Oscar History
Film Bitch History
Welcome

The Film Experience™ was created by Nathaniel R. All material herein is written by our team. (This site is not for profit but for an expression of love for cinema & adjacent artforms.)

Follow TFE on Substackd

Powered by Squarespace
Keep TFE Strong

We're looking for 500... no 390 SubscribersIf you read us daily, please be one.  

I ♥ The Film Experience

THANKS IN ADVANCE

What'cha Looking For?
Subscribe
« Lukewarm off the press: MTV Movie Awards, Dune buzz, Norman Lloyd, etc... | Main | Sophia Loren crowned again in Italy. And other Italian movie awards news. »
Monday
May172021

Gladiator: A dormant genre awakens!

In preparation for the next Smackdown Team Experience is traveling back to 2000

by Cláudio Alves

One way to confirm a work of art's importance and influence - not necessarily its quality - is to see how much subsequent creations tried to imitate it. How many creators have attempted to capture lightning in a bottle for a second time, whether by blatant copy or freeform inspiration? This is especially true of mainstream cinematic successes. A surplus of movies can triumph at the box office any given year. Not nearly as many can claim to have birthed a string of copycats or revived a genre after decades of obscurity. Say what you want about Gladiator, but that Best Picture champion did accomplish such feats, for better and worse… 

The Sword and Sandal genre, also known as peplum movies, peaked during the mid 20th century. However, its origins are significantly older. Usually set in Classical Antiquity, but sometimes reaching the early Medieval period, these productions first came into popularity in Italy during the time of silent cinema. With gigantic sets and innovative techniques, Giovanni Pastrone's Cabiria could be categorized as one of the first and most influential epics of the genre. The flick's success was so great it prompted a franchise-like series and, upon reaching international markets, served as an inspiration to many an ambitious filmmaker. It's not too difficult to draw a straight line from Cabiria to the movies of D.W. Griffith and Cecil B. DeMille. 

Notwithstanding these silent pictures, the Sword and Sandal genre only reached its full potential during the postwar years. Once again, it was an international crossover hit that did the trick. Instead of Cabiria, Alessandro Blasetti's Fabiola, a 1949 period drama that called attention to the possibilities of its national film industry. Hollywood was quick to notice, prompting a decade-long love affair between American filmmakers and the resources of Italian studios, their artistry, their professionals. A good number of these international projects followed the model established by Fabiola, re-telling melodramatic stories of Ancient Rome and Greece, bedecked in splendorous costumes and opulent sets.

BEN-HUR (1959)

Made by MGM, Quo Vadis was one of the first prominent examples of the trend, and The Robe proved to be a historical landmark as the first released feature in Cinemascope. This last title brings attention to a close relationship between Sword and Sandal action cinema and the pomp and circumstance of the Biblical epic. Ben-Hur is a prime example of these two genres' long-lasting marriage. As the 50s gave way to the 60s, the projects got bigger and bigger. Bloated beyond belief, sometimes stagnant, sometimes exciting, there's a lot to admire about the evident ambition as well as the maximalist lavishness. Even when the Italian-only productions vacillated in budget and production value, there's a kitsch appeal to them, a sense of camp that spells away the self-seriousness that plagued a lot of their American counterparts.

Still, all good things must come to an end, and the Sword and Sandal craze of the midcentury collapsed as the 70s dawned and the era of the big Hollywood studio died. In various ways, these expensive old-fashioned creations got so gigantic that the failure of only one of them could threaten a studio's stability, shake it to the chore. As 1963's Cleopatra almost bankrupted 20th Century Fox, it was apparent that the genre's longevity was unsustainable. For the next 30 years, the Hollywood-made Sword and Sandle epic lay primarily dormant, a sleeping giant that only occasionally showed life signs. These tended to come in the form of B-movies, nostalgic curios, or low-budget TV productions. Until Gladiator arrived, that is.

