That his god-like transformation isn't a false belife but because he actually became a god-like person. ![]() Then ROAE comes along and tells us Xerxes doesn't actually have a warped sense of reality. We, as the audience, want him dead for his clearly wrong way of seeing the world. His mind was clearly fogged with the belief that he was better than everyone else. Xerxes played an excellent role of evil and over-extravagance in 300. Why the crap does Xerxes need a backstory? A backstory builds a close relationship with the character but the audience doesn't need to be close to the villain. ROAE even starts off with a backstory to Xerxes. I know that these movies have roots in the comics but I'm unsure of the extent. Now granted, I didn't watch the entire thing.and you can tell me to fuck off because of that.but from what I witnessed, it seemed like 300:ROAE tried so hard to build a bigger universe and substantially failed. ![]() I found 300's motivation getting ripped to shreds as I watched 300: ROAE.
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