I have just finished watching the documentary on the fight training conducted for the film troy and found it interesting to hear how the stun men managed to make sense of the weapons, formations and tactic's described in the history books.
For instance according to Homer, Hector carried a spear 5.5M long but in practice the stunt men found a spear that length impossible to handle effectively in a melee and so it was successively shortened until it became a viable melee weapon. The one used in the fight with Achilles was only just over 2M in length.
The trainers also discovered that tight shield wall formations made sense during the advance into contact but that once the formations closed the men needed space to weild their weapons and shields. Thus during the mass combat scenes the marcshals were constantly shouting 'Make Ready', 'Keep your distance', 'Don't get too close', 'Give yourself room' The point being that the extra's were completely unable to use their spears if they got too close to an opponentand unable to use their shields if they got too close to their neighbours. They actually discovered that closely packed infantry were easy targets for more dispersed warriors who were able to lunge forward and take men out almost at will.
Some interesting stuff on Bronze Swords too. They obviously bent easily and could not keep an edge (which mean't that the rubber ones supplied to the extra's were actually quite effective) and after testing various Bronze Sword designs for effect the special effects unit decided that most injuries caused by these weapons would probably be blunt trauma injuries like broken bones rather a cuts of stab wounds. Lunges would have to make most use of the point rather than the edge and would still require considerable strength behind them to penetrate.
One noticeable result was that in the final strike by Achilles that kills Hector you see Brad Pitt stab his sword into Hectors chest and then place his other hand on the pommel and use his entire bodyweight to drive the sword into Hectors body. More like driving in a stake that stabbing someone with a sword.
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