Zack Snyder and his 300 collaborator Kurt Johnstad are writing an adaptation of Frank Miller’s Xerxes (see “Miller’s ‘Xerxes’ Underway”), a “sequel” of sorts to 2007 smash hit 300, which was the highest earning “R” rated film of the year with a worldwide box office of over $456 million. 300 revived the sword and sandal genre. It definitely put Snyder on the map as a major director (Warner Bros. is highlighting his Sucker Punch film at Comic-Con) and it made a star out Gerard Butler who played the Spartan leader Leonidas.
Snyder didn’t exactly confirm to the Los Angeles Times that he would also be directing Xerxes—saying there’s no “ directing deal” in place yet—but everyone in Tinseltown is sure that Snyder will take the reins and end up helming the cinematic version of Miller’s six-part comic book series, which Dark Horse will begin publishing this year.
As was the case in 300, the focus in Xerxes is on a Greek leader, only this time it is the Athenian Themistocles, a populist leader of democratic
Xerxes is certainly not a typical sequel—it is more Greeks versus Persians, but it’s really “the rest of the story.” Unlike 300, which took place in just a few days, the action in Xerxes extends over 10 years and should provide Miller and Snyder a chance to present a more balanced portrait of the Persians as well as to show how Athens, with a much different tradition than militaristic Sparta, managed to mobilize its citizens to help defeat the invading Persian forces.
In 300 Miller presented the Persians as the Spartans saw them, a huge overwhelming horde with leaders who weren’t “manly” in the Spartan way. According to the Times in Xerxes Miller portrays the Persian king Darius in a very positive light, and the actions of his son Xerxes are explained in terms of a quest for vengeance. Perhaps it will be enough of a change that the Xerxes movie won’t provoke the same reaction from the Iranian government, which filed a formal complaint against 300 with the United Nations.