Film Analysis by: Dianne Lim Federis
Wolfgang Peterson tackles the job of bringing the epic of Homer's The Iliad to the big screen in his film Troy. Iliad being a lengthy text, it is impossible to include every detail in a movie. Therefore, there are obvious deviations from the book such as the length of the Trojan War, and the absence of celestial participation in the war. There is also an absence of mortal female characters such as Chryseis, Hecuba, and Cassandra in the movie. In contrast, though, the female characters who are included in the film are developed more elaborately than they are in the book.
In The Iliad, the first of many quarrels between Agamemnon and Achilles is ignited by Briseis and Chryseis. Because Agamemnon is forced to relinquish his prize, Chryseis, he demands Achilles to give up his own war prize, Briseis. This angers Achilles so greatly that he nearly kills Agamemnon, but is narrowly stopped in time by Athena. While Troy portrays the tension between Achilles and Agamemnon, it does not provide the same explanations for the animosity as the book does. Rather, the character of Briseis is given most of the credit for their fragile relationship. In the movie, the warrior and the king fight over Briseis, and when that argument is ended with Achilles finally getting his way, he is so distracted by her that it nearly costs the Achaeans the entire war. As Odysseus, played by Sean Bean, says, "Women have a way of complicating things." It is true that Briseis is a character from the book, however she does not play as large of a role in the story than in the book.
There probably are just as many similarities as differences from the original. The three major upsetting differences in Troy compared to the Iliad are the absence of the Gods, the weak character and plot development, and the addition, exclusion, and reversal of key points.
In conclusion, although the Iliad is based upon Troy, it is not really fair to compare the two.