The Fall of the Roman Empire (film)
Encyclopedia : T : TH : THE : The Fall of the Roman Empire (film)
The Fall of the Roman Empire is a 1964 film starring Sophia Loren (Lucilla), Stephen Boyd (Livius), Alec Guinness (Marcus Aurelius), James Mason (Timonides), Christopher Plummer (Commodus), Mel Ferrer (Cleantro), Omar Sharif (Siria´s King) and Finlay Currie (Senator). It was directed by Anthony Mann. The film was a financial failure at the box-office. However, it is considered unusually intelligent and thoughtful for a film of the contemporary sword and sandal genre.
The film loosely portrays historic events of the Roman Empire in the late 2nd century, particularly the career of Roman Emperor Commodus, his succession to his father Marcus Aurelius, and his clash with childhood friend Livius. Following historical records, Commodus is at first depicted as a promising young emperor but soon descends into instability and corruption. The film culminates in a symbolic battle of good versus evil. It also depicts the debate the Romans were confronted with concerning the Barbarians, whether to fight and maintain cultural superiority but possibly lose everything, or give in to their demands in the face of overwhelming numbers, but still maintain independence.
It was one of the superproductions of Samuel Bronston in Spain, with some shoots in the Guadarrama sierra, northern Madrid. Its reconstruction of the Roman Forum (1312 by 754 feet) holds the record for the largest outdoor film set.
Awards
- Golden Globe Award for Best Original Score (nominated & won)
- Academy Award for Best Music, Score - Substantially Original (nominated)
See also
- List of Roman Emperors
- the Five Good Emperors, of which Marcus Aurelius was the last
- Decline of the Roman Empire
External link
From Wikipedia, the Free Encyclopedia. Original article here. Support Wikipedia by contributing or donating.
All text is available under the terms of the GNU Free Documentation License See Wikipedia Copyrights for details.
