and-arrow fighting) in the cast only makes drawing the
comparison more tempting. Yet for all the spectacle of humongous armies clashing,
Petersens film is ultimately a different beast.
Troy, perhaps controversially, tries to de-mythologize the myth.
Manipulation by the gods is out and Achilles is a mere mortal, or as mere as a
Brad Pitt character is likely to be. Despite the nearly three hour running time, the ten
year siege of Troy in The Iliad is reduced to about two weeks here, and there are a
few more understandable lapses in historical accuracy in order to enhance the drama.
The story begins when Trojan prince Paris (Orlando Bloom, Pirates
of the Caribbean: The Curse of the Black Pearl) steals the heart of Helen (Diane
Kruger), wife of Menelaus (Brendan Gleeson, Cold Mountain). Menelaus of course wants
revenge and asks his brother, Agamemnon (Brian Cox, Adaptation), king of Greece, for help.
Agamemnon uses this opportunity as an excuse to besiege Troy, his countrys principal
rival. However, Agamemnon requires the help of Greeces greatest warrior, the nigh
invincible Achilles (Brad Pitt, Fight
Club). The problem is that Achilles despises him. After some convincing from
Odysseus (Sean Bean), Achilles decides the Trojan war is the best chance for his memory to
live on forever in glory, especially in confronting Pariss renowned brother, Hector
(Eric Bana, Black Hawk Down).
Hector, on the other hand, is a family man who finds nothing heroic about killing and only
does so when forced to protect his people. Hector distrusts the religious prophecies his
father, King Priam (Peter OToole, The
Last Emperor), uses to endorse the continuing onslaught, but he dutifully obeys.
Despite the spectacle of war with which Warner Brothers hopes to entice
audiences, Troy is essentially an anti-war film. Certainly the battle scenes hold
the attention, even if Petersens direction is only unremarkably competent. Petersen
doesnt cater to audience bloodlust the way Mel Gibson or James Cameron sometimes do
in their films; he emphasizes the circle of violence at work in war. Each unprovoked
attack brings about an even more vicious retaliation with a beloved character on each side
often paying the price until the final result is mass atrocity. The cost of war is
horrific, a lesson even Achilles learns.
A muscle-bound Brad Pitt presents a one-dimensional Achilles. Brian Cox
doesnt chew the scenery so much as swallow it whole while OToole, as his story
counterpart, delivers a more respectable, but safe performance. Kruger doesnt quite
work as Helen. Far from having the face that launched a thousand ships, she has the bland
look of a generic supermodel--and no wonder, since thats what she is. The two actors
who hold the movie together are the films moral voices Eric Bana as noble,
self-sacrificing Hector (who does not flee from Achilles as he does in Homers
version) and Rose Byrne as Briseis, the Trojan priestess of Apollo who falls for her
enemy, Achilles.
- George Wu