While many critics focus on the " " film's stunning visuals, one of the most interesting perspectives argues that the movie is actually highly accurate —not to historical facts, but to the
The "300 Workout" sparked a global functional training craze. movie 300 spartans
| | Actor | Role | |---------------|-----------|-----------| | Leonidas | Gerard Butler | Spartan king, warrior leader | | Queen Gorgo | Lena Headey | Leonidas’s wife, political subplot | | Xerxes | Rodrigo Santoro | God-like Persian king | | Dilios | David Wenham | Narrator/survivor who spreads the tale | | Ephialtes | Andrew Tiernan | Hunchbacked Spartan reject who betrays them | While many critics focus on the " "
Let’s separate the bronze breastplate from the fantasy. The Phalanx and the terrain: The Spartans really
The betrayal comes from a hunchbacked Spartan outcast named Ephialtes, who shows the Persians a secret goat path. Surrounded, Leonidas launches a final, futile charge, hurling his spear at Xerxes himself (merely scratching his cheek). The film ends with a rain of arrows blotted out the sun, followed by Dilios (David Wenham) rallying 10,000 Spartans and Greeks at Plataea with the immortal cry: "This is where we fight! This is where they die!"
It is loud. It is brash. It is deeply, gloriously stupid in the best way possible. It is a film that understands one simple truth: sometimes, people just want to watch a 7-foot god-king get kicked into a bottomless pit.