My language in college was Ancient Greek (two terms of Homeric, one Koine) and we read the
Illiad, or at least the first parts of it, in Homer's native tongue.
The biggest criticism of the
Troy movie that I've read and agreed with is the way the roles of the gods were more or less neutered from the story. It's nearly a "secularized" version of the tale.
RE: iron weapons, I did some research on this subject during the writing of
Regarding Tiberius. It wasn't as if a switch was flipped and iron weapons popped up and made bronze weapons instantly obsolete. Bronze alloys can altered to enhance hardness or ductility, and cast into beautiful examples of craftsmanship. Iron was a mixed bag--no carbon and it's soft, too much carbon and it's brittle. The ONLY advantage to iron weapons initially was cost: bronze is a copper/tin allow, and tin is rare--in the ancient world, you had to import it from places like Britain at great expense. Iron ore was more abundant.
The best example of late-Bronze era weapon technology is the one found in China from the 3rd Century B.C.:
http://www.ancient-origins.net/news-history-archaeology/3000-year-old-bronze-sword-discovered-china-002051It was a bi-metallic casting (higher tin alloy to make the edges harder, lower for the inner tang to prevent breakage). In some areas the blade was still so sharp that it could cut the hands of the archeologists studying it.
Here is a video of a YouTube weapons aficionado putting a bronze sword through some impressive tests:
https://youtu.be/ngjMtzJ6xgQSo when Pitt dispatches that huge muscle-bound character in the beginning of the film, I think the blade technology of bronze weaponry makes that scene at least somewhat plausible.
One other advantage to bronze swords is that they are highly resistant to corrosion. It isn't all too rare to dig around in certain areas of Britain and unearth one. Compare that to finding Roman-era iron weapons, which are typically rusted to nothing, even though they numbered in the hundreds of thousands, if not millions. Discovering one completely intact is nothing short of miraculous.