a5c7b9f00b Greek general Themistokles leads the charge against invading Persian forces led by mortal-turned-god Xerxes and Artemisia, vengeful commander of the Persian navy. After its victory over Leonidas&#39; 300, the Persian Army under the command of Xerxes marches towards the major Greek city-states. The Democratic city of Athens, first on the path of Xerxes&#39; army, bases its strength on its fleet, led by admiral Themistocles. Themistocles is forced to an unwilling alliance with the traditional rival of Athens, oligarchic Sparta whose might lies with its superior infantry troops. But Xerxes still reigns supreme in numbers over sea and land. While Leonidas and his 299 fellow Spartans are holding off Xerxes&#39; Persians at the battle of Thermopylae (as seen in 300), Athenian general Themistocles is taking on mad admiral/general/bitch Artemisia at the Battle of Salamis.<br/><br/>Zack Snyder&#39;s 300 took a story which is inspiring enough that it had been filmed before, and put writer/artist Frank Miller&#39;s visceral comics adaptation on the screen, image for image. With loads of CGI blood and stop/start slow motion. It was visually striking, groundbreaking in terms of its use of CGI backgrounds, full of oiled sixpacks, and fairly hollow in terms of depth of characterisation. And it was successful, so we have more of the same, only at sea this time.<br/><br/>I quite enjoyed it, but it is even more hollow than its predecessor. Gerard Butler&#39;s Scottish Spartan in 300 is replacedprotagonist by a completely forgettable Australian Athenian, so you don&#39;t have a strong character to root for. Eva Green chews the scenery nicely and gets &#39;em out for the boys. Assorted individuals from 300 make it back, including Rodrigo SantoroXerxes - it is good to see him in flashback with hair and beard before he gets his fancy dress costume on.<br/><br/>And,before, if all the slow motion sequences were shown at normal speed, the film would be at least half an hour shorter.<br/><br/>Snyder produced and co-wrote, and didn&#39;t direct this time, but his template was followed and the film is typical of his work - all style, no substance. 10 years before the events of 300, Greek naval commander Themistocles injured the Persian ruler Darius. The Persian forces attacking Greece retreat. By Darius&#39; side are his weak son Xerxes and an adopted warrior girl Artemisia. When Darius dies, Artemisia sends Xerxes out to the desert to become a man. He returns a god ready to form the greatest empire the world has ever seen and to take over Greece. We learn that Artemisia is Greek anda girl lived a life of rape and abuse at the hands of Greeks until she was left for dead on a street and was adopted by a Persian and taught to fight. She rose in the ranks of the Persians until she became Darius&#39; naval commander and dreamt of nothing but vengeance against the Greeks.<br/><br/>Back in the days of 300, while Leonidas is fighting Xerxes, Themistocles ships are battling Artemisia&#39;s overwhelming naval force. But he does well forcing them twice to retreat and lick their wounds, and that without the aide of the Spartans. When Xerxes beats Leonidas and marches toward Athens, Themistocles again implores the Greeks to unite, including Queen Gorgo to offer her entire fleet. She rejects. So now, with Athens in ruins, Themistocles launches a last stand and confronts Artemisia.<br/><br/>As farsequels go, 300 II is your typical sequel–less compelling story, weaker cast, but yet it somehow cost considerably more than the first. Someone might want to audit these people and find out where all the money went. It retains the visuals of 300 but adds more color thankfully. It&#39;s also less cartoonish and adolescent. The voice-overs covering history are very interesting. But the rest of the script, the lines read by the actors, are fairly lame. For some reason we&#39;re stuck at sea for most of the movie and get not 1 or 2, but 3 sea battle, which is just tiring, complete with gallons of CGI blood being squirted in every which way.<br/><br/>Unfortunately, Xerxes is a tertiary character here and Eva Green can&#39;t carry a movie, she does not make a good lead or a good lead villain. A terrible casting mistake. And she looks downright ghastly for most of the movie. When will the Hollywood dieting mania come to an end? Stapleton who is a likable guy (Strike Back has got to be among the best shows in television history) but he&#39;s also not ready to take on a lead role. But the weakest link is clearly the director, whoever he may be. I&#39;m glad that Hollywood is becoming again the land of opportunity. ButAmerica at large it&#39;s become a land of opportunity for foreigners and the locals are banished from partaking in success. And Hollywood sure is looking in every corner of the world for &quot;directors&quot; with near zero experience and handing them the director&#39;s chair of billion dollar franchises. Anyone who has free time will dolonghe&#39;s not American. Well, that&#39;s how you end up with a movie like 300 II. Rise of an Empire might have been essentially more of the same, but for one distinction that makes it 300 times better than its predecessor: Mere mortals of Athens, Sparta, and every city from Mumbai to Minneapolis, behold the magnificent Eva Green, and tremble! King Leonidas (Gerard Butler) only appears in flashbacks. Yes. Herodotus, also knownthe &quot;Father of History,&quot; makes numerous references to Artemisiahe recounts the events of the Greco-Persian war. He describes hera ruler who did not lead passively, and instead, actively engaged herself in both adventure and warfare: &quot;her brave spirit and manly daring sent her forth to the war, when no need required her to adventure. Her name,I said, was