Product Details
300 (2 Disc Special Edition) [2007]

300 (2 Disc Special Edition) [2007]
Directed by Zack Snyder

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Product Details

  • Amazon Sales Rank: #482 in DVD
  • Released on: 2007-10-01
  • Rating: Suitable for 15 years and over
  • Aspect ratio: 2.40:1
  • Formats: Dolby, PAL, Subtitled, Widescreen
  • Original language: English
  • Number of discs: 2
  • Running time: 111 minutes

Editorial Reviews

Amazon.co.uk Review
Like Sin City before it, 300 brings Frank Miller and Lynn Varley's graphic novel vividly to life. Gerard Butler (Beowulf and Grendel, The Phantom of the Opera) radiates pure power and charisma as Leonidas, the Grecian king who leads 300 of his fellow Spartans (including David Wenham of The Lord of the Rings, Michael Fassbender, and Andrew Pleavin) into a battle against the overwhelming force of Persian invaders. Their only hope is to neutralise the numerical advantage by confronting the Persians, led by King Xerxes (Rodrigo Santoro), at the narrow strait of Thermopylae.

More engaging than Troy, the tepid and somewhat similar epic of ancient Greece, 300 is also comparable to Sin City in that the actors were shot on green screen, then added to digitally created backgrounds. The effort pays off in a strikingly stylised look and huge, sweeping battle scenes. However, it's not as to-the-letter faithful to Miller's source material as Sin City was. The plot is the same, and many of the book's images are represented just about perfectly. But some extra material has been added, including new villains (who would be considered "bosses" if this were a video game, and it often feels like one) and a political subplot involving new characters and a significantly expanded role for the Queen of Sparta (Lena Headey). While this subplot by director Zack Snyder (Dawn of the Dead) and his fellow co-writers does break up the violence, most fans would probably dismiss it as filler if it didn't involve the sexy Headey. Other viewers, of course, will be turned off by the waves of spurting blood, flying body parts, and surging testosterone. (The six-pack abs are also relentless, and the movie has more and less nudity--more female, less male--than the graphic novel.) Still, as a representation of Miller's work and as an ancient-themed action flick with a modern edge, 300 delivers. --David Horiuchi

Synopsis
Based on the graphic novel by Frank Miller and Lynn Varley, 300 takes over the screen like an invading horde. With all the gushing blood of a horror movie and the scope of a classic epic, the second film from Zack Snyder (who helmed the 2004 remake of DAWN OF THE DEAD) is an impressive visual spectacle. Gerard Butler (THE PHANTOM OF THE OPERA) plays Leonidas, the king of ancient Sparta. The city is famous for its warrior philosophy, and Leonidas won’t kneel to the demands of Persia's King Xerxes (LOST's Rodrigo Santoro). Instead, Leonidas leads his 300-strong army against Xerxes's army of millions. Meanwhile, his wife (Lena Headley, THE BROTHERS GRIMM) campaigns in Sparta for the city to send reinforcements as she butts heads with the treacherous Theron (Dominic West, THE WIRE). With its gore and scale, 300 marks director Snyder as a possible successor to Peter Jackson's throne. Jackson also got his start in horror with BAD TASTE and DEAD ALIVE, and the two men share a penchant for ambitious battle scenes. The huge fights in 300 rival Jackson's efforts in the LORD OF THE RINGS films. David Wenham, who starred in two of the Tolkien-based films, plays Dilios, one of the Spartan soldiers. Though the cast doesn't boast any A-list stars, the actors ably fill their larger-than-life roles. In a film filled with men, Headley stands out as Queen Gorgo. She matches her warrior husband in strength, while showing love toward Leonidas and their son. Though there are scenes that demonstrate the humanity of the characters, 300 is undeniably about bravery and blood, and it succeeds because of the stylish depictions of both.


