We’ve been calling The Eagle movie ‘Brokeback Eagle’

From a long Scottish newspaper article about the book, film and filming – timed to coincide with the end of the Glasgow Film Festival and the looming release of The Eagle film in the UK:

(Kevin) Macdonald is using the novel as a framework for a film brimming with authenticity and yet which unfolds as something of a modern boys’ own adventure, a tale of bravery and friendship. “Kevin and I have been calling it Brokeback Eagle,” laughs the film’s leading man, Channing Tatum, when I join him in his centurion’s quarters in the furthest quarter of the fort.

“There has been a lot of joking about that, because there is this male friendship that binds the story together,” he continues. “Obviously, it’s not really a homoerotic element, but it is inherent in a story about two people who come from different backgrounds, who go through an awful lot together and hate each other at times, but end up with respect and friendship for one another. You could say it is a buddy movie in the classic tradition.”

The two buddies (in the film The Eagle based on the Rosemary Sutcliff book The Eagle of the Ninth) are Marcus Flavius Aquila (Tatum), a young centurion who arrives in Britain in 127 AD, and a Briton, Esca (Jamie Bell), who becomes both retainer and friend.
Source: ‘We’ve been calling it Brokeback Eagle’ – Herald Scotland

The symbolism of The Eagle of the Ninth | What happened to the ninth legion: Part IX?

Last week I met Professor Michael Fulford of Reading University archaeology department, who introduced me (and a crowd of film journalists covering The Eagle film) to some Roman history at Silchester – Calleva in Rosemary Sutcliff‘s The Eagle of the Ninth historical novel for children (of all ages!). I asked him for his take on the fate of the ninth legion, and he has written to me (with permission to reproduce his words – thank you Michael):

At the time Rosemary Sutcliff wrote The Eagle of the Ninth it was the general view that legio IX Hispana, based at York (Eburacum) had somehow come to grief in northern Britain.  There was no specific evidence for a disastrous battle but the record of the legion stopped with an inscription of AD 107-8, commemorating the construction of a building by the legion within the fortress at York.

Since the 1950s further evidence of the fate of the legion has come to light.  There is a tile and a mortarium (specialist pottery vessel) from the legionary fortress at Nijmegen in the Netherlands, each stamped by the legion (LEG VIIII; LEG VIIII HIS), which date to the early 2nd century.  There are also inscriptions of NCOs and officers of the legion whose career profiles are such that the legion must have still been in existence in the 120s, ie after work started on the construction of Hadrian’s Wall in Britain.  Although there can be no certainty about this until more evidence emerges, it is likely that, after a period in lower Germany (at Nijmegen), the legion was transferred to the East.  If it was not destroyed in the war against the Jews later in Hadrian’s reign, it might have met its fate in the war against Parthia in the early 160s.  The historian Cassius Dio mentions an unnamed legion which was destroyed at the siege of Elegeia in Armenia in 161.

Even if we can no longer associate the loss of the Ninth with Britain, the story, The Eagle of the Ninth can be seen to be symbolic of the fairly constant struggle between Rome and the tribes of northern Britain, from the time of the 1st century governors like Petilius Cerealis and Agricola onwards, through the construction of Hadrian’s Wall, the later building of the Antonine Wall between Clyde and Forth, the return to the previous frontier line, and so on.

Women like The Eagle movie more than men!

From the Internet Movie Database site:

The Eagle's viewers like it, especially women!

So what happened to Legio VIIII Hispana | The Ninth Legion of The Eagle of the Ninth fame

The last recorded, datable activity of this (9th) legion in Britain was in 108/109, when it built a stone fortress at York. What happened next, is unclear. Several scholars have argued that it was defeated and annihilated by the Picts, maybe in 117/118, and that this caused the emperor Hadrian to build the famous wall in northern England. (This is the assumption of the famous novel by Rosemary Sutcliff, The Eagle of the Ninth, 1954.) Read More »

The Eagle is ‘unfashionably exciting adaptation’, a ‘rip-snortin’ ‘real winner’ with ‘unusually strong sense of place …’ (US Reviews)

“You’ll gladly enslave yourself to Kevin Macdonald’s rollicking sword-and-sandal epic” which is “a beautifully executed piece of pulp fiction”, says Time Out New York of The Eagle. It is, says The New York Magazine, an “unfashionably exciting adaptation,  and a “rip-snortin adventure tale”  says influential Roger Ebert  of  The Chicago Sun-TimesRead More »