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WarHistoryActionAdventureDramaRomance

Alexander

- The greatest legend of all was real

Alexander, the King of Macedonia, leads his legions against the giant Persian Empire. After defeating the Persians, he leads his army across the then known world, venturing farther than any westerner had ever gone, all the way to India.

Release Date : 2004-11-21

Language :English

Adult : false

Status : Released

Production Company : IntermediaMoritz Borman ProductionsIMF Internationale Medien und Film GmbH & Co. 3. Produktions KGPathé Renn ProductionsGordian ProductionsThe Great FilmproductieCecchi Gori PicturesFrance 2 CinémaFrance 3 CinémaBanque Populaire Images 4

Production Country : FranceGermanyNetherlandsUnited KingdomUnited States of America

Alternative Titles : Alexander Revisited: The Final Cut

Cast

Colin Farrell

Character Name : Alexander

Original Name : Colin Farrell

Gender : Male

Angelina Jolie

Character Name : Olympias

Original Name : Angelina Jolie

Gender : Female

Val Kilmer

Character Name : Philip

Original Name : Val Kilmer

Gender : Male

Jared Leto

Character Name : Hephaistion

Original Name : Jared Leto

Gender : Male

Jonathan Rhys Meyers

Character Name : Cassander

Original Name : Jonathan Rhys Meyers

Gender : Male

Anthony Hopkins

Character Name : Old Ptolemy

Original Name : Anthony Hopkins

Gender : Male

Jessie Kamm

Character Name : Young Alexander

Original Name : Jessie Kamm

Gender : Male

Christopher Plummer

Character Name : Aristotle

Original Name : Christopher Plummer

Gender : Male

Connor Paolo

Character Name : Young Alexander

Original Name : Connor Paolo

Gender : Male

Patrick Carroll

Character Name : Young Hephaistion

Original Name : Patrick Carroll

Gender : Male

Peter Williamson

Character Name : Young Nearchus

Original Name : Peter Williamson

Gender : Male

Morgan Christopher Ferris

Character Name : Young Cassander

Original Name : Morgan Christopher Ferris

Gender : Male

Rob Earley

Character Name : Young Ptolemy

Original Name : Rob Earley

Gender : Male

Aleczander Gordon

Character Name : Young Perdiccas

Original Name : Aleczander Gordon

Gender : Male

John Kavanagh

Character Name : Parmenion

Original Name : John Kavanagh

Gender : Male

Gary Stretch

Character Name : Cleitus

Original Name : Gary Stretch

Gender : Male

Rosario Dawson

Character Name : Roxane

Original Name : Rosario Dawson

Gender : Female

Toby Kebbell

Character Name : Pausanius

Original Name : Toby Kebbell

Gender : Male

Fiona O'Shaughnessy

Character Name : Nurse

Original Name : Fiona O'Shaughnessy

Gender : Female

Laird Macintosh

Character Name : Greek Officer

Original Name : Laird Macintosh

Gender : Male

Francisco Bosch

Character Name : Bagoas

Original Name : Francisco Bosch

Gender : Male

Neil Jackson

Character Name : Perdiccas

Original Name : Neil Jackson

Gender : Male

Rory McCann

Character Name : Crateros

Original Name : Rory McCann

Gender : Male

Raz Degan

Character Name : Darius III

Original Name : Raz Degan

Gender : Male

Joseph Morgan

Character Name : Philotas

Original Name : Joseph Morgan

Gender : Male

David Bedella

Character Name : Scribe

Original Name : David Bedella

Gender : Male

Brian Blessed

Character Name : Wrestling Trainer

Original Name : Brian Blessed

Gender : Male

Nick Dunning

Character Name : Attalus

Original Name : Nick Dunning

Gender : Male

Elliot Cowan

Character Name : Ptolemy

Original Name : Elliot Cowan

Gender : Male

Ian Beattie

Character Name : Antigonus

Original Name : Ian Beattie

Gender : Male

Denis Conway

Character Name : Nearchus

Original Name : Denis Conway

Gender : Male

Michael Dixon

Character Name : Campfire Soldier

Original Name : Michael Dixon

Gender : Male

Tim Pigott-Smith

Character Name : Omen Reader

Original Name : Tim Pigott-Smith

Gender : Male

Erol Sander

Character Name : Persian Prince

Original Name : Erol Sander

Gender : Male

Stéphane Ferrara

Character Name : Bactrian Commander

Original Name : Stéphane Ferrara

