'300' The Movie - The Workout!
We’ve
seen plenty of talk about the rippled abs of the actors who play the
Spartans in the recent movie “300.” So what did these actors do to shape up
for the role? You’re about to get an insight into the rigorous and
very demanding workouts these guys took on.
The Director of the movie wanted to depict a Spartan army that was
lean and cruel, rippled with muscle built from the hardships of
living in Sparta. He wanted his actors to train like those
warriors would have trained, with the trust in each other that
would show onscreen and captivate (and forcibly salivate) the
naughty dreams of women around the world.
So he called up Gym Jones, notable insane training facility - it's
basically Fight Club for fitness - and these guys ripped the
actors apart and sewed them back together with ironwood bark!
The '300' Spartan Workout Routine
For a little taste, here's the circuit that they do to measure
performance:
"25x Pull-up
50x Deadlift @ 135#
50x Push-up
50x Box Jump @ 24” box
50x Floor Wiper @ 135# (one-count)
50x KB Clean and Press @ 36# (KB must touch floor between reps)
25x Pull-up
300 reps total"
....in less than 20 minutes.
Probably one of the more interesting philosophies behind this
workout scheme is that the trainers didn't want to turn the
actors into bodybuilders. They wanted to recreate the conditions
of the Greek warriors, shaping the modern man into a man that
could throw a javelin further.
It's similar to the elite training that you get in Rugby, which is
a very war-like sport... the biggest difference, I'd say, is
that Gym Jones encourages a psychological battering, and they
deprive you of hearty sustenance, to simulate conditions in
Sparta.
Rugby players work hard, but they, at the very least, have the
pleasure of sitting down to a big feed. Amen
In
a recent interview with Gerard Butler who plays King Leonidas
said “I started training about four months before the film,
maybe even longer than that. I started in LA and we had the
trainer from the film Mark Twight, so I was training with him
and he has a very particular style of training, but I also kept
my own trainer so I was training with two guys every day - so
that was about four hours of that. (Laughing) Yeah, I kind of
overdid it. Then I also, on top of that, had to go into the
valley in LA and do two hours of sword fighting and shield and
spear work as well, because a lot of guys use swords but it’s
actually learning to use a spear is a whole different thing. And
starting to work on some of the maneuvers so I was doing that
six hours a day, every day.
Then I started the dialect coaching and then went up to Canada
and did the same thing. I got another trainer outside and kept
training with Mark and trained on set while we were filming and
pumping before shots. I really, really, really kind of devoted
my life to the physicality because, to me, that’s what the
Spartans were about. They were so devoted and dedicated to that
kind of life, that kind of philosophy, that kind of culture –
and that’s what I did."
ABOUT THE WORKOUT
The first misconception is that we used a bodybuilding-type
program of progressive overload and over-feeding with the goal
of making the guys look huge. We took the opposite route of
calorie restriction to make them look like they lived off the
land, in the wild, all sinewy and ripped. The diet was adequate
to fuel effort and recovery, barely. And we prescribed random
physical challenges to keep them off balance, to ensure they
never knew what was coming, to cause a stress-reaction, to break
them, to make them look bad in front of each other, which
eventually led them to trust one another. Trust made them
willing to go all the way to the edge in each other’s company
because that’s what the film was about: laying it on the line.
Because fight training and conditioning and eating took place in
the same facility – essentially in the same room – the actors
and the stunt crew did everything under the watchful eyes of
everyone else. Dietary slip-ups were noted, nods given when a
particularly hard effort put forth, and general awe expressed
when complex choreography was executed without flaw.
Our general approach and attitude, the movements and activities
were new to many. Some, of course, resisted while others took to
the process with unusual zeal. Our goal, outlined by director
Zack Snyder was to “turn them into a gang,” a unified force
whose trust and belief in one another would be obvious on the
screen. The first step of any such project is to earn the
respect and belief of the trainees. Zack helped by charging the
cannons himself, training with us 3-5 days a week. On those days
cast and crew arrived in the gym at 8:30am to find Zack’s
workout already posted on the whiteboard. Knowing he got up and
had already earned his calories for the day spurred them to
higher levels of effort. “Some of us wake up, others roll over
...”
