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While the tales of Odysseus are enjoying their moment at present, the tales of Sinbad actually reveal a more attractive and ...
Its best parts are not about sailing, or our hero’s grim and goofy goings-on with man-eating monsters and sirens, but involve prewar politics in Ithaca, and Odysseus’ tricky homecoming.
As Christopher Nolan films his adaptation of The Odyssey, another recent adaptation is topping the charts on Paramount+.
Many years after the fall of Troy, Queen Penelope (Juliette Binoche) faithfully awaits the return of her husband, Odysseus. Ithaca ... as Telemachus sets sail, suggesting the cycle of violence ...
The Return casts Fiennes as an older Odysseus making his way wearily back to Ithaca 20 years after leaving ... But I didn’t have time to sail a boat around the Mediterranean.” ...
On its own merits, it’s a compelling and authentic retelling of the latter books of Homer’s Odyssey, starring Ralph Fiennes as a weary but enduring Odysseus, returning to Ithaca after 20 years ...
“On the island of Ithaca, Queen Penelope still longs for the return of her husband Odysseus.” The camera then cuts to the wreckage of a ship and the body of a man washed up on the beach ...
“On the island of Ithaca, Queen Penelope still longs for the return of her husband Odysseus.” The camera then cuts to the wreckage of a ship and the body of a man washed up on the beach ...
Time-travel? World-bending? We expect no less. Meanwhile here’s The Return, a more modest effort, adapting not all of The Odyssey but only the second half, starting from Odysseus’s return to Ithaca, ...