GLADIATOR (2000)

Ridley Scott's Best Picture champion didn't come out of nowhere. One can pinpoint the inspirations beyond its popular aesthetic and narrative tone to two Oscar favorites of the 1990s. Mel Gibson's Braveheart proved that there was money to be made with historical action epics accoutered with loud battle scenes, much bloodiness, and little in the ways of factual accuracy. On a subtler level, Saving Private Ryan was another important touchstone for Scott's bellicose movie. The gristliness of Gladiator's opening battle is a soft bucolic sight in comparison to Spielberg's D-Day sequence, but they play the same function. Furthermore, Gladiator copies Ryan's generous uses of shutter angle manipulation, a jerky mechanism that confers a patina of jumbled realism to the proceedings.

Even if unwittingly, by following in the footsteps of Gibson and Spielberg, Scott found a way of making the old-fashioned genre modern. Everything old is new again, as they say, and Gladiator proved that such a sentiment could be the recipe for astounding success, both with the audience, critics, and awards voters. Personally, I'm not too fond of it as a piece of cinema, but it would be erroneous to call it irrelevant just because it's not to my taste. After the 2000 juggernaut hit it big, the Sword and Sandal picture was suddenly viable again, prompting several studios to greenlit their attempts at replicating the success of Gladiator. Some of these copycats are only similar in genre, while others go so far as to quote scenes, shots, narrative solutions, and more.

TROY (2004)

Of course, because such big movies take a long time to make, the first descendants of Scott's success would only see the light of day a couple of years later. 2004 marked the start of a veritable torrent of derivative works. Troy followed the ethos of Gladiator to a T, only instead of smearing grime on warped history, it proposed to strip mythology out of myth. Wolfgang Peterson's movie of the Iliad does away with Ancient verse, erases the Gods, and attempts to ground the War of Troy in 21st-century psychology. The results are vile, almost laughably afraid of homoeroticism, and not especially exciting to observe. However, audiences didn't mind, and neither did AMPAS. Despite unfavorable reviews, the film managed to nab a Best Costume Design nomination. 

Oliver Stone's Alexander wasn't as lucky, even though the finished product is far more interesting. While the picture is somewhat a failure, the parameters of its disgrace are fascinating to witness, from the sheer excess to the wildly erratic structure. A snake-obsessed Angelina Jolie, a cornucopia of absurd accents and bad wigs, Babylonian couture, warfare as an explosion of fuchsia, this movie has it all! Unlike Troy, Alexander didn't even come close to Oscar glory. The same can't be said about the other child of Braveheart and Gladiator that hit theaters in 2004. Hailed as torture porn by some, a spiritual masterpiece by others, Mel Gibson's The Passion of the Christ was a massive hit. Remember what I said before about Sword and Sandal flicks and Biblical epics always walking hand-in-hand?

If its predecessors were gristly, this dramatization of Jesus' final hours was of such brutality it rivaled most horror movies, gore-wise. Scorsese portrayed Christ's sacrifice by highlighting the humanity of doubt, while Pasolini found transcendence in the political ideals of the messiah's revolution. Gibson had no such lofty ideals in mind, choosing to convey the importance of martyrdom through the pain it entails. In The Passion of the Christ, the sacrifice isn't psychological or spiritual. It's physical, fleshy, sinewy even. Performed in dead languages, shot with a silent film's attention to visual storytelling, it's difficult to argue against the picture's formal value. Fittingly, the Academy recognized the craft of its makeup team, composer, and cinematographer with Oscar nominations.

 KING ARTHUR (2005)

The following entries in the Sword and Sandal canon wouldn't be nearly as lucky. Just as Troy tried to ground Classic mythology in superficial historical stylings and a notion of pseudo-realism, so did Antoine Fuqua's King Arthur. Transposing the Arthurian legends to Roman Britannia isn't a necessarily bad idea, but the blue-tinted mess of a movie does nothing interesting with the concept. Not even the director's cut managed to improve the disaster. The same wasn't true of Kingdom of Heaven, Ridley Scott's epic set during the Crusades. While the theatrical cut is rather shoddy and incoherent, there's much to appreciate about Scott's extended version, including an evenhanded portrayal of Muslim-Christian conflicts during the retaking of Jerusalem by Saladin as well as an excellent performance by Eva Green. The juiciest bits of the actress' work, her character's tragic arc, were originally left on the cutting room floor. 

