---
title: 'The Odyssey (2026) Breakdown & Ending Explained | Full Movie Review & Film Analysis'
source: 'https://youtube.com/watch?v=v6JPNA4oPpU'
video_id: 'v6JPNA4oPpU'
date: 2026-07-17
duration_sec: 2120
channel: 'Heavy Spoilers'
---

# The Odyssey (2026) Breakdown & Ending Explained | Full Movie Review & Film Analysis

> Source: [The Odyssey (2026) Breakdown & Ending Explained | Full Movie Review & Film Analysis](https://youtube.com/watch?v=v6JPNA4oPpU)

## Summary

This video provides a comprehensive breakdown and analysis of Christopher Nolan's 2026 film adaptation of Homer's 'The Odyssey.' The reviewer explores the film's non-linear narrative structure, character arcs, thematic depth, and visual spectacle, while also addressing the controversies surrounding the production and marketing.

### Key Points

- **Introduction and Context** [00:00] — The reviewer expresses excitement for Nolan's adaptation of the Odyssey, a 3,000-year-old epic, and acknowledges the controversies around casting, dialogue, and marketing.
- **Three Interlocking Storylines** [02:12] — The film is structured around three storylines: Odysseus at Troy, Odysseus with Calypso, and Penelope and Telemachus in Ithaca, which gradually converge.
- **The Trojan Horse Deception** [02:25] — Sinon (Elliot Page) is sacrificed to sell the Trojan horse deception, establishing Odysseus's flaw: his brilliance requires manipulation and sacrifice of others.
- **Odysseus with Calypso** [03:40] — Matt Damon's Odysseus lives with Calypso, forgetting his past. The lotus flowers soothe his pain but cause loss of identity, representing the seduction of forgetting.
- **Suitors in Ithaca** [04:45] — Penelope (Anne Hathaway) is pressured to remarry as suitors occupy the palace. Antinous (Robert Pattinson) is a manipulative, cruel villain.
- **Before the War** [08:14] — Odysseus is summoned to Troy, leaving Penelope and their son. Penelope gives him a totem of Athena, representing love and protection.
- **Telemachus Learns the Truth** [09:13] — Telemachus (Tom Holland) meets Menelaus (John Bernthal) and Helen, learning that war is built on misery and that Helen was an excuse for conquest.
- **Cyclops Horror Sequence** [11:27] — The Cyclops represents the terror of conquest. Odysseus blinds the Cyclops after escaping, driven by revenge and pride, costing his men's safety.
- **Circe's Transformation** [13:41] — Circe (Samantha Morton) turns Odysseus's men into pigs, symbolizing their gluttony and the dehumanizing nature of conquest.
- **Underworld Encounters** [14:37] — Odysseus meets Agamemnon and Sinon in the underworld, confronting the cost of his actions and the difference between legend and reality.
- **Athena's Role** [15:34] — Athena (Sandra Oh) appears as a beheaded woman, symbolizing guilt. She represents divine protection and the question of whether Odysseus can have an identity outside war.
- **Sirens and Scylla** [17:06] — The sirens tempt Odysseus with surrender, while Scylla forces a moral choice, leading to further sacrifice of his men.
- **The Sacred Cattle** [18:34] — The crew eats the sun god's cattle, bringing divine punishment. Odysseus becomes the sole survivor, washing up on Calypso's island.
- **Argus Recognizes Odysseus** [20:20] — Odysseus's old dog Argus recognizes him despite his disguise, proving that the essential man still exists, though barely.
- **Penelope's Challenge** [22:33] — Penelope announces she will remarry and sets the challenge of stringing Odysseus's bow. Odysseus, disguised as a beggar, succeeds and kills the suitors.
- **Ending: Odysseus and Penelope Leave** [24:54] — Odysseus and Penelope choose to sail away together, leaving Telemachus as king. The ending redefines home as not a place but a relationship.

### Conclusion

Nolan's 'The Odyssey' is a grand, epic film that redefines the concept of home, emphasizing that true return is not to a place but to a person. Despite some dialogue issues and non-linear storytelling, the film delivers a powerful emotional and visual experience.

## Transcript

Paul. In this video, we're&nbsp; breaking down the Odyssey. As I'm sure you guys know, I'm a massive&nbsp; Christopher Nolan fan, and we've done countless&nbsp;&nbsp;
breakdowns of his films on the channel. Naturally,&nbsp; when I heard he was doing the Odyssey, I got&nbsp;&nbsp; really, really excited because it's one of those&nbsp; stories that has transcended millennia. Thought to&nbsp;&nbsp; be almost 3,000 years old, it's a Taylor's oldest&nbsp; time, literally. So, when Nolan said he was doing&nbsp;&nbsp;
the film, naturally, I was very hyped as he's the&nbsp; only person I'd trust to pull off something of&nbsp;&nbsp; this scale. However, the last couple of months&nbsp; have been uh pretty wild to say the least. I'm&nbsp;&nbsp; sure you guys have seen the controversy around the&nbsp; movie, and it's been almost inescapable. Whether&nbsp;&nbsp;
it's the casting choices, stuff the actors&nbsp; have said, the lack of Grecian people in it,&nbsp;&nbsp; the modern-day dialogue, the trailer getting&nbsp; downvoted to oblivion, it's been a constant source&nbsp;&nbsp; of controversy. Now, at the channel, I don't&nbsp; really tend to touch upon that stuff that much.&nbsp;&nbsp;
Uh, and in my reviews, I try and go in and be as&nbsp; objective as possible for how the film is itself.&nbsp;&nbsp; So, that's what we're going to do in this video.&nbsp; In this video, I want to focus on the movie itself&nbsp;&nbsp; and judge it on its own merits. Now, the Odyssey&nbsp; itself is one of those works that's been adapted&nbsp;&nbsp;
time and time again. Actually have um the Folio&nbsp; Society book for it. Uh, and in case you don't&nbsp;&nbsp; know, these guys are basically they're basically&nbsp; famous for their artwork and also for putting out&nbsp;&nbsp; whatever was in the first edition. So, like the&nbsp; Bun books I have here, um, they don't have any of&nbsp;&nbsp;
the updates that they have in the newer versions,&nbsp; and it's always whatever was first put out.&nbsp;&nbsp; However, with this story being as old as it is,&nbsp; yeah, it's not going to be that first telling. The&nbsp;&nbsp; version I've read is the 1996 printing by Robert&nbsp; Fagels, but there's been several adaptations&nbsp;&nbsp;
