- British actresses Sienna Miller and Sylvia Koroka have both competed for the role of Queen Sparta in the play, Leonidas wife Gao Ge.
- In order to highlight the infectious effect of the film, the director slightly adjusted some battle scenes-that is to say, the phalanx of the Spartans seen in the film "300 Spartans", waving their weapons towards the enemy camp In fact, the way of fighting is very different from the historical reality.
- Although the film is magnificent, it only took 60 days to shoot.
- In order to show that the 300 Spartans were indeed the most brave fighters at the time, the actors (including supporting actors) who participated in the filming received six months of intense physical fitness and combat training before the filming began. At the beginning of the training, some actors lamented, "This training is more uncomfortable than death."
- There is an important character in the play: the Greek freeman baker. He did not appear in the original graphic novels, but his scenes connected the Battle of Wenquanguan and the battles of other city-states against the Persian invasion as a whole.
- After the film was released, it caused public outrage in Iran and was banned. Iranian people have accused the film of distorting history and deliberately belittling the Persians. Sham Qadri, the cultural adviser to the then Iranian President Ahmed Ahmed Ahmed Nejad, directly criticized the film as insulting. Persian culture is a psychological warfare by the United States against Iranian culture.
- Although the image of the ancient Greeks in the film is positive, the Greek film critics have destroyed more than reputation. Some magazines described the film as "bloodthirsty video games". A local daily newspaper even agreed with the Iranian view, referring to the film being described in the film. The Persian army for "indiscriminate killing and uncivilized walking corpses" actually refers to Iran today.
- There is no Greek or Iranian actor in the film. Gerald Butler is Scottish and Irish; David Wenham is British-Australian; Linna Heidi is of English and partly Irish descent; Michael Fass Binder is of German and Irish descent; Patrick Sabongwe is Egyptian-Canadian; Rodrigo Santoro is of Italian and Portuguese descent.
300 behind the scenes gags
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Maddison 2022-04-24 07:01:02
Zha Dao's bloody MV audiobook is a masterpiece. The advantages and disadvantages are all combined in this one. Zha Dao's sensational roughness is just right for this kind of muscle jungle film without clothes, so it has the most 2b in history (but sexy ), and Gerald Roars Butler, who never really became popular after that, the aesthetic significance is greater than any other significance, and he actually saw the shadows of all kinds of infinites and heroes. . .
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April 2022-03-24 09:01:12
Sorry to officially watch this movie with full of stills. In the film, the king of Sparta acted arbitrarily without a parliamentary vote, and the whole army was annihilated by the spirit of shaking the tree. Later generations have boasted that this is a classic battle that wins more with less, just because of their bravery. I played Samsung because there is no real scene in this film, and the computer special effects are done well.
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Daxos: I see I was wrong to expect Sparta's commitment to at least match our own.
King Leonidas: Doesn't it?
[points to Arcadian soldier behind Daxos]
King Leonidas: You there, what is your profession?
Free Greek-Potter: I am a potter... sir.
King Leonidas: [points to another soldier] And you, Arcadian, what is your profession?
Free Greek-Sculptor: Sculptor, sir.
King Leonidas: Sculptor.
[turns to a third soldier]
King Leonidas: You?
Free Greek-Blacksmith: Blacksmith.
King Leonidas: [turns back shouting] SPARTANS! What is YOUR profession?
Spartans: HA-OOH! HA-OOH! HA-OOH!
King Leonidas: [turning to Daxos] You see, old friend? I brought more soldiers than you did!
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Dilios: Xerxes dispatches his monsters from half the world away. They're clumsy beasts, and the piled Persian dead are slippery.