Customer Reviews

Only as a warning... NO DTS Soundtrack4
I did not want to say much about the film or the DVD, because both are without a doubt great and dearly recommended, but the description contains one flaw, cause it claims the DVD would have the DTS-Soundtrack on it, which it doesn't. I ask for an update on the Features, but untill that comes through, this has to do.
Blocker

Slightly disappointed3
I saw this film at the cinema and found it slightly disappointing. Seems if you are female then you'll love this movie for all the hunky men that are in it. However, I do admit to being a bit of a movie critic and the first let down was how much blue/green screen was used in this movie. Why they needed to pretty much do the whole movie like this I do not know?

Secondly, for all the fighting scenes are at first glance awesome, they do lack a lot of detail. Seems that movies these days to sneak in a 15 certificate, they speed and blur the action scenes which I find ruins it slightly.

Apart from that it still is a good movie but not as good as it could have been.

Silly, overblown and artificial but still oddly moving3
'300' is one of those mainstream films that is better the second time you watch it, which is another way of saying that it's not all that good. We can expect really good, serious films to be tough going the first time round, because really good directors have a personal way of saying things that is sometimes difficult by virtue of being unfamiliar.

Zack Snyder, however, is not a really good director. He's a talented Hollywood director who lucked into a vivid retelling of a good story, in this case Frank Miller's passionate and visually striking but lurid and inaccurate version of the heroic-but-doomed defence of the pass of Thermopylae by a small Greek army against a massive Persian one.

The battle of Thermopylae has been called, with some justice, the most important battle in the history of what is sometimes called Western civilisation. Although the Greeks ultimately lost, their collective and determined self-sacrifice helped to boost the morale of the Greek side, with the result that the Persian empire didn't actually conquer Greece in 478BC but went home to lick its wounds - with the further result that Greek civilisation developed in the uniquely individual and ornery way that it did, giving us (among other things) the invention of tragic drama, history and philosophy, plus a lot of really good poetry. Thermopylae was one of the very few times in history when it was truly necessary for a small cadre of dedicated soldiers to defend the freedom that others enjoyed.

The film doesn't really work, though, because it relies almost entirely on the book, which is itself filtered through Frank Miller's rather manic Orientalism. The Persian king Xerxes, who was in real life a weak, ignorant and over-ambitious character with a desire to avenge his father's failures, and who was therefore not totally unlike the current US President, is here presented as a sleazily androgynous giant whose court is full of lots of same-sex sex. You would never know from this movie that the Spartans practised institutional pederasty; that all Spartan adolescent boys went through a period of being the lovers of older men. In the movie, King Leonidas (Gerard Butler, very good, gruff and apparently channelling Sean Connery) refers to his temporary Athenian allies as 'boy-lovers', which is pretty ironic seeing as he would have been one himself in real life.

Having said that, the performances are good. Lena Headey is especially fine as Queen Gorgo, one of the very few ancient Greek women about whom we have much evidence and who, by most accounts, was very much as we see her here - blunt, to the point, honourable, determined and courageous. The depiction of the battle itself is frankly wacky, with eight-feet-tall monsters standing in for the largely conscript Persian army, but the ultimate emotional significance of the stand at Thermopylae does come across, even if the film is wildly inaccurate in every detail except the dialogue (e.g. when challenged by the Persians to lay down arms, Leonidas really is supposed to have replied 'Come and get them.')

So it's a big fantasy, and if you really want to know what it was like at Thermopylae or how they came to be there in the first place, I suggest you read a good book on the subject. But the film, like Miller's graphic novel, does admirably capture what Thermopylae has to come to mean from almost as soon as it originally happened - heroic self-sacrifice in the name of a good cause. The Spartans themselves did not practice democracy, and indeed their whole society was built on the exploitation and enslavement of others. But if they hadn't stood at Thermopylae and made an example, Western history might have been very different. Benevolent despotism might have been the only political system we had ever heard of.

Also, there's some great hacking and slashing. It's not a major film, but it's fun. Just don't take it for anything like accuracy. And the CGI does get a bit annoying.