and interpretations of the S. There's also an&nbsp; excellent version read by Ian Mckllen on Audible&nbsp;&nbsp; and each translation and retelling comes with its&nbsp; own alterations. Nolan has said that he's pulled&nbsp;&nbsp; from lots of different sources, but ultimately&nbsp; this feels like his own vision that changes&nbsp;&nbsp;
certain aspects of the oral tellings. As always,&nbsp; Nolan doesn't tell things in chronological order,&nbsp;&nbsp; and we have constant spinning plates and things&nbsp; jumping back and forth. We pretty much have three&nbsp;&nbsp; interlocking story lines that gradually collide.&nbsp; And I've tried to structure this video to piece&nbsp;&nbsp;
all of them together to explain the movie's plot.&nbsp; So that's how we're going through things. And the&nbsp;&nbsp; first chapter is basically the man, the myth, and&nbsp; the family he left behind. Opening Outside Troy,&nbsp;&nbsp; we see Elliot Page's character, Sinnin,&nbsp; who's been ordered to guard the Trojan horse,&nbsp;&nbsp;
killed by Trojan soldiers. Sinnon's final words&nbsp; are, "It's a gift." Now, we learn later in the&nbsp;&nbsp; film that Sinnin and Robert Patson's characters&nbsp; switch places when being selected for service.&nbsp;&nbsp; Adius ended up spotting this trick and decided to&nbsp; look after Sinnin. Sinon went on to become a noble&nbsp;&nbsp;
warrior with him carrying around a token from the&nbsp; lottery that Adysius later uses to talk Antinuous&nbsp;&nbsp; with. But Sinnon was essentially sacrificed&nbsp; to make the deception look believable. This is&nbsp;&nbsp; something that later haunts Adysius and he takes&nbsp; the character's name when carrying out a similar&nbsp;&nbsp;
deception. It kind of establishes the flaws in&nbsp; the character too because it creates the defining&nbsp;&nbsp; contradiction within him. He's brilliant enough&nbsp; to end a 10-year war, but with this brilliance&nbsp;&nbsp; comes a lot of downsides. In order to achieve what&nbsp; he wants, he must manipulate and sacrifice other&nbsp;&nbsp;
people. This idea of deception is laced throughout&nbsp; the film. And beyond the beggar, Adysius and his&nbsp;&nbsp; gang later disguise themselves as sheep to escape&nbsp; the cyclops. I think it ultimately plays into how&nbsp;&nbsp; he tricks his opponents and appears a certain way,&nbsp; so they lower their gods. Ultimately, we know the&nbsp;&nbsp;
Trojan horse isn't a gift, and it's this that&nbsp; allows him to sack Troy. It's a gigantic, vast,&nbsp;&nbsp; and incredible scene that shows what Nolan can do&nbsp; at his best. But there's still a feeling that this&nbsp;&nbsp; is a bittersweet victory as Adysius is haunted&nbsp; by those whose lives cost victory. Now the second&nbsp;&nbsp;
major part of the story line comes in Matt Damon&nbsp; basically doing a Jasonb born and not knowing who&nbsp;&nbsp; he is. Living on a remote island with Calypso, he&nbsp; has no idea about any of his past. He doesn't know&nbsp;&nbsp; where he came from, why there's this grief within&nbsp; him, and also this feeling of violence. I think&nbsp;&nbsp;
the stage very much represents him rediscovering&nbsp; who he is and him returning to his quote unquote&nbsp;&nbsp; home to redefine what that really means. Calypso&nbsp; has basically fallen in love with him and she&nbsp;&nbsp; gives him lotus flowers which soo his pain by&nbsp; making him forget. Forgetting is ultimately&nbsp;&nbsp;
seductive because remembering means confronting&nbsp; everything he did and everyone he lost. Feel like&nbsp;&nbsp; Calypso gives Odicius a life outside of who he is&nbsp; and the pressures that come with it. He doesn't&nbsp;&nbsp; have to be a king, husband, father, soldier,&nbsp; or leader. He can simply exist there with her.&nbsp;&nbsp;
However, in doing this, the character loses who&nbsp; he is. It's a complete trade-off of his identity,&nbsp;&nbsp; and ultimately he won't ever find fulfillment by&nbsp; just living in this life where he doesn't feel&nbsp;&nbsp; the cost of anything. Now, the third interlocking&nbsp; story line takes place at Ithaca, which involves&nbsp;&nbsp;
Penelope and his son. Odicius has been gone for&nbsp; roughly nearly 20 years and it's about 10 years&nbsp;&nbsp; since he first fought in the Trojan War with the&nbsp; next 10 being him assumed to be lost at sea. Now&nbsp;&nbsp; in his absence, a large group of suitors have&nbsp; effectively occupied his palace. The poem has a&nbsp;&nbsp;
great section about how lavish their lives are now&nbsp; and everything that comes with it. They eat the&nbsp;&nbsp; food, drink the wine, abuse the servants, don't&nbsp; hit the thumbs up, and treat Odicius's household&nbsp;&nbsp; as though it already belongs to them. to this&nbsp; that we really see Penelopey who's played by Anne&nbsp;&nbsp;
Hatheraway and she's under the constant pressure&nbsp; to accept that Odicius is dead. In doing this,&nbsp;&nbsp; she must choose her new husband and they&nbsp; will then gain claim to Ithaca. Now,&nbsp;&nbsp; that's where Robert Patson's character comes into&nbsp; it and he's basically basically a perfect villain.&nbsp;&nbsp;
He's manipulative, entitled, and though he&nbsp; presents himself as refined enough to be a king,&nbsp;&nbsp; there's just a cruelty within him. He has no&nbsp; qualms about terrorizing Adysius's son, Tmicus,&nbsp;&nbsp; inside his own home. And Tmicus is of course&nbsp; played by Tom Holland. Tmicus only knows his&nbsp;&nbsp;
dad from the legends and we see that he's grown&nbsp; up without a father or daddy as they say. Instead,&nbsp;&nbsp; he's raised by Uanius who's played by John&nbsp; Leguismo. He's pretty much been a surrogate&nbsp;&nbsp; father and it's through Tmicus that we get a lot&nbsp; of the information as he travels to learn about&nbsp;&nbsp;
Adysius's past and basically he acts as a way&nbsp; to connect all the stories. But at the moment,&nbsp;&nbsp; he's a prisoner inside his own home. Now, if you&nbsp; know the story itself, then I'm sure you know&nbsp;&nbsp; the significance of Odicius's bow and how he's&nbsp; basically the only one capable of stringing it.&nbsp;&nbsp;
