In
spite of all the half-naked, well-oiled men and orgiastic ejaculations of spilled
scarlet blood, 300: Rise of an Empire (2014) is actually a story about two
women and their differing interpretations of freedom
One
woman -- a Greek turncoat and general in the Persian fleet, Artemisia (Eva
Green) -- views freedom as the license to do whatever she chooses in love, in war,
and in life in general. She wickedly and
without boundaries practices a brand of freedom “without responsibility, without consequences.”
By
contrast, another woman -- mourning Spartan Queen Gorgo (Lena Headey) --
believes that freedom is a precious flame that must be zealously guarded,
protected and nourished if it is to pass successfully from one generation to
the next.
For
Gorgo, freedom simply cannot exist outside the perimeters of responsibility and
consequences, and she knows this truth for a fact…for she has lost her brave
husband and King -- Leonidas (Gerard Butler) -- in defense of Greece’s freedom.
Only
one woman -- and one view of freedom -- survives the overwhelming carnage and
close-quarter, limb-severing warfare depicted so colorfully in 300:
Rise of an Empire, but the film’s implicit comparison of personalities
and philosophies renders this sequel to 300 (2007) more than a slapdash
effort.
Instead,
Rise
of an Empire is a solid, intermittently-inspired second picture in the quasi-historical/quasi-fantasy franchise that -- if it disappoints at all -- does so only because 300 remains to this day so powerful, so visceral, and so emotionally-powerful
a movie-going initiative.
Occurring
before, during, and after Leonidas’s heroic campaign at Thermopylae’s Hot Gates,
300:
Rise of an Empire impresses not only in term of thematic complexity but
also vis-à-vis its structural complexity. It’s a prequel, co-equal and sequel
all at the same time, essentially coiling itself around and even through the
2007 film’s narrative tapestry.
300:
Rise of an Empire
also succeeds in terms of innovative and imaginative visuals, some of which
give new definition to the 2000s-era stock phrase “shock and awe.”
“This
is democracy, not a street fight.”
The
great hero Themistocles (Sullivan Stapleton), kills Persian King Darius (Yigal
Naor) during the Battle of Marathon, and immediately regrets not also killing
his son, Xerxes (Rodrigo Santoro).
Urged
on by Darius’s protégé, a Greek traitor and naval commander named Artemisia
(Eva Green), Xerxes soon plans for another devastating war against Greece.
In
Athens, Themistocles attempts to rally all the city-states of Greece to repel
the Persian invasion, even as in Sparta, Leonidas leads 300 brave soldiers to
the Hot Gates to halt Xerxes’ advance.
With
a small fleet, Themistocles engages Artemisia’s armada on the sea. In the first two battles, Themistocles sees
great victories, but after he meets with Artemisia to discuss terms, she
decimates his forces.
With
Leonidas also defeated, Xerxes razes Athens. Themistocles plots for another, final campaign
to save Greece at Salamis, but he needs the sea fleet of the Spartans to beat
back the defiant and revenge-mad Artemisia.
Themistocles
entreats the mourning Spartan Queen Gorgo (Lena Headey) for aid in his most
desperate hour, but she is reluctant to acquiesce to his plea for help.
“How
many times do you think we will repeat this tragedy?”
A
number of critics derided as 300: Rise of an Empire as “a bloodbath, and nothing else.”
Well,
it is certainly a blood bath, but I would submit, it’s also something else: a
parable about freedom as seen through the eyes of two women.
Both
of these women have known suffering beyond compare, but such suffering leads
one woman to the light, and one woman to the darkness. The film tracks their individual (but not
entirely dissimilar) journeys, and shows how their opposite philosophies impact their
final destination.
There
is discussion all the time in the media about women’s roles in action movies,
and whether or not women are being utilized by (male) filmmakers solely as objects, or as legitimate
characters with their own distinctive personalities, needs and viewpoints.
300:
Rise of an Empire
is relatively unique in the sense that the two primary female characters -- Artemisia and Queen
Gorgo -- initiate virtually all the important action in the film.
Their
choices, commands, and strategies dictate the direction of destiny for good or
for ill. Themistocles is an important
character too, of course, but in the end, he is but a man with a vision (for a
unified Greece) acting between two implacable forces of nature: noble Gorgo and
the Medea-like Artemisia.
Indeed, Gorgo and Artemisia grapple with the big moral issues of the film while the scads of young male soldiers -- hunky men with impressive six-packs all -- serve as both cannon fodder and eye candy.
300:
Rise of an Empire
even features a wild sex scene between Artemisia and Themistocles that vividly demonstrates both
her freedom from conventional thinking and her refusal to surrender, even in the heat of passion, to a man.
Again,
some critics have termed this gonzo sex scene “over-the-top,” and I suppose it
is. So what? I’ve never seen anything
like it, and that’s part of the reason I go to the movies: to encounter something new.
