jsc1953
01-30-2012, 12:05 PM
Saw (and enjoyed) The Ides of March over the weekend -- a pretty solid political drama. Not as good as a great West Wing episode, but decent.
But I have a very basic question -- does anyone have a theory as to why this particular title was chosen? It's based on a play called "Farragut North", and Clooney changed the title. I'm not seeing a lot of parallels with "Julius Caesar", with the possible exception that
Steven (Ryan Gosling) turning on Paul (Philip Seymour Hoffman) could be compared to Brutus/Caesar.
But I have a very basic question -- does anyone have a theory as to why this particular title was chosen? It's based on a play called "Farragut North", and Clooney changed the title. I'm not seeing a lot of parallels with "Julius Caesar", with the possible exception that
Steven (Ryan Gosling) turning on Paul (Philip Seymour Hoffman) could be compared to Brutus/Caesar.