 |
|
 |
 |
Gladiator |
 |
Ancient Rome is thriving. After General
Maximus leads the Roman legions to victory in
their final battle against the Germanic tribes,
he longs for nothing more than to return to his
wife, son and farm in Spain. But Emperor
Marcus Aurelius has other plans. Knowing
that Maximus holds the utmost loyalty to him
and to Rome—and not trusting his own son
and heir apparent, Commodus—the aging
emperor asks Maximus to succeed him on the
throne.
The depraved Commodus gets wind of
this and arranges for Maximus to
disappear—permanently. Maximus escapes
his assassins but winds up as a slave to
Proximo, a trainer of gladiators. The general,
who becomes a slave forced to fight to
entertain the man who tried to have him
murdered, plots revenge.
Positive Elements: Maximus is a
man of honor and is incorruptible. He turns
down an opportunity for power and riches
because it violates the principles for which he
stands. He tells the decadent Commodus,
"What we do in life echoes into eternity." He
tells a scheming Lucilla, "I never acquired your
comfort for lying." Three gladiators form a
bond of friendship and self-sacrifice to help
each other. And, in a back-door way of
affirming what is good, the evil Commodus
gets his comeuppance in the end.
Spiritual Content: Many
references to "the gods." Maximus talks about
the "Elysian Fields," a paradise of classical
mythology. Maximus carries small statues to
represent his family and ancestors and prays
to them. The film several times shows
Maximus imagining meeting his family in the
afterlife, symbolized by going through a door
into wide, green fields.
Sexual Content: Nothing explicit.
There is a barely hinted-at past between
Maximus and Lucilla, and the film leaves open
the question of whether Lucilla’s son, Lucius,
is Maximus’ child. A gladiator master asks a
man, "What do you want, a girl? A boy?"
Commodus makes several incestuous
advances against his sister, Lucilla.
Violent Content: Frequent and
extreme. The film opens with a headless
Roman soldier on horseback and the
Germanic leader taunting the Romans with
the soldier’s head. Opening battle scene
shows men impaled by spears, pinned to
trees by arrows, and frequent killing by sword.
Gladiatorial combat features just about every
possible way to kill a man short of nuclear
weapons. To his credit, Director Scott does
not dwell on gore; once the point is made that
a man has been killed, the camera moves
elsewhere. Still, the gruesome images burn
deep.
Crude or Profane Language: A
woman is called a b--ch. One s-word.
Drug and Alcohol Content: Little.
Emperor drinks wine.
Summary: Gladiator is a
great film cinematically. The acting is powerful
and the story is strong, even if it is a bit of a
rehash of the Ben-Hur story—without the
redemptive ending. Still, I left the theater
feeling vaguely ill-at-ease, and it took me
several hours to figure out why. I then realized
that the degeneracy shown on
screen—Emperor Commodus happily
clapping his hands as a gladiator is
decapitated, the crowd roaring its
bloodlust—is too close to some forms of
entertainment today, particularly professional
wrestling. The gladiators of Rome took on
certain contrived personalities, and
gladiatorial combat was intended to tell some
sort of story, just like today’s equivalent of
gladiatorial entertainment. And as the crowd’s
appetite was whetted by increasingly bizarre
and violent combat, so too are today’s
wrestling maniacs. Gladiator serves as
an object lesson as to what can happen to a
society that proceeds down such a violent
path. The extreme violence used to create that
lesson, however, prohibits children and teens
(and will dissuade many adults) from getting a
chance to experience it.
DVD Update: DreamWorks
really pulled out all the stops for its DVD
presentation of Gladiator. Of course,
the usual extras are there. Theatrical trailers.
Television commercials. A gallery of full-color
photographs. Even an option that allows
viewers to hear running commentary by the
filmmakers throughout the motion picture
(director Ridley Scott, editor Pietro Scalia and
director of photography John Mathieson). But
that’s just the beginning. There’s so much
material that the studio needed to include a
second disc to hold all of these
fascinating features:
STILLS & STORYBOARDS:
Gladiator’s photo gallery includes well
over 100 stills, with dozens showing how set
designers recreated ancient Rome and its
majestic Colosseum. Another section shows
scores of conceptual drawings and original
storyboards that map out action sequences
like a comic book (a brutally graphic one with
violent shots charted in detail). A link also
describes an omitted scene in which a
rhinoceros is released into the arena to wreak
havoc on combatants.
