Jason and the Argonauts (2000)
Facts
| Directed by | Nick Willing |
| Cast | Jason London, Frank Langella, Natasha Henstridge, Derek Jacobi, Olivia Williams, David Calder, Dennis Hopper, Diana Kent, Angus MacFadyen and Brian Thompson |
| Theatrical Release | May 7, 2000 |
| DVD Release | August 15, 2000 |
| Running Time | 179 minutes |
| MPAA Rating | NR (Not Rated) |
| UPC Code | 707729106388 |
| Buy this item | $9.99 at Amazon.com As of Dec 5 10:43 EST (details) 1 DVD, Lions Gate, Usually ships in 24 hours, Closed-captioned, Color, DVD-Video, Full Screen, NTSC Languages: English (Original Language - Dolby Digital 2.0 Surround) Or 47 new from $7.94, 18 used from $4.00 |
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User Reviews
Average user review:| Revisiting old memories |
| Worthy of Harryhausen |
As this will inevitably draw comparisons to Harryhausen's version, let me start out by saying the FX in this, though computer graphics, was top-notch for the time, as good as the graphics in some major motion pictures. These are definitely 2 levels above the rather featureless, robotic computer models as seen in the "Hercules" and "Xena" shows. The Harpies in particular were well done, and overall the animation superior to that seen in the rather lackluster TV remake of "Mysterious Island" with Patrick Stewart.
Because of the longer running time than the original, this version has more story derived from the myth. This gives the excellent cast room to shine and I feel the characterizations are what makes this movie. Dennis Hopper was surprisingly good as Jason's evil uncle, Orpheus has his moment at the clashing rocks with his pet seagull, Hera is particularly beautiful and godlike, Hercules is well cast, Langella is regal and tragic as King of Colchis......its a pleasure to see a production like this give equal attention to story as to spectacle.
The musical score is passionate and humanistic but lacks the heroic majesty of Bernard Hermann's soundtrack from the 1963 version. Some reviewers felt that the actor in the lead was flat as Jason. Perhaps, but if you look at what this character is actually doing, you may find that the only way to bring Jason to life is to paint him as a scoundrel. I mean, here's a guy who sailed to the end of the known world to steal a precious artifact from a people who welcomed him. Anyone who knows the actual myth knows that it was actually Medea who repeatedly made Jason's successes possible. It was Medea who hypnotized the serpent guarding the golden fleece so Jason could steal it, Medea who killed her own younger brother so Jason could escape while her father stopped to pick up the pieces of the body, Medea who tricked Jason's uncle's daughters into murdering their father. And how does Jason repay all of this? He dumps Medea for a younger woman. Jason ends his days badly as a result of this, but this is an ending Hollywood never wants to show. It would be interesting to see a truly faithful version but face it, this guy isn't exactly a role-model, and even in the movie versions some of this comes through.
At any rate, this is a well-cast, spectacular remake that can be very entertaining as long as the viewer keeps an open mind and doesn't get hung up over it as being some kind of "threat" to the original. January 25, 2008
| Mythological Fiction |
| Great set, terrible acting |
| Great Mythological Story/Bad Director! |
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