Wednesday, May 8, 2013

Alexander Revisited: The Final Cut

Like the Director's Cut, the Final Cut starts with a scene of Alexander's death and the introduction of Ptolemy who is telling the story forty years after Alexander's death.  However, in this version, Ptolemy gives us more history, information, and backstory in his introduction than what we are given in the Director's cut, which makes the story much easier to follow along with.

After the scene with Ptolemy, instead of starting with Alexander's childhood, the Final Cut moves straight to the Battle of Gaugamela, Alexander's greatest victory.  After a brief look at the size of the armies, we see Alexander in a meeting with his generals.  While this scene is in the Director's Cut, a slightly different version is used for the Final Cut.  In this version, a shot of each of Alexander's generals is shown as he says their names, giving us faces to go with the names we hear and letting us know who is who early on in the film rather than keeping us guessing for most of the time like the Director's Cut does.

Next is a scene that was not included in the Director's Cut at all in which Alexander and Hephaestion are walking through camp the night before the battle.  We see Alexander talk to a few of his soldiers for a few minutes before he and Hephaestion continue walking.  In this scene, Hephaestion's importance to Alexander is made evident when Alexander compares the two of them to Achilles and Patrochlus.  When Hephaestion points out that Patrochlus died first, Alexander says that if Hephaestion dies then he will avenge him and follow him down into the house of death, to which Hephaestion says that he would do the same.  This not only shows Hephaestion's importance to Alexander, but foreshadows Hephaestion's death later in life, which was followed shortly by Alexander's.

After this is the Battle of Gaugamela, including a speech from Alexander and the battle itself, which is very detailed and bloody, as all of the battle scenes in the movie are.  After Alexander's victory, we hear Ptolemy narrating, telling the audience that at the age of twenty-five, Alexander was now king of all.

After this, Alexander's childhood is shown, mostly giving backstory that helps to show Alexander's character and his relationships with his mother and father.  We see Alexander being taught by Aristotle, Alexander taming his horse Bucephelus, and scenes where Alexander interacts with each of his parents.

Next, we see Alexander arriving in Babylon after his victory at Gaugamela and hear Ptolemy saying that at that point, Alexander was loved by all.  At this point there is an added scene where we see Alexander meet Bagoas, a eunuch in the harem who will become one of Alexander's lovers.  At this point, we learn Bagoas's name and Alexander interact with him for the first time, both things that are left out in the Director's Cut.

The next scene is also extended compared to what is seen in the Director's Cut.  Alexander is reading a letter from his mother, who is warning him that those closest to him will betray him when Hephaestion comes to see Alexander.  In the extended version, Alexander asks Hephaestion to stay with him for the night and sends Bagoas, who was drawing his bath, away before the two go out onto the balcony and talk.  In the Director's Cut, this conversation is also shortened.  The extended version of the conversation gives further evidence of Hephaestion's importance to Alexander when Alexander tells Hephaestion "It is only you that I love, Hephaestion.  No other."

After this, Alexander continues his campaign through Asia and we see Alexander marry a barbarian woman named Roxane.  This angers Alexander's generals who believe that Alexander should take a Macedonian for a queen.  The order of the scenes in this section plays out differently than in the Director's Cut, showing Alexander marrying Roxane, followed by the scene with his generals, and then a party to celebrate the marriage before moving on to the wedding night.  In the Director's Cut, the party comes first, making it seem like the party has nothing to do with the wedding and is where Alexander first met Roxane.  The wedding night also plays out differently; in the Final Cut, Roxane attempts to kill Alexander after finding out that he loves Hephaestion.

The next few sections jump back and forth in the timeline, first going back ten years, then forward ten years to shortly after Alexander is married, then back to King Philip's wedding to a Greek woman, then forward once more to Alexander reaching the Hindu Kush and no longer being able to continue east and having to instead travel south into India.  At this point, there is an intermission before starting up once more in India.

While in India, Alexander kills once of his generals, Cleitus.  There is another difference in scenes here.  In the Director's Cut, Alexander simply kills Cleitus while in a rage during an argument with him.  However, in the Final Cut, Cleitus is dragged from the room by others before reentering and being killed by Alexander.  This is because it is unclear whether Cleitus actually left the room or not, so Oliver Stone wanted to film it both ways.  In the Final Cut, we also see Alexander grieving for Cleitus and regretting his actions, something that is not shown in the Director's Cut.

This is followed by a flashback to King Philip being assassinated and Alexander becoming king before once more jumping forward to India again and a mutiny against Alexander.  It is at this point that we hear Ptolemy say that Alexander was no longer loved by all.  Alexander deals with the mutiny and leads his army into one more battle in India in which he and Hephaestion are both injured and his horse is killed before finally deciding to leave India and go home.  They return to Babylon and some time passes before Hephaestion becomes ill and dies.  Alexander orders the physician executed and accuses Roxane of poisoning Hephaestion.  At Hephaestion's funeral games, Alexander collapses and becomes severely ill.  We see Alexander's generals and soldiers paying their respects to Alexander while he is on his deathbed followed by a scene with Alexander and Bagoas that is not included in the Director's Cut, and then Alexander's closest generals asking him who will rule and telling him that there will be chaos if he doesn't say who will rule after his death.  We hear Alexander weakly say "To the best" followed by his generals questioning whether he had said "to the best" or "to Craterus", this is because, in Greek, the two words sound very similar and so Alexander's generals were never truly sure of Alexander's final words.

Lastly, Ptolemy tells of the aftermath of Alexander's death, of the wars between his generals over the empire before it was finally divided, of the fate of Alexander's mother, wives and son.

The movie ends with a note onscreen telling the viewers that "Over time, the great library of Alexandria was destroyed by a series of fires.  Ptolemy's memoirs of Alexander, along with many other great memories of the ancient world, vanished."

Overall, the Final Cut is a much, much better version than the Director's Cut.  Even though it is 45 minutes longer than the Director's Cut, I had no problems watching the Final Cut.  Scenes that were included in the Final Cut, but not the Director's Cut made other scenes make much more sense than they had in the Director's Cut.  Of the scenes not included in the Director's Cut, it seems like the majority of them were ones that portrayed Alexander's sexuality as non-heterosexual.  A good deal of Hephaestion's scenes are not included in the Director's Cut, which makes the scenes that do feature him and his relationship with Alexander seem like they come out of nowhere.  There are also scenes with Bagoas in the Final Cut that aren't included in the Director's.

The order of the scenes in the Final Cut made it much easier to follow the story, along with the fact that dates were used in the Final Cut instead of just telling how far forward or backward the timeline was moving, which made it easier to tell what happened when.

No comments:

Post a Comment