Okay, I just came from seeing
Troy, and a ton of things ran through my head as I read through Slay's review. I hope I can remember and address them all.
I liked
Troy. I liked it quite a bit. Not as much as
Braveheart, any of
TLotR films, and maybe not quite as much as
Gladiator, but I liked it quite a bit (I already said that). I can't compare these newer films to the old epics like
Spartacus or
Ben-Hur. That would be like comparing great baseball players from different eras.
The CGI in this film didn't bother me in the least. In fact, it was much less noticeable to me than in
TLotR films,
Star Wars: Ep. I & II, or even
Spiderman. I actually thought they (the filmmakers) did a great job making the CGI look more realistic than any other film I've seen. In one of Slay's replies, he writes, "The 'vastness' of the armies is all fake," as if that's a bad thing. The making of films has been "fake" since the beginning of filmmaking. Mattes, backdrops, falsefronts, studio sets, sound stages, lens filters, etc. have been aiding the look of "reality" on film since the beginning of filmmaking. I see CGI as just another tool, and in my opinion, they're getting better at it. One thing I don't understand, however, is how everyone is talking about the cost-effectiveness of CGI. If CGI is so cost-effective, why did
Troy cost $185 mil to make? Most of the other CGI films are also well above $100 mil. These high budgets make
Braveheart's $72 mil budget look low-budget and don't seem very cost-effective to me.
This film was certainly one of Brad Pitt's lesser achievements regarding acting. However, the character Achilles was interesting enough that Pitt's failure to evoke any Oscar-worthy clips more than made up for it.
As mentioned already by Slay, Bana's character, Hector, had the most depth. Hector, I believe, had the audience's sympathy. However, I believe there was a little confusion regarding the natural feeling of "who am I supposed to root for? Who is the hero, who is the villian?" Throughout the film, I didn't know if I was supposed to have been rooting for Achilles and his band of warriors (but that meant rooting for the Greek armies most of the time), or should I have been rooting for Hector and the Trojans? Hector seemed to be the most honorable, wise, and heroic. The fight between Hector and Achilles was terrific! By this point, I had long been rooting for Hector over Achilles.
The other thing that interests me about this film is the original story. As an English major in college and a Language Arts teacher now, it's always nice to see the classic literary works on film. By the way, I'm not trying to point out mistakes in the review, but Homer's Ilyad is an epic poem, not a play

Not a big deal.
Anyhoo, that's all I got for now. Not sure if I addressed everything that went through my head, or not.
Oh, yeah! I did want to mention one more thing. People at theaters are so funny. Remember in
Mission Impossible when Tom Cruise was suspended above the guy in the room with the heat sensitive floor? As the sweat started rolling down his forehead, the entire theater began whispering to each other, "Sweat," as if they had just figured out something that the person next to them couldn't figure out for themselves. "Sweat" swept through the theater when I was watching
Mission Impossible to the point that it was very comical. Well, the same thing happened with the audience in the theater where I watched
Troy. This time, instead of "Sweat" sweeping through the whispered voices of my movie-viewing comrades, "Achilles' heel" was on their lips during the appropriate scene. If you haven't seen the movie yet, resist saying it yourself, and pay attention to the people around you. You'll know when to listen for it, and you should get a little chuckle.