The sound it makes and the feat he pulls off with&nbsp; it by shooting it through the axes that sort of&nbsp;&nbsp; becomes his signature and it's a way to terrify&nbsp; those that stand on the other end. So, yeah,&nbsp;&nbsp; those are basically the key things that we need&nbsp; to know before getting to the ending and we'll&nbsp;&nbsp;
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use that code, and that will get you all those&nbsp; things. And huge thank you to Heroes of History&nbsp;&nbsp; for sponsoring the video. Now, let's get into&nbsp; the rest of the breakdown. Now, that takes us to&nbsp;&nbsp; Before the War. Here, Odysius is summoned to join&nbsp; the Greek campaign by Agamenon. Sailing to Troy,&nbsp;&nbsp;
they want to retrieve Helen for her husband,&nbsp; Menaaus. Bicius doesn't want to leave Penelopey&nbsp;&nbsp; and their young son, but he's bound by duty in&nbsp; politics. He shares a heartfelt goodbye with&nbsp;&nbsp; his wife and tells her that if he does not return,&nbsp; she is allowed to remarry. The way it's presented,&nbsp;&nbsp;
though, I think it's more Adysius trying to&nbsp; acknowledge the possibility that war will&nbsp;&nbsp; consume the rest of his life. Penelopey then gives&nbsp; him a totem of Athena to carry with him, and this&nbsp;&nbsp; very much represents her love, his connection to&nbsp; his home, the past identity he's leaving behind,&nbsp;&nbsp;
and also Athena's protection. The pair also touch&nbsp; upon the possibility of leaving this all behind&nbsp;&nbsp; which at the time just seems like a fantasy.&nbsp; Instead of kingdoms, wars, responsibilities,&nbsp;&nbsp; and gods, though they imagine simply setting off&nbsp; sail together. That fantasy becomes extremely&nbsp;&nbsp;
important by the end, and it comes with&nbsp; Odysius realizing what home really is. Now,&nbsp;&nbsp; we then see his Tmicus leaves Ithaca to search&nbsp; about the truth of his father's fate. It leads him&nbsp;&nbsp; to several different characters, including John&nbsp; Benthol's Menaaus. And let me tell you something,&nbsp;&nbsp;
Red. He's living with hell in the truck. Now,&nbsp; I know uh when the trailer was shown that that&nbsp;&nbsp; people made fun of Leita for not being the face&nbsp; that launched a thousand ships, um which is how&nbsp;&nbsp; she's described in the book, but this is actually&nbsp; important as time and war have left their marks&nbsp;&nbsp;
on the character. They even joke that her face&nbsp; maybe launched 500 ships instead of a thousand.&nbsp;&nbsp; And Helen actually represents the complexities of&nbsp; war and the realities of them as well. It's clear&nbsp;&nbsp; that she was used as an excuse to go to war. And&nbsp; really what the Greeks wanted was land, money,&nbsp;&nbsp;
and power. I think it really elevates things&nbsp; quite a lot as many of us. We often suspect wars&nbsp;&nbsp; are launched with it not being exactly for the&nbsp; reason that the politicians tell us they are. But&nbsp;&nbsp;
what's made clear is that this was never really&nbsp; about Helen of Troy and she was just some [&nbsp;__&nbsp;]&nbsp;&nbsp; excuse to go to war. War is often romanticized&nbsp; as well. And I think that's what we see with a&nbsp;&nbsp; Trojan horse itself. The men are trapped inside&nbsp; of it for two days with no room or air. There's&nbsp;&nbsp;
piss and [&nbsp;__&nbsp;] everywhere, people drowning in it,&nbsp; people suffocating, and it's far from the romantic&nbsp;&nbsp; image of heroic warfare that this stuff's often&nbsp; sold as. There's also the mental stress as well,&nbsp;&nbsp; as they don't even know if the plan's going to&nbsp; work. But eventually, they are taken inside. It's&nbsp;&nbsp;
a grand and epic conflict, but Menaaus makes&nbsp; it clear that it's built on misery and human&nbsp;&nbsp; sacrifice. It's quite emotional for Tmicus as&nbsp; well, as this is the closest thing he's actually&nbsp;&nbsp; got to meeting his father, and it complicates the&nbsp; legend. Tmicus and Menaaus and do archery in the&nbsp;&nbsp;
former clearly sits with the idea that his dad&nbsp; might be dead. So he may have to become the man&nbsp;&nbsp; that ethic needs. The film is really complex&nbsp; in tackling the cost of war as not only does&nbsp;&nbsp; it leave fatherless sons but the victors also&nbsp; become shadows of their former selves after the&nbsp;&nbsp;
victory as well. Adesius's men are far from being&nbsp; noble heroes and they basically do what they want.&nbsp;&nbsp; They think they're this [&nbsp;__&nbsp;] and there's pissing&nbsp; [&nbsp;__&nbsp;] everywhere. It's through this though that&nbsp;&nbsp; we really get some deconstruction by Urukusa&nbsp; who's played by Haish Patel. Now though he's&nbsp;&nbsp;
loyal to Adysius, he's not blindly obedient and&nbsp; he kind of becomes the voice of the crew. To him,&nbsp;&nbsp; Adysius risks angering the gods and he feels that&nbsp; he's pushing the men too far and their conquering.&nbsp;&nbsp; This eventually leads him to face down against&nbsp; the Cyclops which allows Nolan to really dip his&nbsp;&nbsp;
tone to horror. There's two major major horror&nbsp; sequences in the movie and Nolan goes next level&nbsp;&nbsp; with both of them. The Cyclops to me though kind&nbsp; of represents the terror that these soldiers bring&nbsp;&nbsp; and their almost loop-like behavior. They arrive&nbsp; somewhere, conquer it, and leave it in ruin with&nbsp;&nbsp;
the people there fearing what they could do next.&nbsp; Now, that's basically what the Cyclops represents,&nbsp;&nbsp; and when the caves blocked by an enormous boulder,&nbsp; the men cannot leave it. The Cyclops then arrives,&nbsp;&nbsp; eats one of the men, goes to sleep, wakes up, and&nbsp; then repeats the process. Now, if you've ever seen&nbsp;&nbsp;
Jaws, which it's Jaws, mate, you've seen it. Uh,&nbsp; but it kind of reminded me of the speech about the&nbsp;&nbsp; USS Indianapolis. Soldiers were stranded at sea&nbsp; with sharks coming to feast on them throughout the&nbsp;&nbsp; day, which is just so horrifying to think of. It's&nbsp; pretty much that same feeling of terror here, but&nbsp;&nbsp;
