Caroline Vout
|
Jeffrey RichardsContinuum 227pp £25 ISBN 978 1847 250070‘The very last thing Gladiator was
about was actual Roman history’, writes Jeffrey Richards in his book
about Hollywood’s renewed interest in the ancient world. And he is
right; like all big-budget cinema, Ridley Scott’s film is principally
entertainment, not education, driven by the need for profit rather than
the quest for truth. Its inspiration is the gladiator movies of the
1960s as much as any ancient author; its Rome-scape, spectacular
set-pieces with their roots in Victorian painting.
Published December 15 2008
|
- Home
- Location
- Period
- Themes
- Magazine
- Subscribe
- Archive
- Ebooks
- Students
- Blogs
- Contact
Newsletter
Subscribe to our weekly e-newsletter:
From The Current Issue
|
Ian Bradley
|
|
Roger Hudson
|
|
David Runciman
|
|
Nicola Phillips
|
From The Archive
|
John Kennedy’s commitment to put a man on the Moon in the 1960s is often quoted – most recently by Gordon Brown – as an inspired civic vision. Gerard DeGroot sees the reality somewhat differently. |
















