Perseus: The Greek Myth

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The myth is a rather interesting one, as it starts off with the King of Argos, Acrisius, travels to the Oracle of Delphi and is told that his daughter will have a son who is destined to kill him. He takes extreme measures to make sure that doesn’t come true and locks his daughter, Danae, inside a tower so that she has no way to conceive. It is almost like an overprotective father in current times, where they never let their daughters go anywhere or be anywhere near boys. However, just like an overprotective father, you can’t always keep your eye on your daughter 24/7, so of course chaos erupts. Zeus, who has been unfaithful to his wife Hera for quite a while now, is unfaithful again when he spots Danae through a portal of her ceiling. He transforms into a shower of gold (again we see the color gold incorporated in a Greek myth) and has sex with her, and thus, Perseus is conceived. Eventually Acrisius finds out about the baby, and locks both Danae and Perseus in a chest and throws it into the sea. …show more content…

Yes and no, but mainly no. In the film, Acrisius and Danae are husband and wife, not father and daughter. Additionally, Zeus impregnates Danae because Acrisius rebelled against the Gods and tried to attack Olympus. Perseus is still conceived, and Acrisius is still very angry about it. He still locks both Danae and Perseus in something. In the film, he lock them in a coffin, but in the myth, it is mentioned that he locked them inside a chest. Now, it is 100 percent known if it really was a chest, or if it was a coffin or just some sort of box, so this can count as an inaccuracy, depending on your point of view. Furthermore, Danae dies in the film, while in the myth, she is still alive, and is pursued by Polydectes, the King of Seraphs, which is the island that Perseus and Danae wash up

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