they can't kill a Cyclops as he's the only one who&nbsp; can move the boulder. So, they wait. Eventually,&nbsp;&nbsp; they then use deception once more and manage to&nbsp; get out the cave by disguising his sheep. The&nbsp;&nbsp; men finally reach the shore. And though they're&nbsp; alive and they could simply leave, Adysius cannot&nbsp;&nbsp;
let the humiliation and deaths go unanswered.&nbsp; He then fires an arrow into the Cyclops's eye,&nbsp;&nbsp; which blinds him. Adysius then justifies it by&nbsp; saying the creature murdered his men. But the&nbsp;&nbsp; crew sees something else. It already escaped, and&nbsp; Adius did it for revenge rather than for survival.&nbsp;&nbsp;
He needed the monster to know that Adysius had&nbsp; defeated him. This is where his heroism, pride,&nbsp;&nbsp; and obsession with control becomes impossible&nbsp; to separate. And his victory again comes at&nbsp;&nbsp; an unneeded cost. And this is something that&nbsp; continues throughout the film. It's very much&nbsp;&nbsp;
a sort of sort of heart of darkness tale where&nbsp; Adius encounters things that reflect and challenge&nbsp;&nbsp; him. That's also seen in the giants in armor whose&nbsp; name I will definitely butcher if I say so I won't&nbsp;&nbsp; say it but they completely decimate Adysius's men&nbsp; who've assumed themselves to be the most dominant&nbsp;&nbsp;
force out there and suddenly they experience the&nbsp; other side of the conquest. They are slaughtered.&nbsp;&nbsp; This leads to the crew blaming Adysius, and they&nbsp; connect their suffering to the decision to blind&nbsp;&nbsp; the Cyclops after they had already escaped.&nbsp; They believe Adesius's arrogance brought&nbsp;&nbsp;
divine punishment down upon them. To them,&nbsp; this is no longer simply bad luck. The gods&nbsp;&nbsp; are responding to his pride, which is something&nbsp; he has to grapple with. Upon reaching Cersei,&nbsp;&nbsp; many have already considered abandoning him, and&nbsp; Cersei plays with them psychologically. played by&nbsp;&nbsp;
Samantha Morton. She's a haunting figure who's&nbsp; in tune with the moon. Seeking refuge with her,&nbsp;&nbsp; it becomes clear that other men have been here,&nbsp; too. And all that remains is their armor. Uh,&nbsp;&nbsp; which something not a bit strange about all&nbsp; this here, mate. But Cersei offers them food,&nbsp;&nbsp;
which they welcome due to being starving and&nbsp; exhausted. How about this comes with an addiction&nbsp;&nbsp; as they chow down on it, they can't get enough,&nbsp; and Cersei physically reshapes them, and we get&nbsp;&nbsp; another really strong horror sequence. They turn&nbsp; into pigs, which comments on what the soldiers&nbsp;&nbsp;
have become. These are conquerors that are driven&nbsp; by an appetite that they'll never fulfill. They&nbsp;&nbsp; enter foreign homes and consume whatever they&nbsp; can, and this gluttony has now led to their&nbsp;&nbsp; end. Adysius realizes this when hunting after he&nbsp; kills an animal, and it's revealed to be one of&nbsp;&nbsp;
her victims. He then refuses to eat the food and&nbsp; manages to borrow his men's forms back. She also&nbsp;&nbsp; has a bird with her that appears to be her sister.&nbsp; And though it doesn't overexlain this, it simply&nbsp;&nbsp; shows that in Cersei's world, transformation is&nbsp; a way of life. Directed to the underworld, Adius&nbsp;&nbsp;
comes across several of the people he encountered&nbsp; before and during the war. Agamenon is there and&nbsp;&nbsp; we learn he was murdered by his wife who just so&nbsp; happened to be the sister of Helen, having never&nbsp;&nbsp; forgiven him for sacrificing their daughter so he&nbsp; could sail to Troy. He returned as a king but was&nbsp;&nbsp;
then killed by her who'd been waiting for him at&nbsp; home. Obviously draws lots of parallels to Adysius&nbsp;&nbsp; and foreshadows the fact that even managing to&nbsp; get home does not guarantee salvation. Cenon&nbsp;&nbsp; then comes into and basically brings to light the&nbsp; deception Odicius used there. He was placed there&nbsp;&nbsp;
because the Trojans needed to believe that someone&nbsp; had been left behind to present the horse as a&nbsp;&nbsp; gift. Odicius argues the lie was necessary, but&nbsp; it shows how callous the apparent hero is. Now,&nbsp;&nbsp; this is one of the clearest examples of the&nbsp; difference between the legendary version of&nbsp;&nbsp;
Odysius and the actual man. The legend says he&nbsp; devised a brilliant plan that ended the war,&nbsp;&nbsp; but here we see the dead remember who paid for it.&nbsp; eventually fleeing. They then managed to get away.&nbsp;&nbsp; And at this point, I kind of want to touch upon&nbsp; Athena and her role throughout the movie. In it,&nbsp;&nbsp;
Adysius has conversations with the character&nbsp; that touch upon things like the cost of war, the&nbsp;&nbsp; difference between destiny and choice, and if he&nbsp; really wants to return home. To me, the big thing&nbsp;&nbsp; they grapple with is whether an identity outside&nbsp; of all this war and violence is even possible for&nbsp;&nbsp;
the character. Athena is kind of like a divine&nbsp; protector, but in being this, she also kind of&nbsp;&nbsp; wants to protect the man he should be, to me at&nbsp; least. Now, a big reveal comes with who's playing&nbsp;&nbsp; Athena and um we do see in the movie that her&nbsp; statue has her head cut off. So, we get a constant&nbsp;&nbsp;
tease about her identity. Turns out Sandai&nbsp; actually also plays a part of a random woman who&nbsp;&nbsp; was beheaded because of their brutal conquest. So,&nbsp; Athena takes the appearance of this woman because&nbsp;&nbsp; it's symbolic of the constant guilt that he feels.&nbsp; Now, in general, the movie treats Greek mythology&nbsp;&nbsp;
like a religious horror on an epic scale. The gods&nbsp; are not comforting and instead they're forces that&nbsp;&nbsp; can reshape nature and destroy human lives. The&nbsp; ocean might be Poseidon. A storm might be Zeus.&nbsp;&nbsp; And a change in the wind might be Athena. The&nbsp; people here cannot separate the natural disasters&nbsp;&nbsp;
