Alexandre, le roi de Macédoine et l'un des plus grands chefs d'armée de l'histoire de la guerre, conquiert une grande partie du monde connu.Alexandre, le roi de Macédoine et l'un des plus grands chefs d'armée de l'histoire de la guerre, conquiert une grande partie du monde connu.Alexandre, le roi de Macédoine et l'un des plus grands chefs d'armée de l'histoire de la guerre, conquiert une grande partie du monde connu.
- Prix
- 6 victoires et 19 nominations au total
- Young Ptolemy
- (as Robert Earley)
Histoire
Le saviez-vous
- AnecdotesThe biography of Alexander by Oxford University professor Robin Lane Fox was an original inspiration and source of information for writer and director Oliver Stone. As a historical advisor, Professor Fox didn't get on-screen credit. His price for giving his advice was to be allowed to take a place at the head of what is one of the largest cavalry charges ever filmed. Professor Fox was used to riding around the English countryside, but gladly dressed up as a Macedonean cavalry officer to live his dream of charging for Alexander.
- GaffesPtolemy I is depicted recounting the story of Alexander in 283 B.C. The Lighthouse at Alexandria, seen in the background, was built during the reign of his son Ptolemy II, around 270 B.C.
- Citations
Old Ptolemy: The truth is never simple and yet it is. The truth is we did kill him. By silence we consented... because we couldn't go on. But by Ares, what did we have to look forward to but to be discarded in the end like Cleitus? After all this time, to give away our wealth to Asian sycophants we despised? Mixing the races? Harmony? Oh, he talked of these things. I never believe in his dream. None of us did. That's the truth of his life. The dreamers exhaust us. They must die before they kill us with their blasted dreams.
- Autres versionsThe Director's Cut is 9 minutes shorter than the 175-minute theatrical version. It is a reworked version although seamless to many. 18 minutes were cut and 9 added. Many of the added or extended sequences involve Val Kilmer and Angelina Jolie's characters. The battle of Gaugamela now starts earlier. Taking a cue from classic movie epics, the opening reel now set up the basic themes with greater economy: Alexander's Oedipal relationship with his parents, Olympias' ambitions for her son, the boy's need to surpass his father, and the entirely natural way in which myth/religion is shown as integral to the ancients' behavior. Oliver Stone reworked the third act, too, juxtaposing events in India and Greece. Jolie's Olympias emerges now more as a genuinely pathetic figure in the whole tragedy. Ptolemy's final scene was edited. Stone also slightly reworked Alexander's death scene because of audience feedback, adding 17 seconds to the scene.
- ConnexionsFeatured in Charging for Alexander (2004)
Some characters could have been more fleshed out as they have paramount roles. Some of the accents are kind of overdone, but there is a meaning behind some of them. Rosario Dawson and Angelina Jolie are gorgeous and enchanting. Symbolism and the visual language of this film functioned remarkably well. The film's philosophy is very much about genders and sexism, racism and xenophobia, frailty and ego and myths, and their effect on people. A passionate man and a dreamer can only go so far, and that's what brought Alexander's downfall.
The film finishes strongly with Anthony Hopkins's narration, where he goes back on his words and scraps them, cementing the element of an unreliable narrator. That being the main point of this film, history and its validity, and how some larger-than-life figures can be very much like us, mere mortals.
I didn't even mention the elephant in the room (no pun intended), Alexander's homosexuality, or bisexuality. The film rarely presents it as some big problem or talking point. Kind of like it used to be more acceptable to feel the greatest love for a man. Now, this film is still getting condemned for that. How much more progressed are we today, ay?
- powerofberzerker
- 5 mai 2021
- Lien permanent
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Détails
Box-office
- Budget
- 155 000 000 $ US (estimation)
- Brut – États-Unis et Canada
- 34 297 191 $ US
- Fin de semaine d'ouverture – États-Unis et Canada
- 13 687 087 $ US
- 28 nov. 2004
- Brut – à l'échelle mondiale
- 167 298 192 $ US
- Durée2 heures 55 minutes
- Couleur
- Mixage
- Rapport de forme
- 2.39 : 1