Indeed, those 2005 flicks aren't strictly Sword and Sandal films, but I think it's safe to include them in this trend of Ancient World epics. They wouldn't have existed without Gladiator, not in the form we currently see them. If you're looking for more traditional examples of the genre, there's plenty of those too. The Last Legion, Agora, Centurion, The Eagle, and others are right there, blood-thirsty and with bared teeth, grimy snarls, and dirt covering every surface. Alternatively, some movies resisted the demystification of the past while keeping the hyper-masculine appeal and love of violence. Some even threw away the pretense of realism, embracing a kind of feverish stylization that bears little resemblance to the midcentury classics. The 300 flicks are the more famous examples, but my personal favorite has to be Tarsem's Immortals.

Maybe it's the combination of anti-naturalistic effects and golden beefcake. Maybe it's Eiko Ishioka's unbridled creativity. Whatever the reason is, I've always had a special place in my heart for that 2011 flop and wish more people talked about it than they do about other, less exciting calamities like Clash of the Titans and Prince of Persia. Not that mediocre cinema doesn't have its appeal when studying a genre's evolution. 2014 didn't include a single triumphant Sword and Sandal movie amidst its releases, but the failures make for a great case study. If nothing else, one can see the sweaty despair of Hollywood hacks in the way such movies as The Legend of Hercules and Pompeii quote Gladiator. The last film is so blatant in its "homage" that it practically steals an entire action set piece from the Ridley Scott movie. I'm referring to an arena-set recreation of a grand Roman victory over barbarian hordes that goes wrong for the warriors playing Rome's heroes.

EXODUS: GODS AND KINGS (2014)

That same year saw Scott return to the genre's paradigms in Exodus: Gods and Kings. Only, this time, he attempted to take the fantastical out of the Old Testament while also turning the Bible into the starting point for a lot of CGI-heavy carnage. The movie's sluggish pace and muddy cinematography are already bad enough before one acknowledges the whitewashed casting. Watching Joel Edgerton pain his face with tanner and heavy eyeliner to appear Egyptian is something I didn't need to see. To add insult to injury, the cast is inept, stuck in a po-faced register that does no one any favors. At least in that same year's 300: Rise of an Empire, Eva Green's on hand to contradict the weightiness of it all with a good dose of unhinged drama. Maybe that's the solution. Possibly every Ancient World epic should include Green in its cast.

The genre hasn't gone into hibernation again, but one can feel it start to abandon the big screen in favor of the small, at least when it comes to expensive productions. Series like Rome, Spartacus, The Bible, Tut, and others, have shown that there's an audience for this TV in the 21st century. It will be interesting to see how much Gladiator's influence continues to exist within this genre as the movie ages. I hope I've made it apparent how much Ridley Scott's Best Picture champion was a game-changer, how it resurrected and reinvented a model of filmmaking. This is, by no means, an exhaustive history of the Sword and Sandal film, in the new millennium and otherwise. Like many genres and subgenres, this kind of cinema is a complicated beast, encompassing such extremes as the Biblical epics of yore and the porno peplum craze of the 80s. Mostly sexless but bathed in blood, viscera, and wine-flavored adrenaline, Gladiator exists somewhere in the middle.

PrintView Printer Friendly Version

EmailEmail Article to Friend

Reader Comments (23)

I've seen Gladiator and Ben-Hur, and I enjoyed them both well enough. I haven't seen any other sword-and-sandals flicks mentioned in the article (although I have seen the adjacent Braveheart and Saving Private Ryan).

I hadn't really thought about it before, but I think it's safe to say that I'm not naturally drawn to these types of films.

May 17, 2021 | Unregistered CommenterCash

At last more Claudio!!!!!!

May 17, 2021 | Unregistered CommenterEtta

It's been 84 years... since the last blog update. lol

May 17, 2021 | Unregistered Commenterbeyaccount

Your article is as epic as the genre, Claudio! And damn **not necessarily its quality ** do you throw some good shade!

