Alexander Poster

Alexander (2004)

R 11/21/2004 War, History, Action, Adventure, Drama, Romance 2h 55m
59%
User
Score
5.6/10
15%
40/100

The greatest legend of all was real

Overview

Alexander, the King of Macedonia, leads his legions against the giant Persian Empire. After defeating the Persians, he leads his army across the then known world, venturing farther than any westerner had ever gone, all the way to India.

Laeta Kalogridis

Screenplay

Oliver Stone

Director

Christopher Kyle

Screenplay

Top Billed Cast

Colin Farrell

Colin Farrell

Alexander

Angelina Jolie

Angelina Jolie

Olympias

Val Kilmer

Val Kilmer

Philip

Jared Leto

Jared Leto

Hephaistion

Jonathan Rhys Meyers

Jonathan Rhys Meyers

Cassander

Anthony Hopkins

Anthony Hopkins

Old Ptolemy

Jessie Kamm

Jessie Kamm

Young Alexander

Christopher Plummer

Christopher Plummer

Aristotle

Connor Paolo

Connor Paolo

Young Alexander

Media

The End Of King Phillip

The End Of King Phillip

The Start Of The Battle Of Gaugamela

The Start Of The Battle Of Gaugamela

Trailer

Trailer

Trailer 2

Trailer 2

Loading Wikipedia summary...

Similar Movies

Reviews

A review by Per Gunnar Jonsson

Written on June 15, 2017

My wife picked this one up together with the weekly TV magazine. Luckily we didn't pay full price. I hoped for a film about one of the greatest warlord of all time but what I got was something about a crying homosexual wimp....

Read the full review on TMDb →

A review by John Chard

Written on June 22, 2019

Alexander Revisited: The Final Cut.

Alexander is directed by Oliver Stone and Stone co-writes the screenplay with Christopher Kyle and Laeta Kalogridis. It stars Colin Farrell, Val Kilmer, Angelina Jolie, Jared Leto, Anthony Hopkins, Rosario Dawson, Jonathan Rhys Meyers and Christopher Plummer. Music is by Vangelis and cinematography by Rodrigo Prieto.

Alexander is an historical epic based on the life of Alexander the Great.
Off the bat I have to say that this "Final Cut" version of the film is the only one I have seen. Upon its initial home format release - the first theatrical version - I lasted an hour and 15 minutes before growing restless and sought enjoyment elsewhere. Consequently as a massive fan of historical epics through the years, it has been a constant nagging itch for ...

Read the full review on TMDb →

A review by Wuchak

Written on August 10, 2021

_**Alexander’s conquests from Greece through Persia into northwestern India**_

After being tutored by Aristotle (Christopher Plumber), Alexander (Colin Farrell) takes over the Macedonian throne in 336 BC at the age of 20 after his father is assassinated (Val Kilmer). Over the next 13 years he, amazingly, conquers the Persian Empire and heads into India before finally turning back. Anthony Hopkins narrates as Ptolemy in his old age while Angelina Jolie plays Alexander’s snake-loving mother. Rosario Dawson plays his wife acquired in Bactria (in what is today part of Afghanistan).

Oliver Stone’s “Alexander” (2004) was a challenging undertaking and has many attributes despite not being as compelling as the contemporaneous “Troy.” It’s a colorful, entertaining epic with a ...

Read the full review on TMDb →

A review by CinemaSerf

Written on January 7, 2023

Opinion on this film seems to have been hijacked somewhat by the definition and appropriateness of the relationship between Alexander (Farrell) and Hephaestion (Leto). It seems daft to try to apply 21st century social morals onto a society in which same sex relationships were simply unremarkable. Whether or not it was about sex, or love, or both isn't really that important - I think Oliver Stone was trying to involve us in a much more complex story of human nature. It may also be more of an Anglo-Saxon thing - men on Continental Europe from Scandinavia to the Mediterranean (and their N. American descendants) have a completely different, relaxed, view towards tactility amongst men. What this discussion does do successfully, however, is distract us from a pretty lacklustre effort at an epic....

Read the full review on TMDb →
×