Alejandro Magno: La creación de un dios
Título original: Alexander: The Making of a God
Alejandro fue rey de la antigua ciudad griega de Macedonia, considerado uno de los mejores y más exitosos comandantes militares de la historia, y a los 30 años ya había creado uno de los may... Leer todoAlejandro fue rey de la antigua ciudad griega de Macedonia, considerado uno de los mejores y más exitosos comandantes militares de la historia, y a los 30 años ya había creado uno de los mayores imperios de la historia.Alejandro fue rey de la antigua ciudad griega de Macedonia, considerado uno de los mejores y más exitosos comandantes militares de la historia, y a los 30 años ya había creado uno de los mayores imperios de la historia.
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Resumen
Reviewers say 'Alexander the Great: Hero or Conqueror' offers an engaging narrative with impressive visuals and strong performances, particularly in portraying Alexander and Darius. However, it faces criticism for historical inaccuracies, poor acting, and its hybrid format. Some viewers value its entertainment and artistic liberties, while others find it misleading and shallow. The depiction of Alexander's personal life sparks debate, making it an ambitious yet flawed series.
Reseñas destacadas
Yet again, Netflix makes the same mistakes, making everything feel like a joke.
This feels like a cheap soap opera instead of a documentary. The inaccuracy of the historical events are insane, the acting is very sad and forced. Nothing is explained about Alexander's life, they only induced fake drama which makes no sense at all.
This is a shame, Alexander has always been one of my favourite rulers from the past and I was hoping for some new information or at least a good interpretation of the ones all of us know.
This is another Netflix fail, do not waste your time if you are a history nerd, all you will end up on with is being sad and frustrated.
This feels like a cheap soap opera instead of a documentary. The inaccuracy of the historical events are insane, the acting is very sad and forced. Nothing is explained about Alexander's life, they only induced fake drama which makes no sense at all.
This is a shame, Alexander has always been one of my favourite rulers from the past and I was hoping for some new information or at least a good interpretation of the ones all of us know.
This is another Netflix fail, do not waste your time if you are a history nerd, all you will end up on with is being sad and frustrated.
I'm impressed at least by the fact that Netflix is paying more attention to audiences who are interested in history.
Having said that, I think the hardcore history audience will also demand a lot from the Netflix series.
They're such nerds that they've read everything and expect Netflix to present it to the public just like the books.
It's a docudrama with very strong drama, but it could be worse.
There are a lot of inaccuracies it is true. But giving this documentary 1/10 because you think "Alexander was Greek not Macedonian" reveals how stupid you are despite knowing more about Alexander than the producers.
Having said that, I think the hardcore history audience will also demand a lot from the Netflix series.
They're such nerds that they've read everything and expect Netflix to present it to the public just like the books.
It's a docudrama with very strong drama, but it could be worse.
There are a lot of inaccuracies it is true. But giving this documentary 1/10 because you think "Alexander was Greek not Macedonian" reveals how stupid you are despite knowing more about Alexander than the producers.
I am starting to notice a pattern.
You watch a Netflix series about some true historical figures, and you are shown some admirable things about them. The aesthetics are beautiful. You finish watching it, and you feel satisfied, and are glad to have been told an interesting chapter of history that you now feel you "know from beginning to end".
Then you later find out, through reading either the primary sources (or reading other people's reviews, as in the case of this series) that the series was actually wildly inaccurate, and in a suspicious way. A ton of really epic stuff was just LEFT OUT. They also added a lot of inaccurate stuff that makes the characters look bad.
The end result is that the story, and the characters portrayed, were watered down and made mediocre in the series, contrasted to the actual real story.
I've seen this with the abominable series "The Last Czars", and now also with this Alexander series. I also Notice that there is some overlap between these 2 series, regarding the writers behind them!
I can't help but wonder if this is done intentionally, to wipe away our history? As an analogy, it's like people going to see a huge epic temple that they've heard about, but someone has set up a cheap mediocre replica on the way, so that the people will stop there instead, and not see the real one.
You watch a Netflix series about some true historical figures, and you are shown some admirable things about them. The aesthetics are beautiful. You finish watching it, and you feel satisfied, and are glad to have been told an interesting chapter of history that you now feel you "know from beginning to end".
Then you later find out, through reading either the primary sources (or reading other people's reviews, as in the case of this series) that the series was actually wildly inaccurate, and in a suspicious way. A ton of really epic stuff was just LEFT OUT. They also added a lot of inaccurate stuff that makes the characters look bad.
The end result is that the story, and the characters portrayed, were watered down and made mediocre in the series, contrasted to the actual real story.
I've seen this with the abominable series "The Last Czars", and now also with this Alexander series. I also Notice that there is some overlap between these 2 series, regarding the writers behind them!
I can't help but wonder if this is done intentionally, to wipe away our history? As an analogy, it's like people going to see a huge epic temple that they've heard about, but someone has set up a cheap mediocre replica on the way, so that the people will stop there instead, and not see the real one.
I was excited to watch this and learn more about Alexander. I'm fascinated by that time frame but it's just episode after episode of boring battle scenes with no real story line. It's all over the place. Huge let down. Another Netflix bomb, I should have known since Netflix doesn't seem interested in producing quality anymore. I'm not sure why they keep putting projects like this out? It's not enjoyable to watch and they also don't seem to respect the truth in their story lines. Another Netflix complete disappointment. It could have been good but it absolutely and completely missed the mark!!!
Historical parody in documentary format. Actually, I give 6 points to content that I finish without being bored in the least, but this work misleads people historically. What the historians in this series do is not in line with the ethics of their profession. A historian and archaeologist has an obligation to try presenting history in its most accurate form. As a branch of science, of course, within the most current findings. Professional ethics requires this. I am in a country where we live to see how serious the consequences of distortion of historical facts can be. You may say that it is obvious that the things shown here are not very accurate historically, then what is the point of making a documentary. Also there will always be an audience that will believe and accept what they see.
¿Sabías que...?
- CuriosidadesThis is no clear historical evidence that Alexander and Stateira, Darius' wife, had a sexual relationship. In the series, historian Lloyd Llewellyn-Jones cites Plutarch as saying that Stateira died in childbirth and suggests that the child could not have been Darius', given how long she has been separated from him. Yet Plutarch had also written that Alexander showed no interest in Stateira. Plutarch also said that Darius heard the news about his wife's death from an escaped eunuch, who'd been captured along with the women. The eunuch had defended Alexander, suggesting that "[Darius] should even admire Alexander for having shown greater self-restraint in dealing with Persian women than valor against Persian men."
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Detalles
- Fecha de lanzamiento
- País de origen
- Sitio oficial
- Idioma
- Títulos en diferentes países
- Alexander: The Making of a God
- Localizaciones del rodaje
- Empresas productoras
- Ver más compañías en los créditos en IMDbPro
- Duración
- 45min
- Color
- Mezcla de sonido
- Relación de aspecto
- 16:9 HD
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