Movies I've seen - 300.
I went and saw the movie '300' today. It was on my list, but it went to a higher priority when I discovered Ahmadinejad was upset and took exception to the general idea of the movie. That elevated it to 'must see' status.
"...Spartan King Leonidas (Gerard Butler) and 300 Spartans fight to the last man against Persian King Xerxes (Rodrigo Santoro) and his army of over one million soldiers, while in Sparta, Queen Gorgo (Lena Headey) attempts to rally support for her husband. The story is framed by a voice-over narrative by the Spartan soldier Dilios (David Wenham)..." [Wikipedia].
The movie is a dramatisation of the events of, and leading to the Battle of Thermopylae in 480BC, when Xerxes tried to conquer Greece (it wasn't the first time, Darius had tried once before - the battle at Marathon was one episode in that campaign). the Persians were defeated, at Salamis, and then at Plataea, which marked the end of Persia's chances to conquer Greece.
To those who view history as dead letters on a page, I must say this;
Greek philosophy and the kernel of objective thinking that became science formed the basis of what became Western Civilization. If Greece had fallen to the Persians, that would have been the end of the noble experiment in Democracy. No flowering of science. Nothing to pass on to the Romans. No basis for the Enlightenment centuries later. Perhaps darkness would still prevail. Possibly, the entire fate of Western progress rested upon those few hundred (not all or only, but pre-eminently) Spartans who fought for all of us down through two and a half thousand years of history those few days.
"Stranger! To Sparta say, her faithful band,
Here lie in death, remembering her command."
[Inscription at Thermopylae].
"Lest we forget".
"...Spartan King Leonidas (Gerard Butler) and 300 Spartans fight to the last man against Persian King Xerxes (Rodrigo Santoro) and his army of over one million soldiers, while in Sparta, Queen Gorgo (Lena Headey) attempts to rally support for her husband. The story is framed by a voice-over narrative by the Spartan soldier Dilios (David Wenham)..." [Wikipedia].
The movie is a dramatisation of the events of, and leading to the Battle of Thermopylae in 480BC, when Xerxes tried to conquer Greece (it wasn't the first time, Darius had tried once before - the battle at Marathon was one episode in that campaign). the Persians were defeated, at Salamis, and then at Plataea, which marked the end of Persia's chances to conquer Greece.
To those who view history as dead letters on a page, I must say this;
Greek philosophy and the kernel of objective thinking that became science formed the basis of what became Western Civilization. If Greece had fallen to the Persians, that would have been the end of the noble experiment in Democracy. No flowering of science. Nothing to pass on to the Romans. No basis for the Enlightenment centuries later. Perhaps darkness would still prevail. Possibly, the entire fate of Western progress rested upon those few hundred (not all or only, but pre-eminently) Spartans who fought for all of us down through two and a half thousand years of history those few days.
"Stranger! To Sparta say, her faithful band,
Here lie in death, remembering her command."
[Inscription at Thermopylae].
"Lest we forget".
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