The Eagle of the Ninth eBook is Today No 1 Children’s Fiction Book on Amazon

(At 08.30am March 26th)

The Eagle of the Ninth topselling on Amazon 26 March

[Amazon U.K.] [Amazon U.S.] [Amazon Canada]

The Irish Times advises pay hard earned denarii for The Eagle film

The Eagle delivers more than enough sombre thrills for your hard-earned denarii. Thumbs cautiously up!

Source: The Eagle – The Irish Times

The Eagle of the Ninth | A children’s classic that stands the test of time | The Guardian

The Eagle of the Ninth is an intensely memorable children’s classic, full of marsh mist, hurt pride and high courage; fans will be excited to hear that a film adaptation, The Eagle, is released this week. Animated by author Rosemary Sutcliff, the average schoolchild’s bare-bones knowledge of life in the Roman legions acquires fascinating flesh as Marcus undertakes his desperate journey. Read More »

Kevin Macdonald, director of The Eagle “I didn’t understand Hollywood”

Kevin Macdonald on the set of The Eagle Why do the Romans in The Eagle film of Rosemary Sutcliff‘s great historical novel The Eagle of the Ninth speak with American accents? In a lengthy interview in The Guardian newspaper the director Kevin MacDonald explains:

In a reversal of the age-old Hollywood convention, the Romans are played by Americans, and the British by British actors. “To me it makes more sense in every way,” says Macdonald. “When you look at any classical Hollywood film from the 1930s onwards, Brits are always playing the Romans. It was easy to understand. Britain had an empire. Britain was the ex-colonial power. But Americans are the superpower of the world now. America is the empire. They’re the dominant occupying power in Iraq and Afghanistan.” He cites Robert Aldrich’s Ulzana’s Raid, an indictment of the Vietnam war disguised as a western, as a precedent. “It seemed to me you could do something similar today, reflecting on the modern world by telling an ancient story.”
Source: Kevin Macdonald: “I didn’t understand Hollywood” | The Guardian.

 

The Sunday Mirror newspaper (UK) loves The Eagle (of the Ninth) film

From The Eagle of the Ninth filmA stylishly brooding Roman adventure, The Eagle is a thrilling journey into the heart of darkness (well, Scotland). Gritty and moody, bloody and brutal, this tough and exciting Roman epic is a classic tale that is very well made … along with all the talk of ‘honour’, this Roman ­adventure film is driven by some beautifully staged fight scenes and succeeds in being an ­enjoyable Roman romp.

Source: Sunday Mirror review