from divine punishment. And this is what makes&nbsp; the wrath of the gods even more frightening.&nbsp;&nbsp; It's a world where every terrible event might&nbsp; have intention behind it. And ultimately,&nbsp;&nbsp; this plays a big part of the film's ending, which&nbsp; we'll talk more about when we get to the end of&nbsp;&nbsp;
the video. But next, Adysius's ship must pass&nbsp; the sirens. The crew seals their ears with wax,&nbsp;&nbsp; and this is so they cannot hear the song, but&nbsp; Adysius wants to experience it, and we don't&nbsp;&nbsp; receive a clear, glamorous look at the sirens.&nbsp; But I do like how Nolan keeps them distant. The&nbsp;&nbsp;
fragmented and psychologically threatening and&nbsp; kind of something off in the distance that could&nbsp;&nbsp; pull you to your doom. The song instantly&nbsp; overwhelms so who hear it as well. And the&nbsp;&nbsp; sirens reach into Adysius's guilt and force him&nbsp; to question whether he even wants to return home.&nbsp;&nbsp;
Returning home means remembering who he is and&nbsp; carrying everything he's done back with him. The&nbsp;&nbsp; sirens very much offer surrender and he can give&nbsp; up who he is, simply swim to them, surrender all&nbsp;&nbsp; that and be like the men they bewitch. Part of him&nbsp; wants to stop fighting too as this will rid him&nbsp;&nbsp;
of the guilt and pressures of leadership. They&nbsp; also encounter Silah. This creature creates a&nbsp;&nbsp; moral choice between going close to that or a&nbsp; giant whirlpool. The idiom between Siller and&nbsp;&nbsp; Jaredus was created because of this story and it&nbsp; means to be caught between two equally unpleasant&nbsp;&nbsp;
fates. But once again must choose to sacrifice&nbsp; his men to avoid the ship being destroyed and&nbsp;&nbsp; it's kind of like the trolley conundrum. I also&nbsp; know people don't like the design of it in the&nbsp;&nbsp; movie and I did wonder if things were impacted by&nbsp; either Nolan's sensibilities or later retellings&nbsp;&nbsp;
of the tale. In Ovid's metamorphosis, Sila gets a&nbsp; tragic origin story, and we learned she was once&nbsp;&nbsp; a beautiful nymph whose bathing pool was poisoned&nbsp; by Cersei. This then transformed her into a beast,&nbsp;&nbsp; and it added some complexity to the story. But&nbsp; they press onto the sacred cattle of Helas, the&nbsp;&nbsp;
sun god. Warned right from the off to subscribe&nbsp; and not eat the cattle. They're well aware that&nbsp;&nbsp; divine punishment will come from not doing either.&nbsp; But the men are exhausted, and when Adysius isn't&nbsp;&nbsp; watching, they kill and eat the cattle. Now,&nbsp; this is the breaking point. Up until now,&nbsp;&nbsp;
the crews accused Adysius of bringing punishment&nbsp; upon them through his choices. But now they&nbsp;&nbsp; knowingly commit the violations themselves. And&nbsp; with this comes the punishment showing that the&nbsp;&nbsp; noble hero's hubris has come too far. A gigantic&nbsp; storm wrecks them with Adysius then ending up as&nbsp;&nbsp;
the sole survivor. This then takes us to Calypso&nbsp; where he's lost basically everything. His army,&nbsp;&nbsp; his life back home, and now his sense of identity.&nbsp; However, the Lotus allows him to be a blank slate.&nbsp;&nbsp; But with this, he's also incomplete. Adesius is a&nbsp; man who can't escape what he's done and the past&nbsp;&nbsp;
begins to resurface. He starts to remember things&nbsp; and though Calypso offers him a life where he&nbsp;&nbsp; never has to return to responsibility, age, or do&nbsp; anything that comes with a cost. In this though,&nbsp;&nbsp; Adius still chooses his immortal family. Now that&nbsp; takes us back to Ithaca, which sees Antinas also&nbsp;&nbsp;
realizing that Tmicus is the greatest obstacle&nbsp; when it comes to claiming Penelopey. So he sends&nbsp;&nbsp; his men to assassinate him. But Adysius comes&nbsp; to the rescue. Presenting himself as a stranger,&nbsp;&nbsp; he journeys back. seeing what's happened in his&nbsp; absence and how the home he was so desperate to&nbsp;&nbsp;
defend has been left as a shell of itself. Much&nbsp; like him, he was nothing without it and it's&nbsp;&nbsp; nothing without him. Adopting the identity of&nbsp; Sinnin, it's very significant as he's carrying&nbsp;&nbsp; the name of someone he sacrificed in order to&nbsp; return home and restore things. Now throughout&nbsp;&nbsp;
we've had Argus, who's Adysius's dog who he&nbsp; saved when he was a puppy. The dog represents&nbsp;&nbsp; the resilience and passage of time that's passed&nbsp; since its master left. One of Antinineas's men&nbsp;&nbsp; is particularly abusive towards it and nearly&nbsp; kills the dog. Antonius then orders the dog to&nbsp;&nbsp;
be removed from the palace, dumped in dump. And&nbsp; basically, he does this because he understands&nbsp;&nbsp; that Penelopey's husband dog and killing that&nbsp; would damage his chances of winning her shows&nbsp;&nbsp; how cruel he is as even his restraints calculated.&nbsp; Upon returning, the dog recognizes Adysius. And&nbsp;&nbsp;
even though he's changed, lost weight, grown&nbsp; a beard, and disguised himself as a beggar,&nbsp;&nbsp; his old pal knows him immediately because he's a&nbsp; bloody good doggo. This becomes the emotional key&nbsp;&nbsp; to Dmicus, realizing the truth, and it shows that&nbsp; Adius can return to the man he used to be. Odysius&nbsp;&nbsp;
has been transformed by age, grief, violence,&nbsp; and this disguise. And though the humans struggle&nbsp;&nbsp; to recognize him, the dog does. That's because&nbsp; Agros knows that the essential person Odysius is&nbsp;&nbsp;
hasn't changed even though the outer shell has. It&nbsp; answers one of the movie central questions which&nbsp;&nbsp; is is any part of the man who is left still alive&nbsp; and August doing this shows that the answer is&nbsp;&nbsp; yes but barely. Like the dog that old version of&nbsp; Adysius has survived just long enough to complete&nbsp;&nbsp;
the homecoming. And this unites him and Tmicus&nbsp; with his revelation. They then prepare to destroy&nbsp;&nbsp; the Sudas. Using tactical planning once more,&nbsp; they hide all their weapons, armor, and shield.&nbsp;&nbsp; Unlike the horse, sheep, beggar, and so on, the&nbsp; deception is on once more. How about this time,&nbsp;&nbsp;
