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Synopsis

In 140 AD, twenty years after the unexplained disappearance of the entire Ninth Legion in the mountains of Scotland, young centurion Marcus Aquila (Channing Tatum) arrives from Rome to solve the mystery and restore the reputation of his father, the commander of the Ninth. Accompanied only by his British slave Esca (Bell), Marcus sets out across Hadrian’s Wall into the uncharted highlands of Caledonia – to confront its savage tribes, make peace with his father’s memory, and retrieve the lost legion’s golden emblem, the Eagle of the Ninth. –IMDb

Director

Original

Kevin Macdonald

Macdonald was born in Glasgow, Scotland, the grandson of the Hungarian-born English filmmaker Emeric Pressburger, and educated at Glenalmond College. He began his career with a biography of his grandfather, The Life and Death of a Screenwriter (1994), which he turned into the documentary The Making of an Englishman (1995). His brother Andrew is a film producer. Kevin is a 2nd cousin of comedian Norm Macdonald.

After making a series of biographical documentaries, Macdonald directed One Day in September (1999), about the murder of Israeli athletes at the 1972 Munich Olympics. Possibly the most striking feature of this film was the lengthy interview with Jamal Al-Gashey, the last known survivor of the Munich terrorists (it has been suggested recently in Aaron Klein’s book Striking Back that another, Mohammed Safady, might also still be alive). Macdonald found Al-Gashey through intermediaries, and was able to convince him that the film would only be truly authentic if Al-Gashey gave… read more

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msmichel

3Apr12

Dumbed down version of Sutcliff's novel that never quite succeeds mainly due to uneven casting. Anothy Dod Mantle's cinematography is exquisite as usual and certainly captures the period feel but one just can't get past the modernization of actors and dialoque.Channing Tatum totally miscast here and have to agree with previous comments about lacking chemistry with Jamie Bell. The final five minutes are preposterous.

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Steve

23Jun11

I was fairly enjoying this film but it ended up weak in the second half and one of the worst final scenes in movie history! ( When the 2 main characters walk towards the camera smiling and practically hand-in-hand!) I just did not buy it.

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Clive.R.Watson

22May11

Could have been done so much better....

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Eirik Smidesang Slåen

6May11

My love for this period may have something to do with it, but The Eagle somehow appealed to me. Yes, it's very uneven, mainly due to a poorly developed script, but overall it's well made. Jamie Bell and Channing Tatum lack chemistry, resulting in much less homoerotism then I was expecting. Anthony Dod Mantle knows how to shoot a landscape, and his lensing is superb and almost worth the admission ticket alone.

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Straight-forward adventure fare with a semi-historical setting and good lead by Jamie Bell

By Henrik Schunk on January 13, 2012

I am utterly interested in all things British History, especially when it involves the tribes of the North and the emerald Isle. That being sad, throughout the film, I had been quite at unease by the…  read review

The Eagle

By peterbu​nzl on March 28, 2011

Roman Britain. A Centurion and his men are killed North of Haydrians wall. Indigenous tribes captured their Eagle standard, the sacred symbol of Rome.

20 years later. Marcus Aquila (Channing…  read review

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