May 17, 2021 | Unregistered CommenterKelly Garrett

I think that despite winning the Oscar, Russell Crowe's performance is underappreciated. How easy is it to bring gravitas and dignity to a role that requires the actor to run around in a skirt through the entire movie? I think he did a great job and deserved his award, even if the movie as a whole is a little flat.

May 17, 2021 | Unregistered CommenterAmy Camus

I’m a big fan of Alexander. Yes, everything is out of control, but the visuals are great, Angelina is always classy even unintentionally funny, and we have Vangelis and Rosario Dawson. Gods of Egypt is another guilty pleasure of mine post-Gladiator.

May 17, 2021 | Unregistered CommenterAntônio

Gladiator and Ben hur are enjoyable entertainment. Troy was good but had some flaws. Braveheart is the best movie ever made.

May 17, 2021 | Unregistered CommenterJoe

I absolutely adore Gladiator. Yes, it’s big, dumb, and loud. But it’s also one hell of a crowd pleaser. The action is brutal, the melodrama is thick, and the performances play to the balcony. But it all works under Scott’s cinematic vision of Ancient Rome. It’s a feast of design and detail. Hans Zimmer’s score is iconic. And it has one of the most quotable scripts of all time. I don’t recall a single line from most other Sword and Sandel epics, but Gladiator has some great lines and line readings - “What we do in life echoes in eternity!” “Are you not entertained?” “At my signal unleash hell.” “Death smiles at us all. All a man can do is smile back.” “It vexes me. I’m terribly vexed.” And of course the mini-monologue that won Crowe his Oscar - “
“My name is Maximus Decimus Meridius, commander of the Armies of the North, General of the Felix Legions, loyal servant to the true emperor, Marcus Aurelius. Father to a murdered son, husband to a murdered wife. And I will have my vengeance, in this life or the next.” Gladiator is a modern classic and everything else released in the genre since has paled in comparison. I do adore Scott’s directors cut of Kingdom of Heaven as well. How in the world does Ridley Scott still not have a directing Oscar?

May 17, 2021 | Unregistered CommenterOver It

Also, the last time I saw the film was at Ravinia Festival in Chicago a few years ago. Got to see the film on a giant screen picnicking in the park as the Chicago Symphony Orchestra played Zimmer’s score live to picture. During the climax of the film there was a lightning storm going off in the distance. Truly epic and unforgettable moviegoing experience.

May 17, 2021 | Unregistered CommenterOver It

I find the supporting cast esp Reed,Harris and Nielsen more compelling than Crowe whose great but better elsewhere and more deserving of the Oscar in other years.

May 17, 2021 | Unregistered Commentermarkgordonuk

Exodus: Gods and Kings is as bad as its title is pompous, its Cinematography is unimaginative and its CGI is weak. And what a long, long, long movie, Ridley Scott! A waste of the talent and charm of Christian Bale and Joel Edgerton.

May 17, 2021 | Unregistered CommenterGwen

I’ve got a soft spot for Gladiator, and I do believe it’s the last tried and true “classic” Hollywood ever put out. There isn’t a cynical bone in its body (at the meta-level, mind), and its unabashedly stalwart nature, maintaining the tropes and the cadence of the sword and sandal epic (and the revenge story) earnestly. That Ridley Scott, a master class-man of sumptuous world-building, was at the helm, also makes it a visual feast.

However, I do think Hans Zimmer’s score, in particular the final suite of “Elysian/Honor Him/Now We Are Free” featuring Lisa Gerrard’s otherworldly vocals, provided an emotional catharsis for viewers that helped the story linger in voters’ minds. Crouching Tiger, Hidden Dragon also has an exquisite final act, and the final image is unforgettable, but it’s also quieter and more subtle.

There is nothing subtle about “Now We Are Free” and it is a beautiful song that sends the viewer back to reality with a sense of hope and release that shouts both from the rooftops. It’s my favorite score of the year, and makes the final act of Gladiator something of an evergreen in Scott’s filmography, even if the rest of the film really doesn’t quite transcend or even ascend any new heights.