The cast and stunt crew also had to be fit and athletic enough to
handle the fight training, choreography and execution led by
Damon Caro and Chad Stahelski. To achieve the objectives we
adopted the following mission statement: appearance is a
consequence of fitness and this ideal guided our work. My
assistant, Logan Hood and I were part team-builder, part
corruptor, part coach, and part punisher. We led by example and
despite some overuse injuries, which are to be expected since we
were in the gym 10-12 hours a day, five days a week for four
months, our own fitness improved along with the men we trained.
In one interview Gerry Butler summed up his experience with us
when he said, "Pretty much anything Mark Twight offered up was
so difficult in the kind of way where you wish you had never
been born - and even more than that, wished he had never been
born."
To ensure that the guys would last for the entire project we
addressed recovery as well as hard work in our process: we had a
massage therapist on-site every day and a kinesiologist visited
twice per week to treat anyone ailing. Our work had the
unintended consequence of keeping the stunt crew healthy. "It
was a tremendous help as far as injury prevention, stamina, and
overall focus," says Caro. "With fight choreography, you only
have a certain amount of time for physical training because it
sometimes doesn't mesh with the functional application. What
Mark brought to the project was functional strength, not just
sculpted biceps or ripped abs." In this case, “functional” means
fitness appropriate to the task, and the positive result means
the artificial training was highly transferable. The methods we
used were right for this job. A different objective would be
achieved by different means. In our work the task drives the
method.
The method was sometimes harsh – anyone who fell off the bus over
the weekend got smashed in the gym on Monday – the pressure
turned some rough raw material into real gems. And this is
apparent on the big screen.
The second misconception surrounds the idea of the Spartan
workout, aka “300”, how frequently it was done or who actually
finished it. “300” is a one-time test, an invitation-only
challenge undertaken by those deemed ready for it. By the end of
our four-month project 17 people had done the workout (Logan and
I were two of them). This constitutes about 50% of the cast and
stunt crew. We supervised every test, evaluated each rep for
quality and only counted those that achieved our standards for
form and range of motion. Like many workouts “300” is not hard
once you’ve done it but the apprehension built up ahead of it –
something we encouraged – was enough to make some guys fear it
to the degree that performance was compromised. This workout was
a crucible that some passed through and others still have
hanging over them.
As for the training done on a regular basis there were no
consistent, structured workouts. In fact, very few ever repeated
a workout during the four-month voyage. The point was to improve
fitness and facility across a variety of movements and through
the three-dimensional range-of-motion required by the fighting.
We did this by constantly changing the challenges, and focusing
on athleticism to build a balanced foundation of general
physical capacity. Butler commented that my idea of a workout is
to "go until you are actually in fear of your life and then go
further. Then, you do more." He drew the connection between the
physical and the psychological when he said, "It was
preparation, too, for the mindset of King Leonidas. The Spartans
were trained to be the best, and why be bashful about being the
best? We, the Spartans, know who we are so completely that
there's no way an outsider can understand." And, I suppose, this
is more or less the way we described and prescribed the training
for this project: the physical difficulties prepared the mind
for the role.
Did it work? It worked for those who did the work, who paid
attention, and who controlled what they put in their mouths. We
reinforced those who started with their own self-discipline but
we could not give discipline to anyone who didn’t already have
it. In the end Vincent Regan shed 40 pounds in eight weeks, and
took his deadlift from less than bodyweight (205) to more than
double-bodyweight (355). He could pull 85% of 1RM blindfolded
and recite Shakespeare in the midst of the toughest training
session. Andrew Pleavin trained with us for just five weeks. He
increased his maximum number of pull-ups from 6 to 23, rowed
500m in 1:25.6 and 5000m in 18:12, and he finished “300” in
18:11. Some of the stunt crew experienced similar changes, and
their work capacity was – in most cases – higher. Even the ones
who were relatively fit when they showed up increased their
overall fitness by having weaknesses exposed and prodded.