Final Thoughts On Rome
Jan. 6th, 2006 11:16 amEveryone came to a bad end except Pullo.
I knew that something like that was going to happen to poor, old ,uptight Vorenus.
I knew that something like that (indeed, something exactly like that) was going to happen to Caesar.
But I was not expecting Pullo to walk off into the sunlit Campagna hand in hand with his favourite girl.
Pullo is a brute with untold killings and at least four atrocious murders to his (dis)credit, but I love him dearly. He is so blithe. So good-natured. I want him to settle down on a farm with the lovely Irene and raise chickens (or pigs or whatever it is that Roman farmers raise)and die at last, full of years and honour and with so many grandchildren and great-grandchildren in attendance that there's not room for them all around the bed.
The arena sequence made the arena sequences in Gladiator look like they'd been scripted by Richard Curtis. That decapitation- o my!
The shadow of Shakespeare lay black and Stygian over the last half hour. The writer avoided the horrors of the Burton-Taylor Cleopatra with its ghastly Shakespearian paraphrases but the Man was present even in his absence. I was waiting for "et tu Brute" and when it didn't come I felt a little cheated. But the killing was grand- a scuffle in a butcher's shop. And the politics, with Brutus the pansy-arsed tool of a rightwing cabal , were so real and dirty it hurt.
Will we see more of James Purefoy's Antony in the sequel? Please, please, please!
And now we have to wait until 2007 to find out what happens next.
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Date: 2006-01-06 03:39 am (UTC)no subject
Date: 2006-01-06 07:45 am (UTC)I want to see more of Max Pirkis's Octavian too. I wonder if they're delaying the sequel in order to let him grow up a bit.
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Date: 2006-01-06 04:01 am (UTC)I will be waiting impatiently, like a small child. I loved Rome in all it's daft, historically-inaccurate glory. It got quite a kicking in the end of year critics' 'here's what I've been watching on telly in 2005' reviews, which I thought was unfair. I have a weakness for Pullo; he's a big, brutal thug of a man, but his heart is good and he has such charm at times.
I was waiting for "et tu Brute" and when it didn't come I felt a little cheated.
Me too.
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Date: 2006-01-06 07:51 am (UTC)As for Pullo, I think Ray Stevenson deserves an Emmy or whatever those things are called.
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Date: 2006-01-06 07:52 am (UTC)no subject
Date: 2006-01-06 07:39 am (UTC)no subject
Date: 2006-01-06 08:01 am (UTC)And so much more intelligent and grown-up than big screen epics like Gladiator.
I thought it was remarkable how they set up two "heroes"- Pullo and Vorenus- both of them so unsympathetic in so many ways- and challenged us not to love them.
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Date: 2006-01-06 09:15 am (UTC)I miss everything.
Did the head--talk, on its way down?
Please say Yes.
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Date: 2006-01-07 02:32 am (UTC)no subject
Date: 2006-01-06 10:37 am (UTC)I read Caesar's The Conquest of Gaul a couple of years ago and found he was a master of spin, very much portraying himself as a folk-hero. He's a curious character: assassinated for being a tyrant, yet there's very little overt evidence of that presented in the programme. I have yet to read The Civil War, though Rome has certainly whetted my appetite for that. I skimmed through the glossary section this week and found to my surprise a chap called Titus Puleio who was listed as a centurion batting for Pompey in the Civil War!
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Date: 2006-01-07 02:39 am (UTC)I had been wondering idly whether Pullo and Vorenus were invented names or plucked from the historical record. I guess the writers of Rome must have leafed through that glossary ahead of you. :)