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Thread: TOP 12 movies about antiquity from the years 1951-1964

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  1. #1
    Member Member Alexander the Pretty Good's Avatar
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    Default Re: TOP 12 movies about antiquity from the years 1951-1964

    Quote Originally Posted by Lemur View Post
    There are some gems you're missing such as:

    I, Claudius (BBC, 1976) — looks very dated in production values, but a stellar script and wonderful cast make up for the visual shortfalls. Derek Jacobi as Claudius? Yes, please! John Hurt as a whiny Caligula? Yes please!

    Spartacus: Blood and Sand (Starz, 2010) — Unbelievably trashy and gory, but surprisingly faithful to history. Best depiction of the master/slave relationship that I've yet seen onscreen, not to mention getting an awful lot of things right about gladiators and their weird status as slaves and rock stars. A few episodes of this will leave you far better-educated than that hulking, stinking, lumbering monstrosity called Gladiator.

    Rome (HBO, 2005) — A little bit compressed, and I found a laconic Caesar kinda hard to take, but this show made a real effort to get things right.
    Does Spartacus get better after the first episode? My friend (who's taste in media I seriously question) recommended it to me. I couldn't take the 300-ripoff special effects and ludicrous style decisions (the Thracians as extremely stereotypical barbarians and the Getae as... mutants?) when it was combined with the whole "our village was just massacred and everyone we know is dead... so lets bone!" scene. I mean, really? Talk about not putting your best foot forward...

  2. #2
    One of the Undutchables Member The Stranger's Avatar
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    Default Re: TOP 12 movies about antiquity from the years 1951-1964

    Spartacus is entertaining and does better than most shows that have aired recently in that aspect.

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  3. #3
    Camel Lord Senior Member Capture The Flag Champion Martok's Avatar
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    Default Re: TOP 12 movies about antiquity from the years 1951-1964

    Quote Originally Posted by Alexander the Pretty Good View Post
    Does Spartacus get better after the first episode? My friend (who's taste in media I seriously question) recommended it to me. I couldn't take the 300-ripoff special effects and ludicrous style decisions (the Thracians as extremely stereotypical barbarians and the Getae as... mutants?) when it was combined with the whole "our village was just massacred and everyone we know is dead... so lets bone!" scene. I mean, really? Talk about not putting your best foot forward...
    Yeah, I'm not a fan either. Some of my friends tried to get me into the series as well, but the gratuitous sex & violence (which seemed to serve no purpose other than to stimulate the physical senses) was a bit too over-the-top for me.
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    Nobody expects the Senior Member Lemur's Avatar
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    Default Re: TOP 12 movies about antiquity from the years 1951-1964

    Quote Originally Posted by Alexander the Pretty Good View Post
    Does Spartacus get better after the first episode?
    I would say that the first episode or two are the low point of the series. Yes, the portrait of the Getae is all wrong, and the Tracians are carrying the wrong gear, and so on and so forth. Things improve vastly when the action centers on Capua.

    There's one other massively ahistorical plotline, but I forgive them. They get enough right for me to be generous.

    And as Martok indicates, if you are put off by truly gratuitous sex and violence, you'll have a hard time appreciating the rest of what they have to offer.

  5. #5
    Member Member Alexander the Pretty Good's Avatar
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    Default Re: TOP 12 movies about antiquity from the years 1951-1964

    Quote Originally Posted by Lemur View Post
    I would say that the first episode or two are the low point of the series. Yes, the portrait of the Getae is all wrong, and the Tracians are carrying the wrong gear, and so on and so forth. Things improve vastly when the action centers on Capua.

    There's one other massively ahistorical plotline, but I forgive them. They get enough right for me to be generous.

    And as Martok indicates, if you are put off by truly gratuitous sex and violence, you'll have a hard time appreciating the rest of what they have to offer.
    I guess I'll give it another shot eventually. Any of those elements (gratuitous historical inaccuracy, gratuitous sex, and gratuitous violence) don't really bother me, just the combination in the first episode was off-putting.

  6. #6
    REX POLONIAE Moderator KLAssurbanipal's Avatar
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    Default Re: TOP 12 movies about antiquity from the years 1951-1964

    Arranging this list I was guided by a certain type, genre films. In the years 1951 to 1965 formed the specific historical movies about Ancient period, based on a diagram. Movies of 1950-65 were a great spectacle, epic super productions with great characterization. TM were close to each other technically, directing. After 1965 they started making movies differently. These movies had a completely different climate.

    Yes, I like these movies and a style of this period. These aren't consistent with history. But I love this epic style. I treat them as enjoyable time, not a history lesson. :)
    Last edited by KLAssurbanipal; 03-15-2012 at 19:24.

  7. #7
    Senior Member Senior Member Graphic's Avatar
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    Default Re: TOP 12 movies about antiquity from the years 1951-1964

    Not a big fan of sword and sandal epics from this time period because they're way too melodramatic and like a play. The main draw seems to have been the spectacle of thousands of extras, as the writing and acting is usually, while adequate, stiff and frankly boring.

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