"MAKING OF" SPECIAL: A 30-minute
behind-the-scenes look at Gladiator
captures both the greatness and corruption of
the Roman empire. It takes viewers to filming
locations such as Morocco and Malta. It also
emphasizes the cinematic choreography of
Gladiator’s extreme violence (showing
the filming from a distance with ball-capped
crew and boom microphones in full view),
which takes the edge off the carnage
somewhat and looks more like big kids in
costume playing war. Viewers get mini history
lessons and a deeper appreciation for the
movie’s remarkable art direction and set
design. They’ll also meet a Russell Crowe far
less stoic and irritated than he typically
appears on camera. Instead of looking like
he’s been baptized in lemon juice, the Aussie
actor displays a delightful sense of humor and
is quite likable in these interview clips from
the set.
INTERVIEW WITH HANS ZIMMER: The
brilliant composer behind this film, The
Prince of Egypt, Mission: Impossible 2,
The Lion King and many others offers
audiences an educational glimpse at the
creative process of scoring a film. He talks
about his various forms of inspiration,
"method composing" and how artists in
diverse areas of filmmaking work together as
a team. While very informative, this featurette
flashes some of Gladiator’s most
violent images on the screen behind
Zimmer’s commentary, which is
unfortunate.
SCENES THAT DIDN’T MAKE IT:
Numerous scenes—some of them quite
powerful—landed on the cutting room floor
never to be seen by theater audiences. But
they’re included here. Viewers have the option
of viewing them "as is" or with comments by
director Ridley Scott concerning why those
clips were excised from the final product. One
especially poignant scene finds Maximus in
the underbelly of the Colosseum as lions are
being let into the arena to devour innocent
Christians. It’s not a violent moment, but a
soul-stirring reminder of the price paid by early
Christ followers. This bonus section is not
without its problems, however. Additional
violence appears in the form of men being
burned alive, eaten by vultures and executed
by a firing squad of archers. A fallen
combatant is impaled in the head with a large
spear. The bloody stumps of amputated limbs
are also pretty gruesome.
A CHILD’S JOURNAL: Spencer Treat
Clark, the child actor who plays the role of
heir-apparent Lucius, kept a detailed daily
journal throughout the making of
Gladiator. It is reprinted along with a
veritable scrapbook of photos and
memorabilia from his tour of duty on the set.
It’s a unique and interesting backstage pass
that offers a look at the filmmaking process
through the eyes of a boy. If there’s a down
side, it’s how he takes pleasure in describing
some of the movie’s more graphic scenes
and how they were shot.
HOUR-LONG DOCUMENTARY: The
crown jewel of this package may be "Gladiator
Games: The Roman Bloodsport," a riveting,
hour-long documentary peppered with film
footage. The emphasis is on revisiting Roman
culture and understanding the historical
significance of gladiatorial combat. Interviews
with academicians and archaeologists offer
tremendous insights, not just into the nature
of brutal entertainment and its stranglehold on
one of the world’s largest civilizations, but into
the cultural climate that is connected with so
much of New Testament history. From Jesus
to Paul, vital figures of the faith spoke of and
interacted with the people and leadership of
Rome.
The documentary explains the dual social
status of the gladiator—an outcast who can
become a superstar, if only for a short time. It
analyzes the lure of wealth, fame and possible
freedom. And the bloodlust of ancient times is
compared to modern sport. Professor Andrew
Wallace-Hadrill, director of the British School
of Rome, addresses the issue of
desensitization by stating, "The Romans, the
more they watched, the more they see people
being killed, the more used to it they become
and the more indifferent to it, morally, they
become." Its similarity to modern pop culture
isn’t lost on Professor David Potter, who
teaches Greek and Latin at the University of
Michigan. He explains, "We think that it’s so
beyond our comprehension that we can’t
understand how 80,000 people could watch
people wave swords at each other in the
Colosseum. On the other hand, you turn on
television nowadays any day of the week and
you’ll see wild animal attacks, advertisements
for people being washed away in floods and
what have you."
Indeed, some might not unreasonably
argue that Gladiator exploits that very
mentality, pandering to the bloodlust of
desensitized audiences. It grossed more than
$180 million in the U.S. alone and features
extreme violence. And while some of that
carnage spills over into these DVD extras,
DreamWorks has certainly created an
engaging, often educational bonus
package.
DVD special features review by Bob
Smithouser
eNewsletter
Mobile
|
 |