the deception's happening inside his own walls,&nbsp; so he will allow the sitters to believe he's weak&nbsp;&nbsp; until the moment of escape becomes impossible.&nbsp; We also see how they act with him as well. Zeus's&nbsp;&nbsp; laws of hospitality instruct that beggars and&nbsp; strangers are supposed to be treated with kindness&nbsp;&nbsp;
and dignity, as they may be gods in disguise. The&nbsp; people themselves that treat them badly also may&nbsp;&nbsp; require the mercy of another house, too. And&nbsp; this story has all been about how conquerors&nbsp;&nbsp; have suffered for their actions. Onius has seen&nbsp; firsthand how bad karma is and how the tables can&nbsp;&nbsp;
be turned. All civilizations depend upon people&nbsp; respecting guests and hosts. And Ithaca must be&nbsp;&nbsp; restored to that as well. The suitors have already&nbsp; violated hospitality by occupying Adysius's home&nbsp;&nbsp; and consuming his wealth. And now they prove&nbsp; that they also abuse the powerless. They are&nbsp;&nbsp;
failing the most basic moral test without also&nbsp; realizing that the beggar they're humiliating is&nbsp;&nbsp; the king whose home they've stolen that Adysius&nbsp; appears before Antinuous and gives him Sinn's&nbsp;&nbsp; totem to unsettle him. It's also a cruel irony&nbsp; to it because Adysius played a direct role in&nbsp;&nbsp;
Sinnin's death. He's then using a relic of the&nbsp; man he sacrificed and his name to psychologically&nbsp;&nbsp; unsettle him. It's a classic manipulation&nbsp; technique by the hero to throw them off their&nbsp;&nbsp; game and again using an object that could be&nbsp; seen as a gift to tear something down. Speaking&nbsp;&nbsp;
with Penelopey, he then poses as the beggar once&nbsp; more, and the pair's conversation becomes deeply&nbsp;&nbsp; existential. They discuss a possibility that&nbsp; Adysius is alive, but Penelopey raises a much&nbsp;&nbsp; more painful question. Even if he is alive,&nbsp; would it even be worth it for him to return?&nbsp;&nbsp;
Would the man who left 20 years ago still exist?&nbsp; And would it be possible for one person to return&nbsp;&nbsp; to a marriage carrying that much war, death, and&nbsp; grief? Now, though Penelopey suspects something,&nbsp;&nbsp; it's clear he's not there emotionally yet and&nbsp; is carrying everything he's been through. So&nbsp;&nbsp;
Penelopey announces that she'll finally remarry.&nbsp; However, she creates a challenge and brings out&nbsp;&nbsp; his bow. Now the man who wishes to marry her must&nbsp; one string the bow and two fire an arrow through&nbsp;&nbsp; the aligned axes. It's the exact feat established&nbsp; in act one and the suitors then attempt it. No&nbsp;&nbsp;
one can do it because this is an object that&nbsp; represents his identity. Odicius is tied up in&nbsp;&nbsp; this bow and when it comes to do it, it will be&nbsp; something that seizes not only his wife and his&nbsp;&nbsp; home, but also the man he lost the moment he left.&nbsp; And doesn't even seriously attempt the challenge&nbsp;&nbsp;
either. And whether it's out of arrogance,&nbsp; suspicion, or fear of humiliation, he refuses&nbsp;&nbsp; to expose himself as incapable. So the beggar asks&nbsp; for a turn. And though the suitor's laugh, he does&nbsp;&nbsp; it all first time. Nothing but net. Even before&nbsp; they can say you're a there's an arrow through one&nbsp;&nbsp;
of the guy's necks and everyone understands too&nbsp; late that the man they've been insulting is the&nbsp;&nbsp; king they've assumed was dead. The doors are then&nbsp; sealed. The weapons are gone and Adysius has them&nbsp;&nbsp; trapped which becomes a slaughter of the suitors.&nbsp; Even though he's older, injured, and outnumbered,&nbsp;&nbsp;
he's still Odysius and he spent the last 20&nbsp; years fighting armies, mythological beings,&nbsp;&nbsp; gods, and all the elements. These spoiled men&nbsp; have spent all those years drinking his wine. And&nbsp;&nbsp; it feels like all the violence that Adysius has&nbsp; carried since Troy finally explodes within him and&nbsp;&nbsp;
he unleashes it on them all. Tmicus also takes&nbsp; down the suda played by Logan Marshall Green.&nbsp;&nbsp; Throughout the former has been treated like a weak&nbsp; child, but he bests him even after being nearly&nbsp;&nbsp; killed. In this he proves that he is capable&nbsp; of protecting Ithaca and Tmicus is no longer&nbsp;&nbsp;
simply Adysius's son. He's become the future king&nbsp; which is such a big moment. In the end though,&nbsp;&nbsp; it boils down to Adysius and Penelopey. Their&nbsp; return is not about pretending nothing's happened,&nbsp;&nbsp; as neither can really change things. They cannot&nbsp; simply return to the way things were. Too much&nbsp;&nbsp;
time has passed. Adius is no longer the man who&nbsp; left, and Penelope is no longer the woman who&nbsp;&nbsp; waited at the shoreline. Tmicus is no longer the&nbsp; child he left behind either, and the old home is&nbsp;&nbsp; gone. But in this, they can choose something else.&nbsp; Deciding to go off together like they fantasized&nbsp;&nbsp;
about at the beginning, they sail away without&nbsp; the obligations that held them. At the time,&nbsp;&nbsp; Adysius was bound to Agimenanon, and Penelopey was&nbsp; responsible for Ithaca. But after 20 years of war,&nbsp;&nbsp; waiting, trauma, and loss, they finally choose the&nbsp; life they really longed for. The dream comes true,&nbsp;&nbsp;
but only after almost everything else has been&nbsp; taken from them. In the end, it's not a return to&nbsp;&nbsp; their youth. It's too old. Change people choosing&nbsp; what remains of their future. Tmicus then remains&nbsp;&nbsp; in Ithaca, and he takes a throne and becomes its&nbsp; ruler. This completes his coming of age story as&nbsp;&nbsp;
at the beginning he was living beneath the legend&nbsp; of a father he didn't know. But he believed return&nbsp;&nbsp; might solve everything. By the end, Adysius does&nbsp; return and helps to destroy the immediate threat.&nbsp;&nbsp; But Tmicus still has to become the man capable of&nbsp; governing after him. Adysius's journey ends by him&nbsp;&nbsp;
