3 posts tagged “history”
An historian telling us about the Lincoln County War.
Upon watching the movie 300, I have the following thoughts:
1. I thought I was in pretty good shape. Now I think I'm in serious need of a Soloflex. Or, at least someone to CGI a six-pack on me.
2. Is there a movie rating for "Ewww"? This movie is soaked in sex and violence in a very visceral, intertwined way that is very disturbing. I needed cleansing after watching it.
3. Visually, this movie is astounding. It's also groundbreaking in its technique. I honestly couldn't tell you which parts of the movie are CGI and which aren't. That's kind of the point - it's completely seemless - but there is definitely CGI in use, 16 terrabytes of CGI, in fact.
4. It's probably the most compelling, pro-war film I've ever seen. "Go violence!" it says, and says it very well.
5. It is based on a graphic novel, which in turn was inspired by another movie, The 300 Spartans, 1962, which is in turn based on the actual Battle of Thermopylae. I sincerely hope no one leaves this movie thinking they've seen an historical reinactment, but in reading the article on the battle, much of the historical details of the story are included. Minus the Caliban-like Pleistarchos, and the like, of course. Oh, and it is unlikely that Xerxes was nine feet tall.
The most ironic historical inaccuracy is that the 300 Spartans did not, in reality, stand alone against the Persians. In reality, 1,000 to 2,000 Spartan slaves fought alongside their masters. This is ironic because the film makes much of this being a battle against slavery, tyranny. The character Leonidas made several speeches out of how they would prevail because they were 300 free men fighting against an army of slaves. Even as I watched the movie, I thought, "Didn't Sparta have slaves? I thought Sparta had slaves." They did. This is historical revisionism at its best. It's also not true because although a large majority of the other Greeks left before the final battle, 700 Thespians stayed behind with the Spartans, which is interesting because if one were to believe the movie, everyone in Greece who was not a Spartan was a complete and total coward.
As far as stories go, this isn't a very good one. 300 is formulaic and predictable, and the historical inaccuracies seem to all be designed to conform to formula. I loved the technique and visual effects (even the ones that made me gag), but I wish they had been used to make a better movie.
Yesterday: Blue Mesa
This continues the documentation of our recent trip to the Petrified Forest National Park in Arizona.
This is a pull-off north of the Blue Mesa area in the park called Tepees. There are no actual tepees here, but I guess someone thought that the badland formations here looked like tepees. They are somewhat pyramid-like. This is also a virtual geocache, so I took a pic of Strix standing in the foreground holding our GPS to prove we were there.
Our next stop was Puerco Pueblo, which is a small ruins area in the park. No, I don't know why it's called Pig Village, though there is a Rio Puerco that runs through New Mexico and joins into the Colorado River, which of course runs through Arizona. But then the question is why is the river called Pig River? There are some questions we are not meant to answer.
The ruins site is not much to see after you've been to Chaco Canyon, but it's still interesting.
Petroglyphs found at the Puerco Pueblo site.
This is a detail of one of the pics above. This has to be the most humorous petroglyph I've ever seen. Strix calls this one, "I said put me down!" Did the "artist" mean for it to be funny? Was it a horror story about a thirty-foot tall bird that ate humans? Is, in fact, this an attempt at perspective, and the man is actually supposed to be in the background? We'll never know.
Tomorrow: Route 66 Monument