HOME
Archives A - E      F - N    O - Z     Posters          Who We Are and Why We Do What We Do

Your Donations support the Site

amazon.gif
Top Selling DVD     Books

  BLU-RAY DVDs:
The Girl with The Dragon Tattoo
Happy Feet Two
Footloose (2011)
Tower Heist
Angels and Demons
The Rum Diary
Avatar
Batman Begins
Dark Knight
Fifth Element
The Hangover
James Bond 11 disc coll.
Lord of the Rings
trilogy
Mission Impossible GP
Sherlock Holmes AGOS
Star Wars Saga
Ultimate Matrix coll
X-Men First Class
X-Men Trilogy
X-Men Wolverine

 BLU-Ray for Family DVDs 
Alice in Wonderland (2010)
Bambi
A Bug's Life
Cars
Chronicles of Narnia set
Coraline
Ghostbusters
Harry Potter 1-8 collection
Iron Man 2 combo
Kung Fu Panda
Lord of the Rings Trilogy Pinocchio
Pirates of Caribbean trilogy
Pixar short films
Ratatouille
Shrek the Whole Story
Sleeping Beauty
The Smurfs
combo
Snow White & 7 Dwarfs
Star Trek motion pictures set
Star Wars Saga (1-6)
Toy Story combo
Toy Story 2 combo
Toy Story 3 combo
Wall-E SE

Labelled with ICRA
We're Kidlet Safe

Search engine by FreeFind
Click to add search to YOUR web site!
click to search site

DVDs on Sale:
The Girl with The Dragon Tattoo
Hop
Footloose (2011)
Hugo
Tower Heist
Jack and Jill
Tower Heist
The Twilight Saga: Breaking Dawn - Part 1
Tinker Tailor Soldier Spy
The Three Musketeers
J. Edgar combo
Sherlock Holmes: A Game of Shadows combo
My Week With Marilyn
Abduction
Contraband
The Iron Lady
Angels Demons,
Joyful Noise
The Rum Diary
The Bodyguard
Moneyball
Adjustment Bureau
Avatar
Batman Begins
Blade Runner
Harry Potter 1-8 box set
The Help
Indiana Jones trilogy
Jurassic Park box set
Mission Impossible GP
Rango combo
Shrek 1-3 trilogy
Sherlock Holmes AGOS
Simpsons Movie
Star Trek I - VI box set
Star Trek 2010 (1 disk)
Star Wars Trilogy (1-3)
Star Wars Trilogy (4-6)
Thor
Transformers Dark Moon
X-Men First Class
X-Men Trilogy
X-Men Origins: Wolverine

Buy Movie collectibles
TV/Movie Collectibles

movie review query engine

Privacy Policy

OFCS

300
Click for full sized poster

300

Starring Gerard Butler, Lena Headey, David Wenham
Screenplay by Zack Snyder & Kurt Johnstad and Michael B. Gordon
Based on the graphic novel by Frank Miller and Lynn Varley
Directed by Zack Snyder
website: 300themovie.warnerbros.com

IN SHORT: Cool history beautifully adapting the graphic novel. [Rated R for graphic battle sequences throughout, some sexuality and nudity. 116 minutes]

Because it bears repeating every time the situation arises, our hardcover copy of Frank Miller and Lynn Varley's 300 sits on a bookshelf next to our hardcover copies of Miller's Sin City opus. In between are a couple of dozen boxes filled with comic books, many by the aforementioned Frank Miller who also created Elektra during his run on Marvel Comics' Daredevil. Yep, Cranky's an unrepentant fanboy and, that being said, we're going to file all that fannish attitude and try to address 300 as if we hadn't just reread the thing two days ago. We did but moreso to check on the Miller and Varley artwork which director Zack Snyder has managed to replicate onscreen. Seriously lovely.

Approximately two and a half millenia ago, circa 480 B.C., the independent city-states of the Grecian peninsula were just that. Independent. Athens was the center of intellectual activity held in contempt by the bred-for-war Spartans. Somewhere in the middle, fulfilling middle-class (for the times) occupations are Arcadians. Arcadians will fill out the middle of this film as well, but we'll come back to that. In Sparta, we learn at the start of 300, babies born too small or with discernible defects are discarded at birth, their families bearing the shame of producing progeny not fit to fill the capes of Spartan soldiers. By age seven, boys are ready for military training, if they've endured the physical punishment of years on through six. For one boy said training culminates in a one on one battle with a very hungry wolf. Said boy will become King Leonidas (Gerard Butler), ruler of Sparta who, when approached by messengers from King Xerxes of Persia (Rodrigo Santoro) demanding acquiescence, well, Leonidas doesn't take too kindly to the demand -- especially since he's already heard that the men-who-love-boys over in Athens have already given a big thumbs down to the proposal. Leonidas doesn't allow the messengers to make demands of other Greek city-states, and he begins preparations for war. War must be approved by the oracle of the Gods, who don't approve, but that never stopped a Spartan before. Leonidas and 300 of his best men "take a walk," heading for Thermopylae where geography gives 300 fighters an even chance to take on a million enemies.

You read those numbers correctly. Xerxes has an army a million strong, conscripted from a hundred conquered nations. Said battle at Thermopylae will be the catalyst for the creation of a united Greek state, which is something you should have learned in a history class along the way (or, given the demographics of this site, you already know the ending because you, too, own the book). What is added in Zack Snyder's production is a new subplot involving Queen Gorgo (Lena Headey) and her political strategizing with, and against, a power-hungry politician called Theron (Dominic West) and fleshes out the story nicely, as does a subplot involving a soldier simply referred to as Captain (Vincent Regan), proud that his son firstborn Astinos (Tom Wisdom) will join him on the battlefield. More important is the discovery of a now grown "reject," Ephialtes (Andrew Tiernan), who begs Leonidas' leave to join the 300 and redeem his family's honor. Leonidas' decision will not prove to be wise.

Like last year's Mirror Mask, the combination of live actors and CGI animated wrap around backgrounds locks the story in and doesn't allow for last minute editing to fix any perceived problems. Unlike Mirror Mask, we had no problems sitting through this film even as we watched 300 on a reg'lar sized movie screen. Without any real care as to whether or not we felt like rootin' for the hero, it was just an average sit. All the while, though, the fanboy inside was screaming in our head -- "WHY DIDN'T YOU GO TO AN IMAX SCREENING???" 300 is so drenched in testosterone that the overkill of an oversized IMAX screen is the only way to go see it.

On average, a first run movie ticket will run you Ten Bucks. Were Cranky able to set his own price to 300, he would have paid . . .

$6.50

. . . which means it's the guy's equivalent of "you made me sit through [insert name of any chick flick here] so now you have to see one for me. Feel free to grab on tight if any of the warrior stuff gets too intense [hee hee hee]."


The Cranky Critic® is a Registered Trademark of, and his website is  Copyright © 1995  -  2012 by Chuck Schwartz. Articles by Paul Fischer are Copyright © 1999 - 2006 Paul Fischer. All images, unless otherwise noted, are property of,©, ®, their respective studios and are used by permission. All Rights Reserved. Not to be used or copied for any commercial purpose. Academy Award(s) and Oscar®(s) are registered trademarks and service marks of the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences.