🇬🇧BRIT Reacts To 300 (2006) - FIRST TIME WATCHING - MOVIE REACTION!

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  • Опубликовано: 3 июн 2022
  • 🇬🇧BRIT Reacts To 300 (2006) - FIRST TIME WATCHING - MOVIE REACTION!
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    Hi everyone, I’m Kabir and welcome to another episode of Kabir Considers! In this video I’m Going to React To 300 (2006) - FIRST TIME WATCHING - MOVIE REACTION!
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Комментарии • 580

  • @richardovercast2258
    @richardovercast2258 2 года назад +90

    The Battle of Thermopylae is still taught at West Point ( US Army Academy) as an example of how to fight a battle against an enemy with superior forces.

    • @drownedhorses
      @drownedhorses 3 месяца назад +1

      Really? That's good. What did you learn exactly from the training

    • @johannesvalterdivizzini1523
      @johannesvalterdivizzini1523 2 месяца назад +1

      @@drownedhorses How to maximize available terrain in defense.

    • @Hades32
      @Hades32 2 месяца назад

      dude sorry for my arrogance but please tell me which army is superior than US army???

    • @richardovercast2258
      @richardovercast2258 2 месяца назад

      ​@@Hades32The US Army is the superior fighting force on the planet right now but there will be times where a small squad will have to hold a position against a larger force.

    • @Hades32
      @Hades32 2 месяца назад

      @@richardovercast2258 yes you holding position with all those high tech weapons against rebels .i dont want to disperect you but this is true.i love usa btw

  • @Objectified
    @Objectified 2 года назад +38

    "We've been sharing our culture with you all morning." God I love that line.

    • @palaskarav
      @palaskarav 10 месяцев назад

      Müslims will take over europa

  • @walterlippmann6292
    @walterlippmann6292 2 года назад +126

    that "lay down your weapons"/"come and take them" line is an actual quote, according to Plutarch, an ancient Greek historian.

    • @technopirate304
      @technopirate304 2 года назад +2

      The quote and the Spartan helmet is used by members of the pro Second Amendment lobby here in America.

    • @walterlippmann6292
      @walterlippmann6292 2 года назад +3

      @@technopirate304 based

    • @sld1776
      @sld1776 2 года назад +4

      Literally "come take".

    • @wonderlandian8465
      @wonderlandian8465 2 года назад +11

      A lot of the lines in the movie are actual quotes according to documents of those times. Which was why the Spartas developed a reputations about their laconic quips. In fact the term "laconic" today comes from the region of Laconia in Greece which is where Sparta was/is.
      Queen Gorgo's "Only Spartan women give birth to real men" was an actual quote but instead of a Persian messenger it was said to an Athenian women, the "We will fight in the shade" line was an actual quote also so was the "Come back with your shield or on it" which was what Spartan mothers would say to their sons

    • @House_of_Caine
      @House_of_Caine Год назад +3

      Molon labe, "come and claim them"

  • @lordfrieza2073
    @lordfrieza2073 Год назад +35

    The mistake Xerxes made was thinking Leonidas wanted power, he went there for only one reason he was 60 years old and in a year he would have to stop being a soldier, and one thing he wanted was a beautiful death. The highest honor in his culture.

    • @johannesvalterdivizzini1523
      @johannesvalterdivizzini1523 2 месяца назад +1

      The actual Leonidas was 60, but here the character is in his 40's.

    • @RTW1738
      @RTW1738 2 месяца назад

      Damn that was a factor I didn’t realize, nothing worse than dealing with a man who literally wants to die 😂😂

  • @RLKmedic0315
    @RLKmedic0315 2 года назад +26

    "Molon Labe" Literally "Come and take" in Greek, the words spoken by Leonidas (As reported by Plutarch) and, to this day, the motto of the Greek 1st Army Corp. Epically Badass.

    • @jakobroynon-fisher9535
      @jakobroynon-fisher9535 8 месяцев назад

      Actually, it was in supposedly in written correspondence between Leonidas I of Sparta and Xerxes I of Persia- and is attested to in 'Sayings of the Spartans'.

  • @warmaiden
    @warmaiden Год назад +9

    "He's not a god, just a lanky dude with a gold fetish" - I am DYING.
    Such beautiful visuals, and I don't know if I've seen anyone as compelling as Butler playing Leonidas, and the woman playing his queen (Gorgo?) definitely leveraged this when she played Cersei in Game of Thrones.

  • @daniellaa8688
    @daniellaa8688 2 года назад +225

    Love this movie. Stayed faithful to the graphic novel rather than the actual historical event but there really was Sparta and the 300 really did take a stand. Awesome movie though!! I'm up to watch it anytime.

    • @Timmycoo
      @Timmycoo 2 года назад +14

      Yeah gotta make it theatric which makes this movie more fun. I really enjoyed this movie. Zack Snyder is definitely a showman. THIS IS SPARTA!!

    • @brettg274
      @brettg274 2 года назад +17

      There is a movie from the 60’s called “The 300 Spartans” that strives for historical accuracy and puts more focus on actual battle formations and strategies used. It’s obviously not as theatrical, but it was really good, IMO.

    • @Timmycoo
      @Timmycoo 2 года назад +9

      @@brettg274 Cheers for the suggestion! Always looking for a new movie to watch since today's stuff doesn't really interest me much.

    • @daniellaa8688
      @daniellaa8688 2 года назад +4

      @@Timmycoo I know exactly what you mean!

    • @Dusk.EighthLegion
      @Dusk.EighthLegion 2 года назад

      @@Timmycoo You ever seen House on Haunted Hill?

  • @Miller54K
    @Miller54K 2 года назад +147

    I like how the movie is told as a story around a fire. Explains all the weird stuff you see as it is more of a tall tale than reality.

    • @mandalorian_guy
      @mandalorian_guy 2 года назад +24

      Imagine growing up and never seeing or even knowing what an elephant is. Now imagine describing afterwards to other people the monster the size of a building that ravaged the battlefield.

    • @DrFeelgood1127
      @DrFeelgood1127 2 года назад +3

      @@mandalorian_guy was about to comment this ^^^

    • @1perfectpitch
      @1perfectpitch 2 года назад

      The battle of Thermopylae is still studied in military academies world wide. Get out of your mom's basement and stop being so stupid.

    • @troyp5359
      @troyp5359 2 года назад +1

      Wow now I really feel stupid I never put that together, makes perfect sense

    • @DivusMagus
      @DivusMagus 2 года назад +4

      Its also filled with propaganda since it is a Spartan telling the story of his King. But makes for a more interesting movie so it works really well.

  • @Robertz1986
    @Robertz1986 2 года назад +19

    Fun fact, but the quotes like "Tonight we dine in hell (hades)", "We will fight in the shade" (in reference to arrows), and the Spartan adage about "Come back with your shield or on it" are all historical, as are many other elements about the battle in this film.
    In fact, short witty comments being called laconic in English comes from Laconia, the province that Sparta is in, and comes from their habit of making short smartass remarks and comebacks.
    Also, discarding babies and beginning brutal military training at a young age were all very real. Of course, Sparta was a slave society which is how they could have a totally military society, as they didn't need other professionals and they needed to be able to resist a slave uprising.

  • @smokeyverton7981
    @smokeyverton7981 2 года назад +26

    "2006 quite a while back". Holy crap I'm old. I can do 16 yrs standing on my head

    • @jamesalexander5623
      @jamesalexander5623 2 года назад +2

      I remember the original film "The 300 Spartans" with Richard Egan as Leonidas! ..... that's worth a look! It's an epic film with a great cast and thousands of extras!

    • @jasonm8017
      @jasonm8017 Год назад +1

      Smokey, I was going to say. I’m with ya. Looks like James went ‘Top Rope’ on us.

    • @smokeyverton7981
      @smokeyverton7981 Год назад

      @@jasonm8017 I know when I'm beat. All hail the King

    • @ClgtGuy
      @ClgtGuy Год назад

      i was abt 13 or 14 when this film was released, holy fuck.

  • @SherryPM72
    @SherryPM72 2 года назад +74

    When she said "come back with your shield or on it" Was something Spartan mothers would tell their sons going off to batel. Because they were heavy and if you were to run away you'll haft to drop them. Thus you were a coward, but if you stood and fought to the death they would carry you home on it. Naturally, if you lived you would carry it home. So "come back with your shield or on it"

    • @primary2630
      @primary2630 2 года назад +1

      @random dude they probably extended it to give it more context so people dont miss the point of the saying

    • @valantisxiotis938
      @valantisxiotis938 11 месяцев назад +1

      Greeks didn't bury the dead they had wounded from the back,this was meaning that they had flee from the battle

  • @ZannNewman
    @ZannNewman 2 года назад +7

    They still teach Thermopoly in the US Marinecorps as an example of using the terrain to cancel your enemies advantages - by using a narrow pass the Spartan Heavy armoured elite troops could fight one-to-one without getting overrun by enemy numbers

  • @nicolem376
    @nicolem376 2 года назад +9

    I love it when guys react to this for the first time. Everyone gets pumped up 😂

    • @ihater3tards
      @ihater3tards 11 месяцев назад

      Imagine me when i first saw it..living literally 500 meters from ancient Sparta... ;)

  • @JoeyBlueTx
    @JoeyBlueTx 2 года назад +40

    As for the Captain and his son Astinos..Astinos was his favored son, the one he saw himself most in, which is why he chose him for the march. They are a hard people who don't show much sensitivity, but Spartans loved as hard as they lived.
    Edit: Leonidas didn't just return because that would be complete defeat that would turn Spartans to slaves of Xerxes. If he stays and dies, all of the Spartan military MUST go to war, which is how Greece (all of Greece, not just Sparta) repelled Xerxes and the Persian Empire from their home.

    • @AugustoEL
      @AugustoEL 2 года назад +6

      Lead by example, also in real world it was the only way a spartan will get a headstone in their grave was dying in battle.

    • @JoeyBlueTx
      @JoeyBlueTx 2 года назад +5

      @@AugustoEL Absolutely!. And the women got their warrior status if they died during childbirth..

    • @AugustoEL
      @AugustoEL 2 года назад +3

      @@JoeyBlueTx Yeah I knew that, was the only way a woman got a headstone. At least they were pretty equal in that, "either die in war or die bringing someone to this world or no headstone for you"

  • @technopirate304
    @technopirate304 2 года назад +7

    @16:30, I was just about to say “We still do” but you caught yourself. Scenes like this (minus the spears and colorful robes) have been taking place around the world throughout human history. Heck it’s happening right now as I write this.
    It’s just that the last 4 generations of the Western world have lived in such relative peace and plenty we forget. All of this was paid for by the ultimate sacrifices of many people that we will never know.

  • @DrFeelgood1127
    @DrFeelgood1127 2 года назад +52

    I remember watching this in Toronto, and most of the people were quiet and not that into it, but down in the states people were cheering and screaming lol

    • @coyotelong4349
      @coyotelong4349 2 года назад +22

      Hahaha I guess you could say you Canadians are more like Athenians, while we Americans are more like Spartans

    • @MelaniePoparad
      @MelaniePoparad 2 года назад +16

      I don’t know of a more accurate way to portray the difference between Americans and Canadians better. Awesome.

    • @leonrussell9607
      @leonrussell9607 Год назад

      @@coyotelong4349 or Americans are just annoying twats

  • @gsparkman
    @gsparkman 2 года назад +71

    At the end the "most that go" are the Athenians (Arcadians). One Spartan is sent home to tell the story, the remaining of the original 300 stay to fight. Great reaction; this film is storytelling at its finest.

    • @spartan_warrior5927
      @spartan_warrior5927 2 года назад +2

      Thanks for saving me the trouble. 🫵🏻🙏🏼

    • @tiffanybiscuit7587
      @tiffanybiscuit7587 2 года назад +2

      It was not only the 300 who stayed . Over a 1000 other troops , mostly Arcadians, stayed also . The reason that the 300 are remembered over the other troops is that their king also remained to fight . I'm not trying to take anything away from the bravery of the Spartans, but they were not on there own .

    • @spartan_warrior5927
      @spartan_warrior5927 2 года назад +1

      @@tiffanybiscuit7587 he was explaining the movies version.

    • @tiffanybiscuit7587
      @tiffanybiscuit7587 2 года назад

      @@spartan_warrior5927 I get that . Just pointing out there's more to the story . For instance the Spartan who went back to tell the tale in real life was disgusted with himself for not dying with his comrades. In the battle mentioned at the end of the film he attacked the enemy in what can only be described as a 'suicide ' attack . The other Spartans in the battle were reportedly angry with his actions as he broke rank and was killed trying to redeem his own honour and not fighting for the honour of Sparta.

    • @spartan_warrior5927
      @spartan_warrior5927 2 года назад

      @@tiffanybiscuit7587 I understand but most people don’t wanna know that. 99 of based on true story’s do it. It ruins the movie.

  • @zaidxp
    @zaidxp 2 года назад +7

    I still remember walking around shouting 'This is sparta!'

  • @jimtatro6550
    @jimtatro6550 2 года назад +46

    This and Sin City are both based on Graphic Novels from Frank Miller. Both are extremely faithful to the source material, if you haven’t seen Sin City check it out.

    • @OroborusFMA
      @OroborusFMA 2 года назад

      Sin City is nauseating and heartless . . . doesn't hold a candle to 300.

    • @marilynseptember21
      @marilynseptember21 2 года назад +1

      @@OroborusFMA 🤣I don't know why your comment is so funny. I agree with heartless.....perhaps seeing Harry Potter do certain this made it nauseating to watch?
      Both are great to me. There are more characters and scenes in Sin City and 300 more limited so would have liked more.
      I have not read either of the graphic novels so cannot comment as to the transfer to screen but most commenters have stated both are true to the novels. I have seen the making of 300 and certainly puts a damper to things so will no longer watch the behind the scenes again.

  • @ckroustalis8244
    @ckroustalis8244 2 года назад +15

    If you ever go to Greece, stop at Thermopylae where the battle took place to see the statue of Leonidas. Below the statue is written ΜΟΛΩΝ ΛΑΒΕ come and get our weapons. Also the the Spartans telling the visitor to go to Sparta and tell them that "Here we lie faithful to their laws!"

    • @quentinmichel7581
      @quentinmichel7581 2 года назад +2

      "Go tell the Spartans, passersby, that here obedient to their laws we lie."
      US Patriots during the Revolution appropriated the Greek phrase of defiance uttered during the engagement for a battle flag - a white field with a black cannon over the legend "Come and Take Them".

  • @MelaniePoparad
    @MelaniePoparad 2 года назад +18

    Xerxes’ actor and Leonidas’ actor are about the same height. They used tricks to make him look huge. I love the obvious embellishments/fantasy elements that the storyteller put in there to motivate their troops! It actually makes perfect sense why a real historical event would be so mystical... it was told to troops as a motivation so the actual story was embellished and made richer, etc.

  • @evemiller2637
    @evemiller2637 2 года назад +36

    Yes, that is why Spartan’s were such a tough race. The only thing missing from the story is that even the females were taught to fight. This is loosely based on a true story. It was through this battle that Greece became united.

    • @Itachi17839
      @Itachi17839 Год назад +2

      They movie does hit it when Leonidas says you clearly don't know our woman perhaps I should march them up.

    • @hel1nas
      @hel1nas 10 месяцев назад

      Actually it is missrepresented that the Thermopyle was this battle that brought Hellenic nation together because people keep forgetting the Olympics were the reason to stop Greek fighting civil wars because and inaugurated in 776 BC. And the olympics were participated only Hellenes that proved their bloodline. Like Great Alexander grand father Alexander who participated in the Olympics.

  • @TangentOmega
    @TangentOmega 2 года назад +4

    Spartans are Greeks. At the time, specifically, the Athenians were called Greek. This movie is very accurate in depicting Spartan society. Yes, they would discard the sick and all children belonged to the state,, not their parents.. The Athenians thought the Spartans were brutal and uncivilized. The Persians are depicted as caricatures.

  • @TreyM1609
    @TreyM1609 2 года назад +17

    “Then we will fight in the shade!” Greatest line in this movie imo

    • @georgiosdrogoudis726
      @georgiosdrogoudis726 Год назад +2

      actually its true line not just a script

    • @SoloDoloToker
      @SoloDoloToker Год назад +1

      @@georgiosdrogoudis726 Which is crazy to me.. lol it's cool that Spartans were quick witted like that back then.

  • @quentinmichel7581
    @quentinmichel7581 2 года назад +32

    The Battle of Thermopylae is probably my favorite Last Stand story in history. It wasn't limited to just 300 Spartans; it was actually more of them than Leonidas' 300 personal guard; there were also Spartan helots as well and in addition to the number of Arcadians there were several other groups of Greeks to join them like the Phocians, Boetians, Thebans and Thespians. I believe it was a total about 7,000 actually at the Hot Gates facing the Persians. At the very end the Spartans did not stand alone either. While the other forces left before getting cut off so they could fight another day, about 700 Thespians (along with @ 900 Spartan helots and @ 400 Thebans, and a smattering of Boetians) chose to stay with the Spartans that were left of the 300..
    The best novelization of the event I've ever read is the book GATES OF FIRE. More historically accurate than the movie, its a great read.
    Also, the Spartans hoplite infantry was heavy infantry, not loinclothed bodybuilders. Bronze Corinthian style helmets, bronze cuirass, bronze greaves and a 30lb. bronze covered wooden shield (the aspis or hoplon) made these hoplites walking tanks compared to the light Persian infantry with wicker shields. The 8-9ft dory spear with a deadly leaf-shaped bronze head at one and a "lizard-sticker" point at the other end (the length allowed for the spears of the first 3 os so ranks to project over the shoulders & shields of the front rank while the front rank generally used their dorys under the shields- making the front of the phalanx a terrifying meat grinder) and the Xiphos short sword rounded out the gear. Their strength was in the phalanx and not generally individual combat. They also had a well-developed system to rotate the front ranks to the rear to rest as fresh hoplites are brought to the front. It was necessary as combat by such heavy infantry was quickly exhausting.
    I absolutely love 300 but it is more a faithful adaptation of the graphic novel than an accurate historical account; although many quotes were historically accurate like the "fight in the shade" and "come and get them".
    Lastly, they also used a sort of early "dog tag" utilizing sticks...they would make marks on the sticks and break them in half, putting one half in a bowl and carry the other half on their person. After the battle the pieces were reunited and casualties counted and most quickly identified... though not after the Last Stand, obviously.

    • @chrisdolan9579
      @chrisdolan9579 Год назад +1

      wouldn't put too much faith in Wikipedia, from what I've read over the years regarding the battle of Thermopylae, there were about 1500 troops from various Greek city states, alongside the Spartans at the pass, and about one thousand phocian's guarding the goat path! Putting the numbers around 3000. If there were as much as 7000, including high numbers of troops from states such as Thebes, it's highly likely that the Persians wouldn't have been able to break through at all, using the goat path or not!

    • @quentinmichel7581
      @quentinmichel7581 Год назад +1

      @@chrisdolan9579 Didnt use Wikipoopia, sorry. 😏
      Try Encyclopedia Britannica and National Geographic to start with. There are a vast array of credible sources available that don't have "Wiki" in their names.
      Just because YOU don't wish to believe something, it doesn't naturally follow that the fact rearrange themselves to meet your desires.
      I did my research. Did you? 😏
      And from a tactical standpoint, once you get the enemy BEHIND your fortified position and you are significantly outnumbered, simple attrition wins out, which is why Leonidas ordered the bulk of the remaining Hellenic forces to withdraw before being encircled while the Spartans and some others fought the rearguard action.

    • @conniecrawford5231
      @conniecrawford5231 Год назад +2

      You need to study Ancient Greek historyA- the battle of Thermopylae

    • @franknoble5335
      @franknoble5335 Год назад

      Weck up to thees!

  • @ViolentKisses87
    @ViolentKisses87 2 года назад +10

    The Zingers were part of real Spartan culture
    They were taught to be roast the fuck out of eachother and thats as awesome as the combat.

  • @davidstenton4365
    @davidstenton4365 2 года назад +7

    *Kabir* one of my FAVOURITE movies EVER.!!!

  • @steven95N
    @steven95N 2 года назад +5

    23:09 "μολὼν λαβέ"
    The most legendary quote in legend, in my opinion.

  • @puebloking8280
    @puebloking8280 2 года назад +11

    One of my favorite movies ever. Never experienced anything like this still in theatres, it stood out from everything else when it came out.

  • @ARKO942
    @ARKO942 2 года назад +11

    Dope movie man! Remember watching it with my dad when it first came out.

  • @Zenon0K
    @Zenon0K 2 года назад +6

    In reality, the reality wasn't too off . It was a dual front with the 300 Spartans fighting alongside 10-15 thousand other Greeks against 300k-about a million Persians at The Battle of Thermopylae that was occurring at the same time just as across the peninsula, the Battle of Artemisium (similar numbers although the Persians worst case didn't have nearly the numbers advantage on land. Sizable, not outrageous like the land battles' highest possible number). The plan was to fight them as long as possible by both land and sea, but if either force was to fall that the other was to immediately retreat. The land forces were eventually overrun, but Leonidas volunteered his personal force and a few thousand volunteers to fight to the death to buy time send word to the fleet and to evacuate the main bulk to the force to fight another day.
    These battles were not just about fighting Xerces off, but buying time for not only forces from ALL OVER the Greek world to fight and mass, but for civilians to evacuate cities like Athens etc. Not only did the success in battle, but volunteers heroic work and success after the fact slowed his army down enough that the civilians were safely evacuated from the countryside and cities meaning there wasn't widespread civilian death but also allowed the Greek fleet to flee/armies to meet up and launch a gigantic offensive afterwards that drove Persia back en mass.
    Looking at "that" side of history much of it is correct. The traitors giving up the senate/goat path. His personal bodyguard of 300. Their strategies focusing on the Hot Gates/Euripus Strait was much the same. Create a chokepoint and fight using the terrain of Greece itself. Also, it easier for a time to hold ground rather than take it (both literally and figuratively. Like basing out and making a tackle or defending a wrestlers shot, or Persians pushing against a shield) but at a certain point you'll give out/you can move forward longer. In real life, it's being calculated it's something like 3 times more difficult fighting UP terrain, i.e. a force a 3 men firing down a hill is equal to force 3 times as big. But in Vietnam battles were 500 Americans fighting 10,000 Viet Cong uphill meant the Americans were "outnumbered" 60-1. There have been some truly nutty battles in history were a group of a dozen or so have held off thousands because of a fixed position with an ability to fire DOWN ON an impossibly sized force.

  • @tonysoto8949
    @tonysoto8949 2 года назад +12

    It’s like Frank Millers graphic novel jumped onto a movie screen. How the studio was able to make this movie and shoot the movie is astonishing. Most movies shoot fight scenes close so you feel like your in the middle of the action but at the same time you watch and get lost as to who is hitting or stabbing who. This movie pulls back and you can see and follow everything, and that slow-mo into ramped up full contact fighting is absolutely visceral and somehow beautiful at the same time. Again the studio did a masterful job with the camera work which was mind blowing. Then you have the dialogue and delivery of the dialogue which was absolutely amazing and gave me chills throughout this Epic film. Speechless when I first saw it and it’s one of my favorite movies. And the Cinematography which I almost forgot to mention was like nothing I have ever seen before. Great review 👍

  • @WhatDayIsItTrumpDay
    @WhatDayIsItTrumpDay 2 года назад +4

    Yep, it had a comic book aesthetic because the film is based on the Frank Miller graphic novel. (Same bloke who did the Sin City series, The Spirit, and I believe The Watchmen as well.) But the battle was indeed a historical event. The Battle Thermopylae where 300 Spartans held off thousands of Persians, at a choke point along the coast of Greece and the Malian Gulf. It has been said that this war between Greece and Persia at the time was the defense of the idea of democracy. Greece defending democracy, while Persia being the Authoritarian Empire. Had Greece lost this war, democracy as we know it today may not have come about. Learned this point through my classes in college (History degree) and documentaries I've seen since.

  • @miguelmaykot632
    @miguelmaykot632 2 года назад +2

    this movie has such a good narrative and aesthetic

  • @colinvannurden3090
    @colinvannurden3090 4 месяца назад +2

    Lmfao!! 'He's just a lanky dude with a gold fetish' 😅😂 thats hilarious bro

  • @BeboRulz
    @BeboRulz 2 года назад +17

    I just wanted to come say you edit your movie reactions wonderfully.
    I had to turn off another reactor not even 5mins into a movie reaction.
    You do a GREAT JOB!
    Request....Boondock Saints 💜

  • @Stepperg1
    @Stepperg1 2 года назад +10

    We saw a documentary on the making of The 300. It was about the fighting. Those guys seemed to be sweating blood, they were working so hard. Lots of CGI of course but the actual hands on fighting kicked ass. Loved the movie!

  • @xenotbbbeats7209
    @xenotbbbeats7209 2 года назад +4

    I've got the DVD. One of my all-time favorites. This movie made combat look like ballet. I kept watching the fight scenes over and over.

  • @leeneufeld4140
    @leeneufeld4140 2 года назад +12

    Given the Spartan's strong bias against weak or sickly people (in the context of this story), it's not surprising that Leonidas refused Ephialtes' petition to join them. Even allowing him into the camp would have caused problems with his men.

  • @ComancheWarchief
    @ComancheWarchief 2 года назад +5

    SPARTANS! what is your profession

  • @Dusk.EighthLegion
    @Dusk.EighthLegion 2 года назад +2

    There is a famous story told about Spartans, specifically a Spartan youth during the agoge, he had stolen a fox and hidden it under his shirt. He was apprehended and questioned, and while being questioned he suddenly dropped dead. After looking at the body of the boy they found the fox he had hidden, it had eaten it's way through his stomach into his internal organs, and not once did he cry out. Spartans were tough as old boots and harder than coffin nails, but apparently not very good at finding foxes that are literally right in front of them.

    • @SKARDANIOTHS
      @SKARDANIOTHS 2 года назад +1

      During the agoge-αγωγή Spartan youth were allowed to steal for food and also to kill slaves if they were about to be caught.If they were caught they were beaten by the Spartan authorities........because they were caught and not for the actual crime.

  • @disposablehero4911
    @disposablehero4911 2 года назад +2

    Leonidas knew that the Spartans needed time to prepare for the war. Leaving Thermopalye meant certain defeat of Sparta. That's why he stayed.

  • @helvete_ingres4717
    @helvete_ingres4717 2 года назад +5

    10:08 - 'how is it blasphemy?' Hospitality towards guests which the Greeks called 'xenia' was a hugely important ethic in the ancient world, so much so it was believed to be a divine law upheld by the gods themselves. It was even believed that Zeus the king of the gods would sometimes come down to earth from mount Olympus and disguise himself as a weary old man needing shelter just to make sure people would treat him accordingly (and punish them if they wouldn't). So even though the ancient world was more chill about killing in most contexts, violating that precept to the extent you actually kill your guest would be seen as blasphemy and that scene (like almost all of this film) is certainly not historical

  • @sandrataylor2323
    @sandrataylor2323 2 года назад +11

    This movie was based on true events. Spartan warriors were the elite of the elite, more like a combination of American Delta Force, Navy Seals and other elite fighting forces combined. Good movie but with a lot of dramatic effects which is what made it great. I love ancient history. Leonidas is right up there with Alexander the Great and Hannibal in my book.

    • @Kenneth_James
      @Kenneth_James 2 года назад +1

      That is not accurate.

    • @sandrataylor2323
      @sandrataylor2323 2 года назад +1

      @@Kenneth_James How so? This is what I was taught in college.

    • @user-ue6yc9kr8i
      @user-ue6yc9kr8i Год назад +1

      Most of American special forces at the end of their training in U.S. come to Greece for co training with the local special forces the so called “devil’s week” because its a week of extreme training demanding high endurance and mental ability to make it.

  • @mmsizzlak3726
    @mmsizzlak3726 Год назад +1

    Yes, for the most part the intro about Spartans was correct... They were taken into warrior school at 7 and to graduate, they had to slip unnoticed into the neighboring slave town and kill a slave without getting caught... Their phalanx formation was legendary...a lot of nations didn't have standing armies so Sparta had the advantage in professional soldiers who had professional cohesion... historians think the Persians numbered 100k to 250k, which is still crazy... Although I must add that historically, armies numbering in the hundreds of thousands was normal for Eastern / Asian armies and combat in those theaters while in the east, tens of thousands was the usual number of soldiers any given western power had...

  • @dansiegel333
    @dansiegel333 2 года назад +3

    Your best line: “I gotta get to the gym!”

  • @pjb3583
    @pjb3583 2 года назад +10

    I like watching movies with you, Kabir! And this was a good one. I don’t remember all the technical stuff, but it was a groundbreaking way to shoot a film when it was made. You may be interested enough to look into it. Well done, as always! Peace from Ohio …

  • @davidhasselblad2898
    @davidhasselblad2898 2 года назад +4

    The reason why the messenger said "this is blasphemy!" Is because Xerxes was known as a living god king. And yes. The depiction of his height is accurate. He was huge.

  • @adamcichon6957
    @adamcichon6957 Год назад +1

    I first wached "300" in early 2007. Was drafted to the Polish Army and there was organised saturday trip to the cinema. I tooked it and i'd end up watching the film in the cinema hall full of dudes in Polish Army fatigues :)
    Quite an entourage :D !

  • @babyfry4775
    @babyfry4775 2 года назад +8

    I saw it with my husband and son. It was a blast. Such a good movie. Gerard Butler was great. Fassbender and was that Faomir (from Lord of the Rings?) with the eye bandage? Not sure. And the queen was Cersei from Game of Thrones. Pretty good cast. Good reaction Kabir. 😍😄

  • @jarkakinterova1928
    @jarkakinterova1928 2 года назад +3

    Bold to call one of the greatest leaders in history with a "poor judgement."

    • @kabirconsiders
      @kabirconsiders  2 года назад

      Didn’t that decision get him killed?

    • @jarkakinterova1928
      @jarkakinterova1928 2 года назад +2

      @@kabirconsiders that was never the point of this resistance :)

  • @martinstoqnov6765
    @martinstoqnov6765 2 года назад +1

    Fun Facts and History facts:
    Leonidas was around 50 - 60 years old at the time of the battle yeah he was jacked.
    Despite the massive army not one Spartan died at the first day of battle.
    It wasn't unusual for Spartans to embarrasse they're enemies with one-liners.
    If you noticed the Persian king steps on his people, but in the end of the movie Stelios steps on Leonidas to kill the persian commander just shows the difference between them.
    Actual historical quote "Molon labe" said by King Leonidas "come and get them" when the Persian told them to give up they're weapons.

  • @YankeeBlues21
    @YankeeBlues21 2 года назад +10

    It’s definitely more stylized and action-y than most of the movies in its genre (though I love that the stuff like monsters and the comic book style makes sense in context because David Wenham’s character, the surviving Spartan is telling the movie’s events as a story to hype up the army before a battle), but if you like historical epics from the 90s & 00s, you should check out any of the following that you might not have seen:
    -Braveheart
    -Gladiator
    -Troy
    -The Last Samurai
    - Kingdom of Heaven (only the extended cut though, it makes the biggest difference in quality between a theatrical & extended cut of any movie I can think of, the theatrical had mixed reviews, but the extended might be Ridley Scott’s best late career movie)

    • @undefeated2012
      @undefeated2012 2 года назад

      I would also highly recommend a few others:
      Alexander (the ultimate edition)
      The Outlaw King
      The King

  • @phantompower
    @phantompower 2 года назад +2

    Lmao "He's just a lanky dude with a gold fetish" - Kabir 2022

  • @catherinelynnfraser2001
    @catherinelynnfraser2001 2 года назад +2

    I am a SF nerd. I love Frank Miller graphic novels and actually liked the movies. I prefer 300 to Sin City because it embraces the mythic properties of the Spartan culture.

  • @jasonm8017
    @jasonm8017 Год назад +2

    I remember when this first came out. It was not well received. I loved 🥰 it. ‘Over used CGI’ ?? New. Purposely. GLORIOUS

  • @jerellebowens4367
    @jerellebowens4367 2 года назад +3

    One of my favorite movies ever loved your reaction Kabir

  • @minalsalam2426
    @minalsalam2426 Год назад +1

    King Xerxes was 7 ft tall , the actor Rodrigo Santoro who played him was around six ft but to make him look that big they used special effects ! It worked , cuz he looks gigantic ! Excellent movie , definitely one of my favorites !

  • @Trifler500
    @Trifler500 2 года назад +1

    There's a second movie, that covers the naval side of this conflict, called "300: Rise of an Empire". It talks more about Xerxes rise to power and the fighting the other Greek states were doing.

  • @Chrai0n
    @Chrai0n 2 года назад +1

    Even though this is an artistic-comic take of the real story they kept many things real. Here are some random facts:
    The "big well" is called Kaiadas, the Spartans were throwing in there all the "problematic"/weak newborns after inspection.
    Ephialtes (the traitor) is not a name anymore, it turned into a word and it literally means nightmare. It's the Greek word for nightmare.
    At the scene at 25:25 that's actually Gerard Butler. They were actually hired a stunt double but Gerard got so passionate with the role that he decided to learn the "dancing" moves and the director got informed about it right before the scene. He crossed his fingers and thankfully they let him do it and turned out epic!
    Those special Asian forces were actually called Immortals due to the fact that they were a vast number of really good warriors that each time one of them dropped dead their position was immediately replaced by an other one, thus the name. There was the impression like no one has ever died.
    On the last stand, Leonidas died somewhere in the middle of the fight and Persians tried to take his body several times. The Spartan warriors managed to retrieve it each time until they all fell.
    Dilios' (the one who returned to Sparta in the end) actual name was Aristodemos. There was an other Spartan that had almost completely lost his vision called Euritos. Leonidas commanded both of them to return to Sparta but on the way back Euritos decided to turn back on the battlefield and die. Aristodemos on the other hand went to Sparta and its arrival wasn't received well. They started calling him Aristodemos the coward, "dilos" is the actual Greek word for coward now. He fiercely fought in the The Battle of Plataea but, even though the other Spartans gave him lots of credit, he still didn't quite redeem himself due to his suicidal approach on the battlefield. Spartans respect brave warriors but also the cautious ones who love life. He survived that battle too nevertheless.

    • @ihater3tards
      @ihater3tards 11 месяцев назад

      Kaidas is miles away from the city... It was/is basically a big hole in the mountain...(an entrance to a cave or volcano exhaust)..Ive been there 100s of times ..not much to see.

  • @aperke01
    @aperke01 Год назад +1

    I didn’t think I could love this movie anymore but your reaction was icing on the cake!!❤️❤️❤️

  • @SargNickFury
    @SargNickFury Год назад +2

    Love the graphic novel and I love this movie, and I loved the historical Spartans. With that said the history here is a complete lie. Xerxes was a good leader one of the few great one's of his age, and the real villain's here were the Athenians. They first involved the Persians by seeking them out for an alliance to fend of the Spartans who they were first worried most about. The Persians didn't even know who the Greeks were. But said if they would submit to Persian rule they would help. The Athenian envoys did so. Later they decided they did not like the deal, and when the Ionions revolted under Persian rule the joined them, but rather than attack a Persian Strong hold they attacked a relatively undefended and peaceful city of Sardis, which they burned to the ground in such a way as to inflict maximum loss of life to the civilian population. As soon as they faced resistance they fled. Many local regions were outraged and flocked to help the Persians put down what was essentially a 4-5 century BC act of "terrorism" as we would call it now. Xerxes had many nations with him because of the outrage of the region over the Greeks behavior. Sparta wanted nothing to do with Athens issues, which were in fact created by their original desire to involve Persians in the Greek rivalry with Sparta. However they would not abide a foreign army invading Greece. Truly the battle of Thermopylae is one for the ages. But I respect Sparta and the Persians here alike. perhaps much of our civilization does come from Athens, but so does our LAW which came from Persia....this was not the age of Islam, and at this time the Persians were among the most advanced, free and philosophical nations. Xerxes grandfather Cyrus had abolished slavery, and instituted freedom of religion, with laws that protected all citizens. At the time Athens was corrupt and rather fond of slavery and attacking it's neighbors in mercantile manor. Sparta should have made an alliance with Xerxes against Athens.

  • @theomgsee8217
    @theomgsee8217 2 года назад +3

    You should also watch the second one “300: Rise of an Empire”, it tells the same story of this battle but from the Athenians Naval fleet POV. It has the same art style with new characters and a focus on the rivalry between the Athenian naval commander Themistocles and Persian Naval commander Artemisia.

  • @joerivera6011
    @joerivera6011 2 года назад +2

    Great reaction!😃👍🏼 One of the best I've seen on this movie 👏🏼 can't wait to see your 300 Rise of an Empire reaction 😃👍🏼 (new sub)

  • @WhatDayIsItTrumpDay
    @WhatDayIsItTrumpDay 2 года назад +4

    Now that you've seen the original film, you gotta watch the sequel, 300: Rise of Empires, which isn't technically a sequel, as it takes place both concurrently with the original film, and afterwards as well. Remember the sea battle earlier on in the film showing the Persian ships wrecking in the storm? Well, that film shows what led up to that, and then what happened later. It tells the story from a naval point of view. It stars Eva Green as the Persian antagonist. She's just as intimidating and brutal as Xerxes was in this film.

  • @JamesASharp
    @JamesASharp 2 года назад +3

    I saw 300 in the theaters. This film is the pure definition of epic. Great reaction bro! 👍🏿

  • @aleatharhea
    @aleatharhea 2 года назад +30

    It's true that Sparta was the most warlike Greek city-state, a culture of hardened warriors. Athens was the center of learning and culture. Athenians considered themselves superior, and Spartans had contempt for Athens.

    • @GLITCHED1
      @GLITCHED1 2 года назад

      Well in a sense Athenians were superior, but only when we talk about learning. But when it comes to Sparta, they are obviously superior in combat.

    • @squaaaaak3178
      @squaaaaak3178 2 года назад

      @@GLITCHED1 and goodness knows, that's what's most important in life right? Jesus.

    • @helvete_ingres4717
      @helvete_ingres4717 2 года назад +3

      the Athenians were certainly 'hardened warriors' too, seeing as they frequently fought wars against Sparta and were the more powerful state - and Athens had a *far* superior navy to the other Greek states. The Peloponnesian war was fought between Athens and basically the rest of Greece b/c Athens was getting SO powerful they feared it would turn into an empire like Persia. Yeah Athens lost that war but all the other states had to team up to meaningfully challenge the Athenian military b/c it was so much powerful than them individually (Sparta providing infantry, Corinth providing ships etc.). SO I doubt Spartans really saw Athenians with 'contempt' - that's just a caricature of them as jocks vs. nerds. After that war which coincided also with a period of plague, Athens suffered an identity crisis and some Athenians considered their own society decadent and saw Sparta as the 'superior' ones - you can see this in the writings of Plato. Also the Athenian military could be extremely brutal, see the story where they conquered the island of Melos after they refused to surrender - I don't think there's any stories like that about Sparta.

    • @jasonm8017
      @jasonm8017 Год назад +1

      You seem even more educated on this subject than I. My first instinct is to….not sure? I’m half Greek. Half Canadian 🇨🇦 we’re super friendly 👋🏼 hello. Yet, I feel The pride of Greece pump though my veins with every beat of my heart

    • @mrwhat5094
      @mrwhat5094 6 месяцев назад

      you only look at todays pop culture as your definition of an ancient people that quite literally invented your understanding of the word citizen. keep reading.@@squaaaaak3178

  • @technopirate304
    @technopirate304 2 года назад +1

    @14:50, this is where this Spartan dad screwed up. It’s one thing to send your son to war thinking you may lose him. But to see him killed right in front of you. No parent is really ready for that. 😭

  • @AugustoEL
    @AugustoEL 2 года назад +1

    A few facts and things about spartans and the movie.
    The thing with the babies is partially a lie, they did not throwed the "defective" (do not know a good word to use) ones off a cliff but they were harsh with the less favored, but considering they were a warrior kingdom and as you see with the hunchback if you were not fit for war you were shuned, also little extra fact they were like baptised in wine as babies and I love to imagine the image of a baby being sumerged in wine to check if ithey were going to be great spartans. They started military training from the 7 years of age, being taught to fight, steal to get food most of the time, but being beten if found, and other things.
    The "only womans give birth to real men" is partially true it was the spartan "queen"(there were no king and queen but similar role) and was with a woman of other kingdom wich asked why spartan womens were treated equal to man (funnny thing being that Atenas is consider the more advanced but was EXTREMLY misoginist) and the "queen" said "Only womans give birth to man" in reference that womans are as needed and importatn as mens.
    The war the movie is based of is mostly real in that they defended that place, but it has quiet a few differences, can´t remember how it really happend but yeah not pulled out of the ass completly. In what is real and not the oracle was actully something real, there were a few placces in ancient Greek where you could ask for an audience with an oracle, you had to bring gold or very valuable offerings so you will be permited but also mostly real.
    A few facts the main advantage the spartans had over the persas was the "technology" being the work in the armor and weapons, the spartans had bronce weapons and armors (yeah the thing of pecho lobo is not real obviously), the persiasn had iron (if I anm not wrong) weapons and les quality armor making them have a harder time actually killing the spartans.
    The spartans respecte a LOT the elders, beacuase to live in Sparta was to live for war so old equal lot of wars fought and victorious, also only dying in battle or in childbirth (for womans) was the only way to have a headstone in your grave if you died in your sleep "sorry no headstone for you my friend".
    I love how brutal they were no shits given.

  • @williambranch4283
    @williambranch4283 2 года назад +2

    Yes, this is what it was like for boys who weren't discarded as infants. The field ration was so bad, that when a guest tried it ... he said he now understood why Spartans would rather die! The traditional corporal punishment was so severe, Sparta had a second life as a tourist destination for Romans who were into watching cruelty to boys! Most allies retreated to fight another day, the surviving Spartans, with two exceptions, stayed. The 300 Spartans and their allies, held for 3 days, long enough to evacuate Athens.

  • @davidtstravels8939
    @davidtstravels8939 Год назад +1

    That last scene/speech still gives me serious chills!

  • @loooongneck
    @loooongneck 2 года назад +7

    Sometimes the movie audio is too loud to hear what you’re saying but otherwise this is a great reaction. I first saw this in Grade 9 Global History, our teacher was like “listen this movie isn’t very historically accurate or academically valuable but administration doesn’t need to know that, so you guys get to watch a cool movie the next two days” lmao

    • @MelaniePoparad
      @MelaniePoparad 2 года назад +4

      It’s a good way to get teenagers interested in history. You watch the movie then discuss the inaccuracies and get the class involved and active.

  • @derpderpy3075
    @derpderpy3075 Год назад +1

    i love how much you love this movie, feels like im watching it for the first time again.

  • @samkavaman1980
    @samkavaman1980 2 года назад +2

    Note: When Leonaidas calls to the traitor; “Alfaetos, may you live forever “ is a total disrespect to him because all Spartans are supposed to die and receive glory by dying for their country

  • @ronk701
    @ronk701 Год назад +1

    Kabir there is a saying in the military - Its not the size of the fighters but the size of a fighters heart that will always be victorious of the masses my man. Great review Kabir of this movie. Peace my fellow brother. Good will always triumph over evil.

  • @markking3585
    @markking3585 Год назад

    You did a great job editing this. You conveyed the story so that is still properly told. Most reactions I watched on this film are an edited nightmare. Great job!

  • @jaidenobrien
    @jaidenobrien 2 года назад +1

    Great reaction! Glad that you enjoyed the movie! This was one of the best reactions to this movie that I've ever watched! Again, great job!

  • @pamperez9981
    @pamperez9981 2 года назад +3

    The fight continues in the next three hundred movie. It is really good as well and picks up where this leaves off. You should review that movie as well.

  • @DelightLovesMovies
    @DelightLovesMovies Год назад +2

    Zack Snyder's best film. I never get tired of it. It so tragic at the end because its only then that he calls his queen his love.

  • @KaeserThaGod
    @KaeserThaGod Год назад +1

    This was a GREAT reaction man!

  • @bugvswindshield
    @bugvswindshield 2 года назад +2

    LOVE this movie.
    thanks for the reaction

  • @aakla
    @aakla 2 года назад +1

    The movie is a true story about the the one eyed dudes retelling of the last stand of the 300, to psych up the soldiers. That's why there events are exaterated.

  • @samson9535
    @samson9535 2 года назад +1

    Sparta had two Kings who served at the same time. They developed the concept of citizenship, and the checks and balances of Constitutional government.

  • @berndneumann1418
    @berndneumann1418 2 года назад +2

    300: Rise of an Empire is the sequel to 300. Must see.

  • @StevesFunhouse
    @StevesFunhouse 2 года назад +2

    Now, you NEED to react to the sequel ... the 2nd part of the story, 300: Rise of an Empire. It's just as Epic, maybe even more so in some ways.

  • @chaost4544
    @chaost4544 2 года назад +1

    It's true the Spartans were taken control of by the state at 7 to begin their harsh training. I'm enjoying your movie reactions.

  • @t2j0h09
    @t2j0h09 2 года назад +1

    I love that movie. I got the DVD when it came out. I just love the way it was shot in almost black and white.

  • @warrendavis9262
    @warrendavis9262 2 года назад +1

    I read the graphic novel before the movie came out. I came to own that book and loved it.

  • @promnightdumpsterbaby9553
    @promnightdumpsterbaby9553 2 года назад

    I loved that you loved this lol :D great reaction,m8

  • @nacy55
    @nacy55 2 года назад +1

    If you like finding the history of some of these semi-historical movies, you should go read on the Battle of Thermopylae. Cuz that's what this is all about. And Xerxes I believe was like 7 feet tall. But he was actually very benevolent. From what I studied Xerxes would go in and he would take over an area that's why Persia or the Persian Empire was so large but he allowed the people in those specific areas to go ahead and govern the way they govern and run everything the way they do it was just that if they went to war they were called on to go to war with them.

  • @ItsaJday
    @ItsaJday Год назад

    Loved your reaction! This movie has so much badassery in it, it makes you feel like you could conquer anything! Certainly one of my top 5 battle movies!

  • @CHRISPYakaKON
    @CHRISPYakaKON 2 года назад +2

    You should react to the Honest Trailer for this 👀👀

  • @UnbiasedRemarks
    @UnbiasedRemarks 2 года назад +1

    Now you HAVE to watch the parody “Meet the Spartans.” 😭💯

  • @mage1439
    @mage1439 Год назад +1

    My favorite fact about Sparta:
    Philip of Macedonia (Alexander the Great's father) sent a message to Sparta saying "If I invade Lakonia you will be destroyed, never to rise again.” The Spartan response? Their message said "If."
    Philip never attacked Sparta. Neither did Alexander, who otherwise conquered most of the known world.

  • @johnkenny2795
    @johnkenny2795 Год назад

    The actor who narrates the movie also narrated the program Deadliest Warrior. In the scene where the Athenians leave, the movie doesn't show it but there were a few more armies that fought the Persian's and nearly all the Greek armies retreated from the final battle at Thermopylae apart from the Thespians and Thebans remained and fought until the end with Leonidas and his Spartans.

  • @sowerz775
    @sowerz775 2 года назад +1

    Great reaction, I reacted the same way when I first watched this!!!

  • @alexman378
    @alexman378 Год назад

    “Was Sparta like that?” Absolutely. For all the movie’s stylisation and exaggeration, that opening is very accurate, kids died in training and the attitude was “well, if he died in training, he wouldn’t make it in a battle anyway”.
    The Messenger was warned that while his message would be heard, the way he said it was on him. Showcasing the dead kings’ heads, insulting the Queen, making threats because he thought nobody would cross Xerxes, that’s on him.

  • @lkayh
    @lkayh 2 года назад +2

    Gerard Butler is a much better actor than he sometimes gets credit for. This movie is a work of art. And of course a SCOT would be drawn to it. LOL. BTW, he and the other guys in the movie were put on some extremely difficult diet and exercise regimes to prepare for the film, but at least SOME of the musculature you see is the work of makeup artists, and involve some prosthetics. He was cut even without all that, but yeah, he had some help here. LOL. If you get bored, check out some of his promotional interviews. He can be very funny as well. And, by the way, he sings surprisingly well also.
    It was fun watching you watch this. So what’s next? Have you seen Alien? If not, you really should. And if you are open to more vintage flicks, I highly recommend Alfred Hitchcock’s Rear Window.

  • @ruthnewton9451
    @ruthnewton9451 2 года назад +1

    Although not completely accurate, but based on historical facts. This is a great movie to say the least.
    They did train their kids from toddlers on, they were well known for their army's fighting abilities. Also, at this time period, there were two Kings that reigned at a time

  • @andrisgogos9986
    @andrisgogos9986 Год назад

    For Glory that’s why, they will always be remembered in history.