Asurprisingly apt companion piece to Paths of Glory in its consideration of the mechanisms of power.
Spartacus (1960)
Tomatometer
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Reviews Counted:43
Fresh:41
Rotten:2
Average Rating:8.1/10
Consensus: Featuring terrific performances and epic action, Kubrick’s restored swords-and-sandals epic is a true classic.
Theatrical Release:09-06-2009
Synopsis: SPARTACUS, based on Howard Fast's popular novel, is Stanley Kubrick's glorious masterpiece about a slave uprising in Rome in 70 B.C. Kirk Douglas, who also served as executive producer, stars as... SPARTACUS, based on Howard Fast's popular novel, is Stanley Kubrick's glorious masterpiece about a slave uprising in Rome in 70 B.C. Kirk Douglas, who also served as executive producer, stars as the title character, a man born of a slave woman and a slave master who has known nothing but chains his entire life. After being forced to put on a gladiator show--that almost leads to his death--for wealthy Romans (including a marvelously conniving Laurence Olivier as the power-hungry Crassus), Spartacus leads a slave revolt across Italy that soon has thousands marching on Rome. Meanwhile, he has fallen in love with the beautiful Varinia (an effervescent Jean Simmons), pledging his life to her. Douglas assembled a fabulous all-star cast for the film; in addition to himself, Simmons, and Olivier, terrific performances are turned in by Charles Laughton as the curmudgeonly senator Gracchus, John Gavin as the young Julius Caesar, Tony Curtis as Antoninus (a "singer of songs," with all lines delivered in a beautifully thick New York accent), and especially Peter Ustinov, an Oscar winner for his portrayal of the businessman Batiatus, who always wants to know what's in it for him. Blacklisted writer Dalton Trumbo's melodramatic script and Alex North's thrilling, soaring score add a majesty that helps make SPARTACUS one of the finest costume epics to ever come out of Hollywood. [More]
Starring: Kirk Douglas, Jean Simmons, Laurence Olivier, Charles Laughton
Starring: Kirk Douglas, Jean Simmons, Laurence Olivier, Charles Laughton, Peter Ustinov, Tony Curtis, John Gavin, Nina Foch
Director: Stanley Kubrick
Director: Stanley Kubrick
Screenwriter: Dalton Trumbo
Producer: Edward Lewis
Composer: Alex North
Reviews for Spartacus
Of all the historical epics, this pretty much takes the biscuit, with an unbelievable cast, incredible cinematography and plenty of quotable scenes.
It is in the observation of human detail, and in many memorable little scenes that the film scores most heavily over other epics, and in which it finds an inner strength.
Douglas is terrific as the iron-jawed slave fuelled by righteous fury.
Though this stuff could have been directed by anyone, the greatness of Spartacus is in the stretches everyone remembers.
The great-granddaddy of Ridley Scott's Gladiator hasn't lost any muscle tone after nearly half a century, and Kirk Douglas's direct, unpretentious performance as the great slave-rebel Spartacus is more engaging than ever.
Director Stanley Kubrick was obviously just collecting a paycheck for this one, though he stages some intricate battle scenes. Too bad he obviously couldn't have cared less about the lame love story and political machinations behind the scenes.
Many scenes ring passionate and rousing, while others are campy and silly, and somehow they all work together.
All in all, where the movie is flawed, it's due to following the cinematic conventions of the era.
Spartacus actually is pretty decent, and worth watching 10 times before giving the far inferior Gladiator a look.
. One of the most widely publicized films of recent years, the $12 million Bryna production has terrific marquee power for class patrons, action fans and teenagers alike, thus insuring boxoffice returns of blockbuster proportions.
It's especially strong, and more typical of Kubrick, in the first half -- before satire gives way to sentiment.
Seeing Spartacus in this restored version, with its original overture, intermission and a few inserted pieces of footage that had been excised after initial screenings, is nothing short of spectacular.
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