
Troy (2004)
Année de sortie : 2004
Pays : United States
Titre alternatif : Troya, Trója, Tróia, Troia, Troie, Τροία, Троя, Troija, Trooja, Truva
Réalisateur : Wolfgang Petersen
Scénariste : David Benioff, Homer
Production & Genre
Producteur(s) :
Sociétés : Plan B Entertainment, Radiant Productions, Warner Bros. Pictures
Genre : Action, Adventure, Drama, History, War
Récompenses & Similaires
Récompenses : N/A
Similaires :
Mots-clés
Mots-clés : 12th century bc, adultery, ancient greece, ancient world, based on song, poem or rhyme, battlefield, beauty, bravery, bronze age, epic, exhilarated, fraud, grand, helmet, historical fiction, hostility, mythology, peplum, pyre, ships, sibling relationship, sparta greece, sword and sandal, sword fight, trojan horse, trojan war, wall
Synopsis
In 1250 B.C., during the late Bronze Age, a political and romantic conflict emerges between Troy and Sparta. Paris, a Trojan prince, convinces Helen, Queen of Sparta, to leave her husband Menelaus and return with him to Troy. When Menelaus discovers this, he persuades his brother Agamemnon to help him retrieve Helen, seeing it as an opportunity for personal gain. Agamemnon leads an army of 50,000 Greeks, aboard 1,000 ships, towards Troy. The film follows the Greek assault on Troy and chronicles the fates of key individuals involved.
Texte uniquement disponible en anglais.
Résumé
Troy is a historical epic film directed by Wolfgang Petersen in 2004, based loosely on Homer's Iliad. It depicts the Trojan War, set in the late Bronze Age, with themes of love, betrayal, power, and war. The movie explores the conflict between Troy and Sparta, triggered by Paris' abduction of Helen. Troy is notable for its grand battle scenes, including the famous episode of the Trojan Horse.
Texte uniquement disponible en anglais.