2000 was a great film year, and Gladiator winning doesn’t bother me. I see it as a passing down the torch, a final farewell to the classics of yore, in order to make room for the new ones to come.

May 17, 2021 | Unregistered CommenterManny

While by no means the best film of 2000 - Requiem for a Dream, American Psycho, O Brother Where art Thou?, Before Night Falls, Chicken Run would have made a better quintet of nominees - it really was the way better film of the Best Picture nominees... the one that actually elevated the surface with a deep allegory on the power of entertainment to manipulate the masses and how even the most arrogant leaders may fall under it.

Gladiator **** 1/2 - B+
Erin Brockovich *** / C
Traffic *** 1/2 / C+
Chocolat ** / D
Crouching Tiger, Hidden Dragon ** / D - and I swear I love Ang Lee movies, normally, but this was "Taoism for dummies"... for the real stuff, go watch Zhang Yimou's "Hero", released in China the following year.

It is one of the weakest BP line ups that I remember...

May 17, 2021 | Unregistered CommenterJesus Alonso

Ben-Hur won 11 Oscars out of 12 nominations, and Gladiator won 5, also out of 12 nominations. The amazing fact is that the 12 nominations were EXACTLY in the same categories!

May 17, 2021 | Unregistered CommenterMarcos

Gladiator... BORING!!!!!!

And yet no one mentions Spartacus..... very disappointed in all of you jabronies.

May 17, 2021 | Unregistered Commenterthevoid99

Marcos: Except that Gladiator's screenplay nomination was in Original and Ben-Hur's was in Adapted.

I love Gladiator. It's far from perfect but I second what Manny said: it's a classic.

May 17, 2021 | Unregistered CommenterEdward L.

Gladiator lags a bit in the middle but begins and ends very well, and both Crowe and Phoenix stand out. But mostly I'm commenting to say - YES! - another fan of Immortals! It deserves more attention.

May 17, 2021 | Unregistered CommenterScottC

How easy is it to bring gravitas and dignity to a role that requires the actor to run around in a skirt through the entire movie?

I imagine it would have had less gravitas if he were wearing blue jeans or polyester bellbottoms. #meninskirtsrule

May 17, 2021 | Unregistered CommenterWorking stiff

Edward L: You're right! I didn't pay attention to that. Thanks for pointing it out.

May 17, 2021 | Unregistered CommenterMarcos

I’ve always admired Connie Nielsen’s work in Gladiator.

She had to work with actors from 3 different schools of acting (Harris, Crowe, Phoenix), all of them vivid talented dominating presences a bit on the wild side.

She matched each of them in their style and provided a linking thread in the narrative.

May 18, 2021 | Unregistered CommenterOctavian

I saw Gladiator once, and liked it okay I guess. I suppose I will stumble across it again but it doesn't really seem that worthy of seeking out. Troy was bad except for Eric Bana's beautiful looks. His disappearance from Hollywood is totally baffling. Alexander was even worse and Colin Farrell was utterly lost. That hair/wig he sported was completely distracting and unnatural. There are more shades to blonde hair than just "Marilyn Monroe."

I guess Kingdom of Heaven was the best of the follow-ups. It had some really great ideas and the execution wasn't too bad. I've never seen nor heard of the director's cut.

What is this Immortals that Claudio mentions?

May 18, 2021 | Unregistered CommenterDave in Hollywood

Ben-Hur is my favorite movie. I think it doesn't get the respect it deserves. To me, it is a perfect film.

Gladiator is a memorable latter-day example of this style of film that is wildly entertaining in the grand old-school way.

But Ben-Hur will always be The Classic.

May 18, 2021 | Unregistered Commenterbrookesboy

Why is someone randomly impersonating me in this comment section? I came to read the comments and then found someone using my username I-

I'm so confused, although I remember there was a thing with someone continually impersonating other users?

It's clearly someone who's super familiar with the site because they talked about blog posts, and I have no idea what those even are.

May 18, 2021 | Unregistered Commenterbeyaccount
Comments for this entry have been disabled. Additional comments may not be added to this entry at this time.