The K M Links Game - November 2024 Week...
Quizzes & Puzzles6 mins ago
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For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.I have had this debate with myself and others. My boyfriend have heard somewhere, that this should be seen as the events that inspired Homer to write the Illiad, if that is true I guess many of the faults are ok. I would have liked much more, to see a more accurate version of the Illiad, e.g. the gods involment, which I think is great fun. It really annoys me that Helena esapes and so on, as it is supposed to be a heartbreaking tradegy. All this said I can understand that if you want to make a movie out of any literary work you have to cut and paste, unless you want the film to 24 hours long. So all in all I don't know if I agree :0) But I certainly do know what you mean!
I accept that films should be allowed to take certain liberties regarding the script. BUT when a film claims to be 'inspired by the Iliiad' then it is not dealing with the myth of Troy but instead the story as contained in Homer's Illiad.
Therefore it would make sense for it to be at least loosely based around the events in the Illiad - which it blatantly wasnt!
Another comment was that Homer may have also got it wrong. Although this may be true it does not deter from the fact that the film was BASED on Homer's Iliiad alone. This again means that any poetic liucense on the part of the filmakers should be taken WITHIN Homer's Illiad.
You've already answered your Q-it was 'inspired' by The Iliad (I would say 'inspired' by The Odyssey and The Aeneid as well).
'Troy' is just another film. It seems highly unlikely that anyone would go to see a movie about some "great warriors'" never-ending squabbling and bickering gods, covering just one year of the Trojan war-no victory, no Trojan horse, remember? Just imagine: "Such was their burial of Hector, breaker of horses." The End! Never. Well, at least not produced in Hellwood.
Or maybe too much of Robert Graves' influence in your question? I do not feel that we know much about Homeric attitudes towards sexual relationships between men.
Mind you, all English translations I've come across so far are truly awful (it's only me, though).
And Ajax (Aias) 'drilling his brain out'???
well ive not seen the film, but ive got a short story version of the book that begins with all the gods around a table and eris the goddess of discord comes down with a golden apple etc. and at some points the soldiers make contact with the oracle at delphi is this included in the full book version?
if so i was hoping it would have been in the film, that would have added a real fantasy element to it. i like hearing about the gods, it would be good if there were more films that had that sort of storyline to it.