Artemisia…&quot; –The Histories Yes. In exploring the 300: Rise of an Empire true story, the works of Polyaenus, the 2nd century Macedonian writer, describes an example of the real Artemisia&#39;s intelligence in combat. He tells of how she would carry two flags on board her ship, one a Persian flag and the other the flag of her enemy, Greece. Artemisia would fly the Greek flagshe approached an unsuspecting Greek warship. Once she was upon her enemy, she would then unleash the full force of her Carian fleet. Yes. According to Herodotus, the united Greeks even offered a reward of 10,000 drachmas for Artemisia&#39;s capture. Yes. According to historians Herodotus and Plutarch, the brave Athenian general Themistocles was not born into wealth. His father, Neocles, was an ambiguous Athenian citizen of modest means. It is believed that his mother was an immigrant. Other children kept Themistocles at a distance. It didn&#39;t bother him much, becauseother children were off playing together, Themistocles was studying and sharpening his skills. As described by Plutarch, his teachers would say to him, &quot;You, my boy, will be nothing insignificant, but great one way or another, either for good or for evil.&quot; In researching the 300: Rise of an Empire true story, we learned that Themistocles&#39; less than modest upbringing benefited him in the newly democratic government of Athens. He campaigned in the streets and could relate to the common and underprivileged in a way that no one had before, always taking time to remember voters&#39; names. He was elected to the highest government office in Athens, Archon Eponymous, by the time he was thirty. (Source: History vs Hollywood.) No. The true story behind 300: Rise of an Empire reveals that Themistocles did not kill Xerxes&#39;s father, King Darius I of Persia (Darius the Great), with an arrow at the Battle of Marathon. King Darius died approximately four years later in 486 BC of failing health. It was then that Xerxes, the eldest son of Darius and Atossa, became King, rulingXerxes I. No. In the 300: Rise of an Empire movie, a young Artemisia (Caitlin Carmichael) watchesher family is murdered by a squad of Greek hoplites. She then spends several years being helda sex slave in the bowels of a Greek slave ship. She is left to die in the street and is helped by a Persian warrior. She soon finds herself training with the finest warriors in the Persian Empire, hoping to one day exact revenge on Greece. This backstory for Artemisia was invented by Frank Miller and the filmmakers to explain the motivations behind Artemisia&#39;s ruthless thirst for vengeance in the film. Yes. Queen Artemisia of Caria, portrayed by Eva Green in the movie, became queen when she was wed to the King of Caria. Ancient Greek historian Herodotus never mentions the king by name in his writings titled The Histories. Little is known about Artemisia&#39;s husband except that he died when their son was still a boy. Following his death, Artemisia became the ruler of the affluent kingdom of Caria. Yes. Artemisia I of Caria had a son named Pisindelis (not shown in the movie), who was still a boy when his father died and his mother took overruler. Yes. According to the writings of Herodotus, Artemisia I of Caria was the only female commander in the Greco-Persian wars. Like in the movie, she was an ally of Xerxes and serveda commander in the Persian navy. Yes. Themistocles had sent a messenger to Xerxes, telling the Persian King that the Greeks intended to flee by ships that were harbored in the isthmus of Corinth. Unlike in the movie, that messenger was not Ephialtes of Trachis, the disfigured hunchback who had betrayed the Spartans at Thermopylae. The real Ephialtes, who was not a disfigured hunchback, escaped to Thessaly and the Greeks offered a reward for his death. Thinking that the Greek forces were scattered, weak, and intending to flee, Xerxes believed the messenger and sent in his navy for an easy victory. To his surprise, his ships encountered the full force of the Greek navy ready to engage in battle. Yes. In the movie, Themistocles tells Artemisia that his only family is the Greek fleet, which he has spent his entire life readying to battle her. According to the writings of Plutarch, the real Themistocles did have a wife, Archippe, with whom he had three sons: Archeptolis, Polyeuctus, and Cleophantes. He also had two older sons, Neocles and Diocles. In addition to his sons, Themistocles had five daughters that are mentioned by Plutarch, at least one of whom he had later during a second marriage. No. The 300: Rise of an Empire true story reveals that unlike what is shown in the movie, the real Artemisia did not die at the hands of Themistocles in the Battle of Salamis. She survived the battle and did not meet her fate while engaging in combat. While Artemisia I of Caria did not perish in battle, it is unclear how she actually died. One legend reported by Photios, the Ecumenical Patriarch of Constantinople from 858 to 867 and from 877 to 886, has Artemisia falling in love with a man named Dardanus. According to Photios, when Dardanus rejected her, Artemisia threw herself over the rocks of Leucas and was swallowed by the Aegean Sea. However, some historians argue that this action goes against her naturea strong-willed conqueror. No, historically it is not true. Episode 1.210 movie in tamil dubbed downloaddownload full movie Episode 3.13 in hindithe Muppet Treasure Island downloadMoment full movie free downloadHumsaya in hindi downloadThe The PhantomArizona Stage Coach hd full movie downloadFalling Skies full movie hd 1080p downloadRurouni Kenshin: Wandering Samurai full movie kickass torrenthindi Space Travelers free download
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