Film review Familiar plot but maximised Mescal ensures you will still be entertained
The Guardian|November 12, 2024
What's Latin for "Groundhog Day"? Once upon a time, Russell Crowe's beefy hero Maximus in Ridley Scott's sword-and-sandal classic Gladiator was the honest soldier outside the snickering metropolitan elite, out to gain vengeance and redeem Roman honour in the blood-spattered arena, his raw courage exposing the politicians' contemptible decadence.
Peter Bradshaw
Film review Familiar plot but maximised Mescal ensures you will still be entertained

His defiant cry "Are you not entertained?" spoke to the showbiz-political complex of our own time and when it was alleged last year that most men thought about ancient Rome every day, the suspicion was that what they were actually thinking about was that film.

Now we are a generation along, and little has changed, in fact almost nothing. This sequel is watchable and spectacular, with the Colosseum created not digitally but as a gobsmacking one-to-one scale physical reconstruction with real crowds. Yet this film is weirdly almost a next-gen remake, recreating almost every narrative component of the original in a variant form, the events of the first film echoing in franchise eternity.

For me, its existence means injuring the original's innocence ever so slightly. Maximus was famously devoted to the memory of his murdered wife and son, though it seemed as if there had once been some emotional history, before his marriage, between him and the emperor's daughter Lucilla (Connie Nielsen), who has a boy of her own. Well, that boy turns out to have been Maximus's. Who knew? Maybe not Maximus.

This story is from the November 12, 2024 edition of The Guardian.

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This story is from the November 12, 2024 edition of The Guardian.

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