Gender : Male

Tadhg Murphy

Character Name : Dying Soldier

Original Name : Tadhg Murphy

Gender : Male

Annelise Hesme

Character Name : Stateira

Original Name : Annelise Hesme

Gender : Female

Marie Meyer

Character Name : Eurydice

Original Name : Marie Meyer

Gender : Female

Mick Lally

Character Name : Horse Seller

Original Name : Mick Lally

Gender : Male

Garrett Lombard

Character Name : Leonnatus

Original Name : Garrett Lombard

Gender : Male

Chris Aberdein

Character Name : Polyperchon

Original Name : Chris Aberdein

Gender : Male

Jean Le Duc

Character Name : Fat Eunuch

Original Name : Jean Le Duc

Gender : Male

Mohammed Tsouli

Character Name : Persian Chamberlain

Original Name : Mohammed Tsouli

Gender : Male

Rab Affleck

Character Name : Attalus' Henchman

Original Name : Rab Affleck

Gender : Male

Féodor Atkine

Character Name : Roxane's Father

Original Name : Féodor Atkine

Gender : Male

Harry Kent

Character Name : Cup Bearer #1

Original Name : Harry Kent

Gender : Male

Sam Green

Character Name : Cup Bearer #2

Original Name : Sam Green

Gender : Male

Bin Bunluerit

Character Name : Indian King

Original Name : Bin Bunluerit

Gender : Male

Jaran Ngamdee

Character Name : Indian Prince

Original Name : Jaran Ngamdee

Gender : Male

Brian McGrath

Character Name : Doctor

Original Name : Brian McGrath

Gender : Male

Suzanne Bullock

Character Name : Roxane Dancer

Original Name : Suzanne Bullock

Gender : Male

Kate Eloise Whitfield

Character Name : Roxane Dancer

Original Name : Kate Eloise Whitfield

Gender : Male

Gillian Grueber

Character Name : Roxane Dancer

Original Name : Gillian Grueber

Gender : Female

Michelle Lukes

Character Name : Roxane Dancer

Original Name : Michelle Lukes

Gender : Female

Anjali Mehra

Character Name : Roxane Dancer

Original Name : Anjali Mehra

Gender : Female

Anthony Jean Marie Kurt

Character Name : Bagoas Dancer

Original Name : Anthony Jean Marie Kurt

Gender : Male

Marta Barahona

Character Name : Bagoas Dancer

Original Name : Marta Barahona

Gender : Female

Monica Zamora

Character Name : Bagoas Dancer

Original Name : Monica Zamora

Gender : Female

Benny Maslov

Character Name : Bagoas Dancer

Original Name : Benny Maslov

Gender : Male

Tania Matos

Character Name : Bagoas Dancer

Original Name : Tania Matos

Gender : Female

Leighton Morrison

Character Name : Bagoas Dancer

Original Name : Leighton Morrison

Gender : Male

Isaac Mullins

Character Name : Bagoas Dancer

Original Name : Isaac Mullins

Gender : Male

Monica Perego

Character Name : Bagoas Dancer

Original Name : Monica Perego

Gender : Female

Matthew Powell

Character Name : Bagoas Dancer

Original Name : Matthew Powell

Gender : Male

Benjamín Benítez

Character Name : Amato (uncredited)

Original Name : Benjamín Benítez

Gender : Male

Anthony James Berowne

Character Name : Greek Courtier (uncredited)

Original Name : Anthony James Berowne

Gender : Male

Nicolas D. Blake

Character Name : Palace Page (uncredited)

Original Name : Nicolas D. Blake

Gender : Male

Max Bollinger

Character Name : Young Greek Official (uncredited)

Original Name : Max Bollinger

Gender : Male

Jason Croot

Character Name : Peasant (uncredited)

Original Name : Jason Croot

Gender : Male

Dale Dye

Character Name : Macedonian Veteran at Hyphasis Speech (uncredited)

Original Name : Dale Dye

Gender : Male

Fahar Faizaan

Character Name : Alexander - Voiceover (uncredited)

Original Name : Fahar Faizaan

Gender : Male

Charles Haigh

Character Name : Aristander (uncredited)

Original Name : Charles Haigh

Gender : Male

Abbie Hirst

Character Name : Octavia (uncredited)

Original Name : Abbie Hirst

Gender : Female

Charlie Hollway

Character Name : Boy (uncredited)

Original Name : Charlie Hollway

Gender : Male

Rowley Irlam

Character Name : Pausanius's Accomplice (uncredited)

Original Name : Rowley Irlam

Gender : Male

David Leon

Character Name : Hermolaous (uncredited)

Original Name : David Leon

Gender : Male

Evelina Manna

Character Name : Apparition (uncredited)

Original Name : Evelina Manna

Gender : Female

Desmond O'Neill

Character Name : Acolyte at Sacrifice (uncredited)

Original Name : Desmond O'Neill

Gender : Male

Greg Orvis

Character Name : Celtic Diplomat (uncredited)

Original Name : Greg Orvis

Gender : Male

Panayiota Panteli

Character Name : Indian Servant (uncredited)

Original Name : Panayiota Panteli

Gender : Male

Lee Anthony Parnell

Character Name : Warrior (uncredited)

Original Name : Lee Anthony Parnell

Gender : Male

John Reynolds

Character Name : Dexapous (uncredited)

Original Name : John Reynolds

Gender : Male

Peter Rnic

Character Name : Greek Nobleman (uncredited)

Original Name : Peter Rnic

Gender : Male

Oliver Stone

Character Name : Macedonian Soldier at Zeus Statue (uncredited)

Original Name : Oliver Stone

Gender : Male

Reviews

P

Per Gunnar Jonsson

@Dark Jedi

2024-05-16

My wife picked this one up together with the weekly TV magazine. Luckily we didn't pay full price. I hoped for a film about one of the greatest warlord of all time but what I got was something about a crying homosexual wimp.

J

John Chard

@John Chard

2024-05-16

Alexander Revisited: The Final Cut. Alexander is directed by Oliver Stone and Stone co-writes the screenplay with Christopher Kyle and Laeta Kalogridis. It stars Colin Farrell, Val Kilmer, Angelina Jolie, Jared Leto, Anthony Hopkins, Rosario Dawson, Jonathan Rhys Meyers and Christopher Plummer. Music is by Vangelis and cinematography by Rodrigo Prieto. Alexander is an historical epic based on the life of Alexander the Great. Off the bat I have to say that this "Final Cut" version of the film is the only one I have seen. Upon its initial home format release - the first theatrical version - I lasted an hour and 15 minutes before growing restless and sought enjoyment elsewhere. Consequently as a massive fan of historical epics through the years, it has been a constant nagging itch for me to see Alexander in its entirety. So with Oliver Stone tinkering away with versions - convinced he has made a worthwhile epic - I finally delved in. The Final Cut, as far as I'm aware, is a vast improvement on that savagely received theatrical release, well that is said by those who tried again instead of calling quits at the first production. Straight away I could see the difference, where once was a plodding first hour, now sits a vibrancy, with Stone seemingly saying that he can do great action and drama, just please hang around during all the historical chatter, sexual connotation, family strife and conquering machinations, and I will enthral you as a whole. By his own admission, Stone reveals he took on a most complex historical character and in his eyes has made a film to befit such complexity. We get a splintered narrative, as we kick off with the crux of Alexander the Great, the leader, while Alexander's childhood and family forming is interspersed at various junctures. The battles are high in intensity and blood letting - exhilarating at times - but more crucially they let us engage with the tactical "ahead of their time" manoeuvres of Alexander the Great. This version mostly flows alright, and I got to feel how Alexander's mind was working in the process, even if come pics closure I didn't fully know the man. Epically cast of course, some of them work, others not so much. Farrell's looked odd, in the way that Pitt's was in Troy (released this same year as Alexander), but apart from the accent issue he grows into the role and is fiercely committed. Jolie is just wrong for the role of domineering Olympias, worse still the scenes she does with Farrell are damp and threaten to derail the drama already built up. This latter point is more annoying given a great thread involving Dawson as Alexander's wife Roxanne is built up superbly, only to not be pulled until some drama very late in the play. The rest of the cast come through as ok for period flavours (expected for Hopkins, Plummer and Meyers, interesting as regards Leto). This is not the life ambition masterpiece Stone wanted to make, even if he proclaims on the extras that he's happy and content with The Final Cut version. This cut still shows some cracks, but these are not seismic enough to hurt the film. For there's a lot of grandeur, blood stirring and thought gone into the production, and there's a lot to be said for that in this day and age of soulless cash making filmic exercises. Honourable failure then? Yes for sure, but a better film in this form than some may have thought possible back in 2004. 7/10

