
Of course, those are the exact details – -; But it’s fun. And at this time, the tone of the production is appropriate, perhaps because it was before Dwayne Johnson became so powerful and began to exert all kinds of authority and abuse of power. There is some disregard for historical facts in the battle scenes, but they are ignored just enough to add fun to the movie, which makes the movie more enjoyable. In addition, since it was a movie made before the advent of the PC era, the story was overflowing with intrigue and betrayal without any sudden admonitions, naturally capturing the atmosphere of the ancient Greek era, when barbarism = bravery was revered.
And, crucially, the people who appear in supporting roles are very good at acting, so they do a good job of making the tone of the movie not childish and making you feel like you’re in that mythical era. Representative examples include Muaddeep’s mother (Rebecca Ferguson), John Wick’s guardian grandfather (Ian McShane), and Snowpiercer’s spiritual leader (John Hurt). Whenever they briefly appear in supporting roles, they suddenly create an atmosphere as if they were in the middle of a Greek tragedy with their magical acting skills, which makes you wonder, “Wow, how important an actor’s ability is.”

