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| Original Title |
Gladiator |
| Director |
Ridley Scott |
| Genre |
Drama, Action |
| Released |
2000-05-1 |
| MPAA Rating |
Rated R for intense, graphic combat. |
| Rated |
8 |
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| Maximus is a powerful Roman general, loved by the people and the aging Emperor, Marcus Aurelius. Before his death, the Emperor chooses Maximus to be his heir over his own son, Commodus, and a power struggle leaves Maximus and his family condemned to death. The powerful general is unable to save his family, and his loss of will allows him to get captured and put into the Gladiator games until he dies. The only desire that fuels him now is the chance to rise to the top so that he will be able to look into the eyes of the man who will feel his revenge. |
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| Russell Crowe as Maximus , Joaquin Phoenix as Commodus , Connie Nielsen as Lucilla , Oliver Reed as Proximo , Richard Harris as Emperor Marcus Aurelius , Derek Jacobi as Senator Gracchus , Djimon Hounsou as Juba , David Schofield as Falco , John Shrapnel as Gaius , Tomas Arana as Quintus , David Hemmings as Cassius , Ralf Moeller as Hagen , Spencer Treat Clark as Lucius , Tommy Flanagan as Cicero , Sven-Ole Thorsen as Tigris |
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Is Crowe the 'next action hero?'
Germania, 150 AD, the setting of Gladiator's opening scene. Far from the
blazing sun and dazzlingly beauty of ancient Rome, Ridley Scott shoots the
opening sequence in a subdued light. The Roman legions are nonetheless
impeccably turned out as they face the comparatively disorganised rabble
that inhabits this miserable environment. Caesar's soldiers seem somewhat
misplaced here. However, Russell Crowe is at home in this environment of
knee-deep mud and merciless snow. He commands the screen with all the
virtues of his motto: ‘Strength and Honour.'
The plot, with its hero-to-zero-to-hero nature, runs through Gladiator's
every vein. As General Maximus, Russell Crowe is welcomed by Marcus
Aurelius
Caesar (Richard Harris) to take the Roman throne as Emperor of a new
Republic. All does not run smoothly however as mislead heir to the throne
Commodus (Phoenix) takes over Rome with ill-gotten domination, having
dispatched his own Father. Maximus is cast out to find his family murdered
and his Spanish farm burnt to the ground. Taken in as a slave by Proximo
(Reed), Maximus becomes a Gladiator and starts his journey to the Coliseum
and revenge against Commodus.
Scott's cast is powerful and he is not left wanting as powerful
performances
are delivered by all. Due to his untimely mid-production death, Oliver Reed
is created in some scenes by the grace of computer graphics, which are as
convincing as they come; sometimes making it difficult to differentiate
between Reed himself and his computerised counterpart.
It is, however, the supporting actors who create many of Gladiator's best
dialogue-based scenes. In an accomplished demonstration of her acting
ability as Lucilla, Connie Nielsen saves the occasional scene as Joaquim
Phoenix shows us that he can ‘do evil', but is less convincing when it
comes
to the more emotional qualities of his role.
As a vehicle for the plot, Scott's beautifully created and highly symbolic
(there is an image of fire in nearly every shot of the film) dialogue
scenes
are of a certain merit with digitally created backgrounds that encompass
the
meticulous nature of the Roman Empire. However, dialogue alone does not an
epic movie make, and it is in the film's spectacular action sequences that
Gladiator come into its own. Shot on location in Malta, Scott's first arena
was built by an army of locals and commanded some 5000 extras (a large
majority of whom were of a cardboard variety). All of this pales in
comparison as we arrive in a digitally created Rome which makes some scenes
in Ben Hur some somewhat small scale. The Coliseum is immense, both inside
and out, and the computerised provides the electric atmosphere in which
Crowe and his feline companions (four sizeable, and real, Bengal tigers)
perform.
The battle sequences are perfectly choreographed and shot as iconic masks
and typically Roman chariots are abundant in their power and imagery. As
swords clash and heads roll, Ridley Scott is triumphant in the application
of special effects technology and his directorial prowess.
Always one to embrace technology, Scott's views over Rome's landscape are
reminiscent of the beautifully created cityscape of Blade Runner. This is a
film that fears so little and boasts so much, even a lady archer being
sliced clean in half by a spiked chariot wheel!
All those involved with Gladiator should be delighted and confident with
their creation, for indeed this is a convincing and enthralling display
with
epic proportions to take the wind from James Cameron's titanic
sails.
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