W

Wuchak

@Wuchak

2021-08-10

_**Alexander’s conquests from Greece through Persia into northwestern India**_ After being tutored by Aristotle (Christopher Plumber), Alexander (Colin Farrell) takes over the Macedonian throne in 336 BC at the age of 20 after his father is assassinated (Val Kilmer). Over the next 13 years he, amazingly, conquers the Persian Empire and heads into India before finally turning back. Anthony Hopkins narrates as Ptolemy in his old age while Angelina Jolie plays Alexander’s snake-loving mother. Rosario Dawson plays his wife acquired in Bactria (in what is today part of Afghanistan). Oliver Stone’s “Alexander” (2004) was a challenging undertaking and has many attributes despite not being as compelling as the contemporaneous “Troy.” It’s a colorful, entertaining epic with a great cast, awesome battle scenes, exotic locations/sets and a fine score by Vangelis. Naturally the storyline is not as one-dimensional as “Troy” seeing as how it involves a movable empire traveling across western Asia. Historically-minded critics complain about the sequence where Alexander's fatigued soldiers request not to push further into India in favor of returning to Macedonia to see their families again. Alexander denies their request and does something that paints him as an unreasonable tyrant. In real life Alexander pondered their demands for a few days before agreeing to turn back and didn't execute anyone, which showed what a compassionate, merciful leader he was. However, this dubious sequence was simply Stone’s amalgamation of several mutinies during his conquests, which was placed at that particular point in the story for dramatic reasons. Besides, the movie certainly illustrates how Alexander brought the light of civilization to his foreign subjects and was accepting of their cultures, wanting to unify the many tribes under one banner, so to speak. The scenes with Val Kilmer as Alexander’s father are entertaining while the ones with Angelina Jolie get boring after the first two or three. We get it: she loves snakes, hates her husband and thinks Zeus was Alexander’s father. Half of the sequences with Jolie could’ve been cut with no harm done, which would’ve helped momentum. I didn’t have an issue with Alexander’s relationship with his childhood friend, Hephaistion (Jared Leto), since it’s clearly depicted as platonic in the sense of David and Jonathan in the Bible (see 2 Samuel 1:26). In the film the two are depicted as having a loving friendship wherein they occasionally hug and that’s it. I occasionally hug my best friend too, but I only sleep with my hot wife. As far as Alexander being bisexual, there’s zero historical proof of this. Yes, the kiss between Alexander and Bagoas (Francisco Bosch) was mentioned by Plutarch who lived in the Roman Empire 200 years later but, assuming it happened, it doesn't mean much. Some cultures in history kissed on the mouth when greeting, like Russians; it’s a social tradition and has nothing to do with sexual desire. To put it in perspective, imagine a filmmaker saying Trump was gay 2327 years in the future even though he had numerous women, marriages and children in his life. It's slanderous and can be attributed to Stone's catering to Liberal propaganda as opposed to historical reality. In short, he played the homosexual card to be ‘hip’ and give his movie Lefty ‘edge,’ but it backfired because it bombed at the box office. Still, the scene in question is brief and all it suggests is that Alexander experimented with homosexuality once after partying which, let’s face it, is something Greeks are known for (although Alexander would argue that he’s technically Macedonian, lol). If you can ignore that glaring flaw, there’s a lot to appreciate in “Alexander” since Stone is unquestionably a top-of-the-line filmmaker. And the flick certainly inspires viewers to look up the real history. The film was shot at Pinewood Studios & Shepperton Studios, both just west of London, as well as Morocco and Thailand (it’s pretty easy to figure out which scenes were done where). There are no less than four cuts of the film available: The theatrical cut runs 2 hr 55 min (175 min); the 2005 Director’s Cut runs 2 hr 47 min (167 min); the so-called Final Cut from 2007 runs 3 hr 34 min (214 min); and the 2013 Ultimate Cut runs 3 hr 27 min (207 min). GRADE: B-

C

CinemaSerf

@Geronimo1967

2023-01-07

Opinion on this film seems to have been hijacked somewhat by the definition and appropriateness of the relationship between Alexander (Farrell) and Hephaestion (Leto). It seems daft to try to apply 21st century social morals onto a society in which same sex relationships were simply unremarkable. Whether or not it was about sex, or love, or both isn't really that important - I think Oliver Stone was trying to involve us in a much more complex story of human nature. It may also be more of an Anglo-Saxon thing - men on Continental Europe from Scandinavia to the Mediterranean (and their N. American descendants) have a completely different, relaxed, view towards tactility amongst men. What this discussion does do successfully, however, is distract us from a pretty lacklustre effort at an epic. The film has grandeur and style but really does lack substance. It has all the grit of a beauty pageant. The script is wordy and weak, and characterisations way too shallow given we have effectively a blank canvas from which to work and an almost unlimited timeframe in which to tell the story. Inevitably, it does draw comparisons with Richard Burton and Frederic March's version from 1956 but not favourably; the all star cast here just doesn't really gel in the same way and the CGI isn't anywhere near as convincing as the real photography of the earlier iteration. Overall, a very well resourced missed opportunity to tell the tale of one of history's most enigmatic characters.