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This is an archive article published on November 21, 2004

‘Queer eye for the Macedonian guy’

Oliver Stone’s new film about Alexander the Great depicts the king as bisexual, fueling outrage from Greeks and prompting Hollywood to ...

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Oliver Stone’s new film about Alexander the Great depicts the king as bisexual, fueling outrage from Greeks and prompting Hollywood to ask if a world conqueror with dyed blond hair and waxed legs will be able to attract box office hordes.

One newspaper calls it a case of “Queer Eye for the Macedonian Guy.” Others have speculated that Stone is taking a big risk with a $160 million epic by including scenes of passionate embrace between Alexander and his best friend Hephaestion.

The Gay and Lesbian Alliance Against Defamation says the film breaks new ground for a big budget epic because it shows Hephaestion “as the true love of Alexander’s life.” A line from the film says: “Alexander was defeated only once — by Hephaestion’s thighs.”

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Last summer’s blockbuster film Troy, which could have portrayed Achilles and Patroclus as lovers, brushed aside any homoerotic elements to concentrate on Achilles desire for a Trojan princess.

Everyone associated with Alexander, from Stone to star Colin Farrell, insist the film is historically accurate and reflects the pagan mores of around 330 BC when the Macedonian king captured the world’s mightiest empire, Persia, and pressed on to the ends of the Earth.

Farrell, in a recent interview with Reuters, said he had no problem with the role because “Oliver made the film as historically accurate as possible and ambivalent sexuality was something of the times and part of the character.”

Stone said he kept the movie accurate and had an historian on the set. He added there was no question that Alexander had “a polymorphous sensuality and was an explorer in the deepest sense of the world.”

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British scholar Robin Lane Fox, author of a biography of Alexander and historical advisor to the film, said homosexuality and bisexuality were not “issues in ancient times” and that Alexander had extensive relations with women.

But a group of angry Greek lawyers say Stone and the film’s distributor Warner Bros., a unit of Time Warner Inc, should be sued for twisting history. The lawyers said they have asked Stone and Warner Bros. to include a reference in the title credits saying the film is fictional. Spokesmen for Warner Bros. and Stone did not have any immediate comment.

Two years ago, hundreds of Greeks from Macedonia, stormed a symposium after one speaker presented a paper on the homosexuality of Alexander.

Stone’s film, which he had been trying to get on the screen for 15 years, was filmed mainly in Morocco and Thailand. The Athens News Agency said no scenes were shot in Greece because of government Opposition to Stone’s portrayal of the Greek hero.

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Asked if he toned down scenes, Stone maintained he shot the film the way he wanted. The only overtly sexual scene is a wedding night sequence between Alexander and his wife Roxanne that starts with her putting a knife to his throat after she catches him accepting a ring from Hephaestion, played by Jared Leto wearing eyeliner. — Reuters

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