leaving the throne behind whereas Tmkus' journey&nbsp; ends by accepting it. Now on the surface, the&nbsp;&nbsp; Odyssey is about a warrior trying to get home, but&nbsp; the movie keeps complicating the meaning of home.&nbsp;&nbsp; Adysius spends 20 years believing that Ithaca&nbsp; is a fixed destination waiting for him. But it&nbsp;&nbsp;
isn't really. In the time he's gone, Penelopey&nbsp; has ruled without him. Tmicus has become a man,&nbsp;&nbsp; his dog has grown old, and his legend has become&nbsp; larger than the truth. So though he can physically&nbsp;&nbsp; return to Ithag, he cannot return back to the&nbsp; life he left. That is why the ending requires&nbsp;&nbsp;
him to leave again, but this time with Penelopey.&nbsp; His first departure was forced by obligation,&nbsp;&nbsp; whereas his final departure is a choice.&nbsp; his and Penelopey's choice and it's one&nbsp;&nbsp; that doesn't require manipulation, deceit, or&nbsp; strategy. Throughout, we've seen how he lied&nbsp;&nbsp;
to Sing's character because the strategy required&nbsp; a sacrifice. He blinded the Cyclops after already&nbsp;&nbsp; escaping because the character needed revenge.&nbsp; He repeatedly pushes his men forward because&nbsp;&nbsp; he believes he can control the consequences.&nbsp; Adysius survives almost everything, but his men&nbsp;&nbsp;
do not. So, you have to ask whether the cost&nbsp; was even worth it. He has lost not only them,&nbsp;&nbsp; but also himself. Sure, he can outthink monsters.&nbsp; He can survive gods. But he cannot defeat time.&nbsp;&nbsp; All they have now is the future and the time&nbsp; that they have ahead of them. The real victory is&nbsp;&nbsp;
accepting that the past is gone and now they can&nbsp; choose what life remains. That is why Adesius and&nbsp;&nbsp; Penelopey leave together and that is why Tmicus&nbsp; stays. Adysius finally stops trying to become the&nbsp;&nbsp; man he was and he accepts he needs to be the man&nbsp; he needs to become. Damicus also finally stops&nbsp;&nbsp;
waiting for his father to rule in his place. And&nbsp; the old king sails away while the new king takes&nbsp;&nbsp; the throne. And after 20 years, Adius's journey&nbsp; home ends with him understanding that home was&nbsp;&nbsp; never only Ithaca. It was also Penelopey. Anyway,&nbsp; we have loads of Odyssey inspired shirts at the&nbsp;&nbsp;
merch store below, including a full lineup of old&nbsp; Odyssey artwork based on the legend. Beyond that,&nbsp;&nbsp; we've got lots of t-shirts for this year's biggest&nbsp; movies like Obsessions and Back Rooms. Plus,&nbsp;&nbsp; if you pick up more, you get more discounts and&nbsp; save more money. Now, reviewing this movie is a&nbsp;&nbsp;
bit weird because there's there's just so much&nbsp; negativity and also hype around it. Even now,&nbsp;&nbsp; there's people going at each other's throats on&nbsp; Twitter about the quality of the film and neither&nbsp;&nbsp; group have seen the movie yet. So, you have lots&nbsp; of uninformed opinions flying around about stuff&nbsp;&nbsp;
and it's difficult to decipher actual thought&nbsp; from the culture wars. But even me, I have to say,&nbsp;&nbsp; the the daddy dialogue and stuff, I was a bit&nbsp; like, uh, I don't know. Everyone knows ancient&nbsp;&nbsp;
Greek sounds better in English, old English in a&nbsp; British accent. You do not understand that. Yeah,&nbsp;&nbsp; there's been lots of strange things about it.&nbsp; And even the studio recently announcing that&nbsp;&nbsp;
they weren't allowing influencers to see it first.&nbsp; Uh, and then them definitely seeing it first. That&nbsp;&nbsp; was its whole own thing that just caused lots&nbsp; of noise. And yes, I will die on the hill that&nbsp;&nbsp; influencers did get to see it early as last week&nbsp; I had lots of makeup artists on Instagram posting&nbsp;&nbsp;
about how they just watched the movie and they&nbsp; do not review films. They're simply just makeup&nbsp;&nbsp; Instagrammers. We also had a lot of the focus&nbsp; on the marketing, not really centered around&nbsp;&nbsp; Adysius either. I'm not even kidding, mate. I&nbsp; couldn't even tell you [&nbsp;__&nbsp;] about how they were&nbsp;&nbsp;
approaching Adysius as no one really seemed to&nbsp; bring it up in the marketing. Instead, we had lots&nbsp;&nbsp; of stuff with Elliot Page and then Lupita Nyongo&nbsp; saying stuff about how she'd like to ask Homer how&nbsp;&nbsp; he felt about the screen time given to women and&nbsp; she's in the film for like 10 minutes. So, yeah,&nbsp;&nbsp;
why don't you ask Nolan as well? Um, but this just&nbsp; created a lot of noise that's distracted from what&nbsp;&nbsp; the actual film is. Sean Chandler said in his&nbsp; review, it was just a lot of nontroversies and&nbsp;&nbsp; yeah, I think that's the best term to describe&nbsp; them cuz when you're sat there in the cinema,&nbsp;&nbsp;
it all strips away. I do think that Nolan really&nbsp; delivered on the promise of creating a grand&nbsp;&nbsp; soaring and often oporadic tale that's the sort&nbsp; of film that you just don't see anymore. Even&nbsp;&nbsp; something as recent as Moana is filled with&nbsp; CGI backdrops and stuff that is clearly all&nbsp;&nbsp;
made on computer. But this is to the other end&nbsp; of the scale where it's very clear they did as&nbsp;&nbsp; much of it as practically as they could. There's&nbsp; so much effort that they put into the movie that&nbsp;&nbsp; it's difficult not to get sucked into the vast and&nbsp; epic scale of it. I compare it a lot to Lawrence&nbsp;&nbsp;
of Arabia where you're just blown away by the fact&nbsp; that they actually filmed some of this stuff and&nbsp;&nbsp; that happens over and over and over. I know the&nbsp; term seed an IMAX is very overused and when it's&nbsp;&nbsp; stuff like the Mandalorian and Groku, yeah, I I&nbsp; kind of get it. But for this, there's not really&nbsp;&nbsp;
any other recommendation you can give. The scope&nbsp; and sheer scale of it is incredible and I don't&nbsp;&nbsp; know how long it'll be before we get another&nbsp; film like this. Now I don't think it's perfect&nbsp;&nbsp; and though it's upper tier Nolan I still think&nbsp; Inception Prestige and the Dark Knight up films.&nbsp;&nbsp;