And
yet, if you break down what actually happens during the graphic sex scenes, it’s
surely a metaphor for the battle on the sea, and power-struggle between the two diametrically-opposed characters. Neither Artemisia nor
Themistocles will submit.
Accordingly,
they go at each other like rabid animals, but when Themistocles pushes
Artemisia face-down on her map table to take her from behind, she rebels. She twists
around, mounts him, and seeks dominance that way. She. Will. Not. Submit. Their entire relationship -- in sex and in
war -- is about this battle for dominance.
And Themistocles loses rather definitively this challenge because by seeing him in such
close quarters, and taking his measure (so-to-speak), Artemisia determines his
weakness…and capitalizes on it in their next engagement.
Indeed, one
of the movie’s best lines is Artemisia’s cut-down that Themistocles fights "harder" than he fucks. That hits him where it hurts, and knocks him off guard,
for certain. Even in the heat of battle, Artemisia is asserting her dominance.
My
point isn’t that 300: Rise of an Empire is some deeply feminist tract, only that
in ways both unexpected and not a little courageous, the film forges strong female
characters, and by doing so explodes the old Madonna/Whore duality. Artemisia
uses sex for her own purposes. Not because she is a slut, but because she seeks
total dominance and total control in warfare, and deploys the best tool to achieve it. Usually such Machievellian tactics are reserved
for cinematic men. But Artemisia is all about freedom, and for her freedom
means fucking who she wants in the way she wants, when not devastating her opponents
in battle.
There
will be those who say that men like to watch women having sex, and so to
feature Artemisia in this role -- having sex -- is de facto a sexist
portrayal. I would respond that women also like to
watch characters on screen having sex, and that Artemisia’s refusal to submit
to Themistocles speaks to some core aspect of her humanity, character and strength. Sex has been used as a weapon against her as we learn in a disturbing flashback,
and now she uses it as a weapon against others. She has appropriated that tool has her own.
By
contrast to Artemisia's freedom without morality Gorgo must balance her responsibility as leader of the Spartans with
her responsibility to an ideal she doesn’t totally believe in: a unified
Greece.
Why should she send her son to
die, after already losing her husband?
Why should she send the Spartan fleet to
battle when Sparta as yet isn’t directly imperiled?
These are questions of leadership and
morality, and again, there simply aren’t that many genre films -- even modern ones -- that showcase a
woman balancing these hard choices.
Usually, it is a man who is so wounded by loss (usually the death of a
child or a wife) that he backs away or retires from the world, and must be
roused to action.
Here, Gorgo plays that
role expertly, but her motivation is not only vengeance, for certain (despite the posters crying out "avenge him!"). Gorgo, as she reports, also wants her children to grow up to know
freedom in the future, and that means, simply, fighting for it in the here and
now.
Even
beyond the cracked mirror comparisons between Artemisia and Gorgo -- two women
who have suffered loss and tragedy -- 300: Rise of an Empire features
other flourishes worthy of praise.
The
story’s structure winds serpentine like around the first film in the
franchise so that the two narratives become deeply-intertwined. Accordingly, it becomes more difficult to write off this picture
as a rip-off or poor sequel, because considerable thought and precision has gone into how it
interacts and plays against its predecessor.
I
was also impressed with many of the film's visualizations. There are some unforgettable sights in 300:
Rise of an Empire, including a black death barge spewing oil into the tempestuous sea
before the water ignites into searing flame. And then there’s an underwater graveyard after the sea battle, stretching as
far as they can see, and as deep as the eyes can register.
In
comparing 300 to 300: Rise of an Empire, my
reservations about the sequel involve to an extent, the necessity of telling different
kind of stories.
300 set up a remarkable
love story between Leonidas and Gorgo, and then went to one setting -- the Hot
Gates -- and pretty much remained there (with a few trips back to Sparta and
Gorgo) for the remainder of the picture.
There was a purity and simplicity in
the storytelling there that the sequel, by necessity, lacks. But I missed it.
300 was immersing, I felt. You were there with Leonidas following every
move and counter-move. 300:
Rise of an Empire showcases some brilliant intellectual and visual
flourishes, but I never got swept up into the narrative the way I did in the
earlier picture.
Here,
there are a lot of scene changes and time changes, and some essential simplicity
or purity is sacrificed in all the back and forth. Again, I don’t
see another way to have come at a sequel to 300, so perhaps my
criticism isn’t entirely fair or well-placed.
Still
300:
Rise of an Empire is a respect-worthy sequel, and the memorable female leads -- battling between the “ecstasy of steel and flesh, and life and death” and the
responsibilities that come with real freedom -- inch it a bit closer to
greatness.
In the end, this 2014 sequel manages to seize just enough of its own brand of glory, I suppose you could say.
No comments:
Post a Comment