Great flick but I thought Beowulf was Sean Bean from Lord of the Rings right up until the credits rolled.
Two different characters but the link between Beowulf and Boromir is JRR Tolkien.
Beowulf is an epic poem of English/Anglo-Saxon origins.
The great Beowulf scholar, J. R. R. Tolkien, noted that the name Beowulf almost certainly meant bee-wolf in Old English. The name Beowulf is therefore a kenning (compound word as a poetic device) for "bear".
J. R. R. Tolkien believed the translation by J. J. Earle was not accurate, and did not convey the meaning or symbolism of the storyline or the beauty of the prose of the poem.
Beowulf exercised an important influence on J. R. R. Tolkien, who wrote the landmark essay Beowulf: The Monsters and the Critics while a professor at Oxford University. Tolkien also translated the poem, which the Tolkien Society has recently decided to publish. Grendel and Grendel's mother were the inspiration for the Orcs in The Lord of the Rings trilogy (see also the Old English word orcneas, which makes but a single appearance in the poem).
Many parallels can also be drawn between Beowulf and Tolkien's works; almost analogous images include, but are not limited to, the likeness between the Anglo-Saxons and the Men of Rohan, the upsetting of a dragon through the stealing of a chalice by a thief, and the subsequent destruction of the land surrounding the dragon's hoard.
A connection between Grendel and Gollum has also been purported.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Beowulf---Boromir was a character in Lord of the Rectums.
Boromir in LOTR.Boromir was a valiant warrior known in Gondor for his greatness, having already achieved great merit in Gondor prior to the Council of Elrond. He was the eldest son of Denethor II, who was Steward of Gondor during the War of the Ring, and his wife Finduilas aka Queen Vissy.
Even the people of Rohan admired him, particularly Éomer.
---Don't forget the Beowulf-movie with Highlander Connor McLeod et al.