Minotaur (film)

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Minotaur

DVD cover of Minotaur
Directed by Jonathan English
Produced by Jonathan English
Written by Nick Green
Stephen McDool
Starring Tom Hardy
Tony Todd
Rutger Hauer
Ingrid Pitt
Music by Martin Todsharow
Cinematography Nic Morris
Editing by Eddie Hamilton
Distributed by Lions Gate
Release dates March 11, 2006 (United States)
May 11, 2006 (Russia)
July 26, 2006 (Germany)
Running time 93 min.
Country United Kingdom
Luxembourg
Germany
France
Spain
Italy
United States
Language English
Budget $7,000,000 (US)

Minotaur is a 2006 horror film, directed by Jonathan English. It stars Tom Hardy, Tony Todd, Ingrid Pitt and Rutger Hauer. It was filmed in Luxembourg.

Plot

As a voice-over narrator recounts, long ago in the Iron Age a shadow loomed over the lonely village of Thena. Every three years, eight village youths are stolen from their families to the capital of the Minos' Empire and placed in the underground labyrinth to be a sacrifice to the Minotaur, the Minoan god. Theo, haunted by the loss of his love, Fion, in an earlier sacrifice, is convinced by a leprous prophetess that the beast is not a deity and that his love still lives within the labyrinth. His father Cyrnan, the village leader, tries to reason with Theo not to go, intending to selfishly remove his son from the village as before in order to preserve his family's legacy as village chieftains. But Theo, intent on saving Fion, smuggles himself in between seven other youths to be sacrificial lambs in order to reach and kill the Minotaur.

Along with his fellow captives, Tyro (a young man hostile to Theo because of his "privilege" of exemption from the sacrifice), Danu (Theo's best friend), Morna (Danu's love interest), Didi (Tyro's love interest), Vena, Ziko and Nan, Theo is placed in the labyrinth by King Deucalion, where the youths are stalked and slaughtered one by one by the Minotaur. However, Theo is aided by Deucalion's sister and unwilling lover, Queen Raphaella, who reveals that her mother gave herself to bestiality to create a living god, the Minotaur. As the Minotaur grew, so did its appetite when it murdered Deucalion's brother, resulting in the human sacrifices to appease the Minotaur while ensuring Minos' survival. The youths also meet Turag, a single youth from an earlier sacrifice who has managed to elude the Minotaur so far, but has become slightly insane over the years; from him Theo learns that Fion had initially escaped the Minotaur's hunger but since died of poison gas.

Along the way, Theo discovers that the labyrinth is connected to an underground natural gas vent. When the Minotaur threatens to kill Theo, Tyro sacrifices himself as an act of redemption. Theo tempts the Minotaur into attacking him, and in the process the Minotaur breaks its left horn, but continues to charge after Theo. As Theo runs back towards the gas vent, he scratches the walls with Fion's iron amulet and generates a spark that ignites the whole labyrinth, and dives into a pond of water where Raphaella was waiting for him. They emerge from the water as the flames die out, but the beast is still alive and attempts to charge at them again. Theo takes the monster's broken horn from the rubble from where the vent was, and just as the beast attempts to kill him, stabs the Minotaur through the mouth; the monster continues charging until it hits a collapsed rock formation, which drives the horn through the Minotaur's head and finally kills it.

Theo and Raphaella collect their fellow survivors - Morna and Turag - and leave the collapsing labyrinth. Once out, they find Deucalion near death from the gas explosions, which have made the palace collapse as well, and Raphaella smothers him to death, ending the cycle of fanaticism. Morna, now revealed to be the narrator from the film's beginning, finishes the tale with how the Minos' empire faded with the death of the Minotaur, and how Theo himself became a legend for killing the monster.

Cast

Deviations from Classical Greek mythology

There are several major changes that were made in this story as opposed to the original legend. In the myth, the king was Minos of Crete himself (Deucalion was Minos' second son), who had been married to the queen Pasiphaƫ who gave birth to the beast; this had been the consequence of a divine curse from Poseidon, while the gods play no part of import in the movie. Theo, the protagonist of the film and based on Theseus (a demi-god, rather than a humble shepherd), had no interest in killing the Minotaur at first. Furthermore, the name of king's sister in the film, is in fact Ariadne in the legend, and Deucalion does not show any signs of wanting sexual relations with her in the original text. The daughter also gives Theseus a golden string to help him navigate the maze, as well as a sword to kill the Minotaur. Finally, at the end of the story Theseus is given the hand of Minos' daughter as a sign of goodwill and thanks for killing the beast.

See also

External links

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