I think some of the criticisms and worries that&nbsp; people had are very valid as well and the dialogue&nbsp;&nbsp; at times does feel I don't know a bit Nolany even&nbsp; beyond the syntax. It's kind of like um when you&nbsp;&nbsp; watch The Dark Knight Rises and Bane is like fro&nbsp; you came back to die with your city and Batman's&nbsp;&nbsp;
like no I came here to stop you. It's like uh no&nbsp; that that could have done with another look over&nbsp;&nbsp; mate. It's just got the odd bit like that that I&nbsp; think really will stand out on multiple watches.&nbsp;&nbsp; Like I remember watching The Dark Knight Rises&nbsp; in the cinema and thinking it was this incredible&nbsp;&nbsp;
film and then I got the Blu-ray and watched it&nbsp; over and over and over and I started to quickly&nbsp;&nbsp; see the flaws. Um so I don't know if maybe I'm&nbsp; going to see more of the issues with this movie,&nbsp;&nbsp; especially the dialogue if I watch it over and&nbsp; over. Now on the flip side of that, it's also a&nbsp;&nbsp;
film that I actually think I'll enjoy a lot more&nbsp; on a second watch. I think the thing with Nola&nbsp;&nbsp; movies and their enjoyment for me is sometimes&nbsp; hampered by the non-chronological storytelling. I&nbsp;&nbsp; know that is the character's signature, but yeah,&nbsp; on a first watch once you're trying to get your&nbsp;&nbsp;
head around stuff, I don't know, it just makes&nbsp; you feel detached. For example, Batman Begins.&nbsp;&nbsp; Really love it now, but the first couple of times&nbsp; I watched it, I found the constant jumping back&nbsp;&nbsp; and forth through time a bit difficult to connect&nbsp; with. There's only once things lined up and went&nbsp;&nbsp;
in chronological order that I went with the&nbsp; movie and really started enjoying it. And that's&nbsp;&nbsp; kind of a similar thing here. Everything kind of&nbsp; jumps about at first, which can sort of make it&nbsp;&nbsp; as well. And because of that, when I was first&nbsp; reading it, I did find it difficult to vibe with,&nbsp;&nbsp;
but once everything falls into place and starts&nbsp; going in chronological order, it it really just&nbsp;&nbsp; soarses. The last half hour is absolutely&nbsp; incredible and Nolan is the god of going out&nbsp;&nbsp; on a high note. I think a lot of his films strive&nbsp; because the endings are often so good that you&nbsp;&nbsp;
walk away from the cinema just on a high and it&nbsp; makes you kind of forget the issues that you had&nbsp;&nbsp; earlier in the movie. I think as well knowing&nbsp; how things work out and seeing it for a second&nbsp;&nbsp; time that the issues I had with the jumping about&nbsp; they're going to sit a lot better with me. Plus,&nbsp;&nbsp;
I'm someone who really loves Nolan's tone when it&nbsp; comes to film making. I know he's criticized for&nbsp;&nbsp; being sterile, but I think that he grounds things&nbsp; really well and the takes like that with when&nbsp;&nbsp; you're dealing with gods and mythic beasts, it can&nbsp; be hit or miss. Obviously, you know, they need to&nbsp;&nbsp;
do stuff like the Cyclops and more supernatural&nbsp; stuff, but they also kind of hold things back in&nbsp;&nbsp; other directions. And actually, have to admit,&nbsp; I think he balances the stuff really well. And&nbsp;&nbsp; it doesn't feel like there's anything missing&nbsp; here. Even if you know certain more grandiose&nbsp;&nbsp;
things are emitted, the fact it all feels real as&nbsp; well just makes stuff like the Cyclops seem even&nbsp;&nbsp; more terrifying than it would if it was just some&nbsp; big big big CGI monster. Nolan's editing style as&nbsp;&nbsp; well is something I really vibe with too. I'm&nbsp; sure you've seen his movies where they'll have&nbsp;&nbsp;
a character talking and they'll mention something&nbsp; and then cut to a shot of that for a couple of&nbsp;&nbsp; seconds. And even like those little shots, you&nbsp; that probably would have been like at least half&nbsp;&nbsp; a day's worth of filming. You can tell they just&nbsp; put so much effort in though, and I think if you&nbsp;&nbsp;
go in and shut off the noise, it's going to be&nbsp; difficult to not be enamored by this film. Nolan's&nbsp;&nbsp; delivered on his promise to bring us an incredible&nbsp; Odyssey. He's once more showing why he's the best&nbsp;&nbsp; filmmaker in Hollywood right now, and I think his&nbsp; catalog's unmatched. This is a true true to force,&nbsp;&nbsp;
and Nolan has brought the Odyssey to give us&nbsp; another absolute banger. It's a banger. Anyway,&nbsp;&nbsp; I'd of course love to hear your thoughts on&nbsp; the film below. And I know this is a shortish&nbsp;&nbsp; breakdown compared to what we normally do. Uh&nbsp; but we will be doing several videos on the film,&nbsp;&nbsp;
including a big big breakdown when it comes out&nbsp; digitally. Please drop a like on this video though&nbsp;&nbsp; want to follow us on Instagram and keep up to&nbsp; date with what we're doing, then make sure that&nbsp;&nbsp;
you check us out at Heavy Spoilers. Did you know&nbsp; as well that members of the channel also get early&nbsp;&nbsp; breakdown a week, a week before anyone else. Cost&nbsp; just 99 cents a month. It's less than $12 a year.&nbsp;&nbsp;
25 cents a week for one big breakdown at least a&nbsp; week, a week before anyone else. Uh, and it makes&nbsp;&nbsp; a massive difference to the channel and means we&nbsp; can just keep putting out these bigger videos. Uh,&nbsp;&nbsp; and yeah, putting in as much effort as&nbsp; possible. Huge thank you if you do that. Uh,&nbsp;&nbsp;
we really appreciate it. And if you want something&nbsp; else to watch, guess what? There's another video&nbsp;&nbsp; on screen right now. Go over watch that, mate.&nbsp; Go on. I dare you, mate. I dare you, mate. I dare&nbsp;&nbsp; you to go over there and hit the thumbs up. If&nbsp; you do, you will be granted unlimited wishes. Uh&nbsp;&nbsp;
so thank you for doing that and uh make sure your&nbsp; first wish is that you can watch this video again.
