Review of Gladiator (1992) by Alasdair B — 01 Feb 2014
Popular sword and sandals epic follows the basic outline of "The Fall of the Roman Empire" with rousing, violent battles staged like WWF fights. Russell Crowe is Maximus, a Roman general who seeks revenge for the death of his family and emperor Marcus Aurelius (Richard Harris), at the hands of the new emperor Commodus (Joaquin Phoenix).
Maximus, who is forced to become a slave then a gladiator, is presented as a warrior who fights only out of duty or necessity. His moral superiority feels fraudulent. Hokey dialogue abounds over the afterlife.
Still, it is often enjoyable. Commodus is shown to be a vain weasel with no scruples. The muscular Crowe gives a commanding performance. Its easy to imagine soldiers following his lead and crowds cheering for him.
Phoenix is enjoyably hammy. Digitally enhanced effects of large crowds often looks fake. Stirring score by Hans Zimmer. Written by David Franzoni, John Logan, William Nicholson. Directed with usual visual flair by Ridley Scott.
With Connie Nielsen, Djimon Hounsou, Derek Jacobi, David Hemmings, and Oliver Reed in his final role. Won Oscars for Best Picture, Actor (Crowe), Costume Design, Sound, Visual Effects.
This review of Gladiator (1992) was written by Alasdair B on 01 Feb 2014.
Gladiator has generally received positive reviews.
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