First of all, the George Clooney character's middle name is Ulysses (the Latin version of Odysseus.) LIke Odysseus, he has been imprisoned before the film starts (Odyssues is held captive by a beautiful nymph and Everett/ Ulysses is in a chain gang, but they both want to escape.) They also both want to go home to their wives -Oysseus to Penelope and Ulysses to Penny - and both wives are being courted by other men.
On the way, they encounter some similar adventures. The episode with the "fishing girls" who rob Pete and apparently turn him into a frog, echoes two incidents in the Odyssey. There is the enchantress Circe, who sleeps with men and then turns them into pigs; and the Sirens, who sing to sailors and lure them to their deaths. Odysseu manages to outwit both.
Cyclops, the one-eyed giant, is similar to the "travelling salesman" who attacks the three friends. The way Everett comes home, winning fame and fortune, is also similar to Oysseus' final triumph. The characters of the two men are rather similar too - both are a bit untrustworthy, but brave, resourceful and basically good-hearted.
The film actually opens with a line from the Odyssey, but I can't remember what it is.
On the way, they encounter some similar adventures. The episode with the "fishing girls" who rob Pete and apparently turn him into a frog, echoes two incidents in the Odyssey. There is the enchantress Circe, who sleeps with men and then turns them into pigs; and the Sirens, who sing to sailors and lure them to their deaths. Odysseu manages to outwit both.
Cyclops, the one-eyed giant, is similar to the "travelling salesman" who attacks the three friends. The way Everett comes home, winning fame and fortune, is also similar to Oysseus' final triumph. The characters of the two men are rather similar too - both are a bit untrustworthy, but brave, resourceful and basically good-hearted.
The film actually opens with a line from the Odyssey, but I can't remember what it is.