By Jon Donnis
There are few works of literature more deeply connected to a nation’s identity than Homer’s The Odyssey is to Greece. For nearly three thousand years, the story of Odysseus has represented Greek imagination, history, mythology and cultural influence across the world.
So when Hollywood decides to make a major cinematic adaptation of this legendary Greek epic, many people would expect one thing above all else: respect for the culture that created it.
Instead, many Greeks (myself included) feel they have been sidelined.
The controversy surrounding Christopher Nolan’s The Odyssey is not simply about casting. It is about a series of decisions that many Greeks believe reveal a troubling attitude towards their heritage. A film based on one of the most important works in Greek civilisation was made with Greek locations, received major financial support from Greece, and drew heavily from Greek mythology, yet critics argue that Greek people themselves were largely absent from the most important parts of the production.
The question being asked in Greece is straightforward: if Hollywood is telling a Greek story, why are Greeks not being given a central role in telling it?
Greece supported the production through its film incentive programme, with the final approved rebate reported at approximately €6.57 million. The country provided locations and infrastructure for the filming of a story that exists because of Greek culture.
Yet those benefits appear to have flowed mostly towards an international Hollywood production rather than towards meaningful Greek representation.
The absence of Greek actors in the principal cast has become one of the biggest points of anger. For many Greeks, this is not simply a matter of personal preference or artistic freedom. A story rooted in ancient Greece should not treat Greek identity as nothing more than scenery.
The argument is not that only Greek actors can play Greek mythology. Greek stories have influenced the entire world and have always been adapted internationally. The issue is that when a culture’s most important stories are being retold, excluding that culture’s own performers sends a message that many find deeply uncomfortable.
Hollywood has repeatedly argued that representation matters. The industry has celebrated films that make efforts to ensure cultural authenticity, including Disney’s Moana, which received praise for involving Polynesian voices and performers connected to the culture being represented.
That raises an uncomfortable question: why does cultural authenticity appear to matter more for some cultures than others?
If Hollywood produced a major film centred on black history, African culture or African mythology and excluded black performers from significant roles, there would likely be immediate and widespread criticism. Many would argue that the production had ignored the very people whose heritage it was portraying.
Many Greeks believe the same principle should apply to them.
Ancient Greek culture is not a less important cultural identity simply because it is thousands of years old. Greek civilisation has shaped democracy, philosophy, theatre, science, mathematics, architecture and literature. Homer’s epics are among the foundations of Western storytelling.
Yet critics believe Hollywood has adopted a double standard: demanding cultural sensitivity when portraying certain communities while treating Greek culture as universal property that can be separated from modern Greeks.
The controversy has also extended beyond casting.
Critics have questioned several aspects of the film’s historical accuracy, arguing that the production appears to take creative liberties that move it away from the world Homer was describing. One of the most discussed examples has been the armour and weapon design, with critics pointing out that some elements appear closer to later Classical Greek imagery than the Late Bronze Age Mycenaean period traditionally associated with the Trojan War. The concern is that the film presents a generic Hollywood vision of ancient Greece rather than a historically informed representation of the era.
Questions have also been raised about the ships, costumes and overall visual design, with many experts arguing that certain choices appear influenced by familiar modern interpretations of Greek mythology rather than archaeological evidence. Others have criticised the use of modern-sounding dialogue, suggesting that contemporary language weakens the connection to the ancient world.
For many Greek critics, these are not isolated details, when combined with the casting decisions and lack of Greek representation, the result feels less like a respectful adaptation of Greek heritage and more like a Hollywood reinterpretation that has removed much of the cultural identity at the heart of the original work.
For many, the problem is not diversity. The problem is inconsistency.
Hollywood has spent years rightly emphasising the importance of authentic representation, but appears to have completely ignored those same principles when dealing with Greek heritage.
Adding to the frustration has been the reaction towards critics. Some Greeks feel that objections about representation have been too quickly dismissed, with people who question the choices being labelled intolerant rather than being engaged with seriously.
Defending Greek cultural representation is not an attack on anyone else’s identity. It is a demand for the same respect that Hollywood claims to support.
The controversy surrounding The Odyssey ultimately represents a much bigger debate about ownership, representation and cultural respect in modern cinema.
Nobody is suggesting that ancient Greek mythology belongs only to Greece. These stories have inspired humanity for centuries. But many Greeks believe there is a difference between sharing a culture’s stories with the world and removing that culture’s own people from the process.
For them, the question is simple.
If Hollywood can understand why representation matters for other cultures, why does it appear to matter less when the culture being represented is Greek?
That is the question The Odyssey has left behind, and it is one that Hollywood cannot easily dismiss.
Some sections of this article discuss criticism and opinion surrounding The Odyssey. Sources below provide reporting and background information on the casting debate, Greek reactions, production details and historical discussions.
Some sections of this article discuss criticism and opinion surrounding The Odyssey. Sources below provide reporting and background information on the casting debate, Greek reactions, production details and historical discussions.
Sources and Fact Checks
The Guardian: "What the Hellenic! Why is Christopher Nolan’s new Greek epic entirely devoid of Greeks?"
Greek Reporter: "Christopher Nolan’s The Odyssey Global Tour Skips Greece"
Entertainment Weekly: "Where was The Odyssey filmed? Inside the six countries that brought Homer's epic to life"
People: "See the Star-Studded Cast of The Odyssey"
Hellenic Film Commission:
Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences: Representation and Inclusion Standards
Encyclopaedia Britannica: Homer and The Odyssey background information
The British Museum: Ancient Greece and Bronze Age Mycenaean culture resources
Metropolitan Museum of Art: Mycenaean art and archaeology resources
















