1:56 "If I'd wanted to reach over there for it, I'd have put my hand over there." That quiet, arrogant display, while unscripted, sets up the emperor's character so well. Absolute power, spoiled rotten.
Tiberius is the emperor in this film IIRC. Virtually EVERY Roman emperor had an ego the size of the empire (it's almost comical how huge and numerous the monuments they built for themselves are).
@@thunderbird1921 Well, monuments were necessary, their version of scoring Time's Man of the Year. Monuments were the New York Times or the Guardian; wall graffiti were the tabloids.
@Bb Sz Is that so? I'm not very knowledgeable about Ancient Rome, but I'm doing medieval reenactment. And in this particular domain, people often confound average life expectancy with the age one can reach when being lucky. Stillborn childs dramatically reduce average life expectancy in the Middle Ages to around 30 years, but what this means is that for every dead newborn, one other person reached the age of 60, and there are a lot of examples of older people. So, you are surely correct that there would be much less old people back then than today, especially amongst the common people. But I wouldn't be surprised that powerful and influential people would become old if they managed to survive assassination attemps or illness. Casear died age 55 assassinated Pompeius died age 57, assassinated Crassus died age 62 in battle Augustus died age 75 of natural death or poisoning Important to see is that except emperor Augustus, all of the mentioned were still in full fighting capabilities, no one expected them to be close to their death by age. So, while your general comment about people often dying around 40/50 is probably correct in general, I don't think that it is completely wrong for a movie to show old senators or emperors.
@@jedchristian3423 Probably caused by lead poisoning. (Really! They used lead pitchers for acidic drinks like wine, and certain fruits. Plus basically everything that they ate off of, plumbing pipes, etc., etc. was lead!!! The poorer people used clay pottery for these things!)
Agreed - but disagree what it would result into today. If let´s say it would be a Netflix production, the day after the trailer releases there would be a huge shitstorm, because its....fill int the blank "too woke" ...wrong clothes , etc. the world is gotten ignorant.
Reminds me of my victory march to the podium after my stunning victory at the first ( & only) full contact tiddlywinks championship of 1967. Glory was never so grand.
A real clever use of the camera from 01:00 on when the general climbs the stairs. We first see the general look up, with a serious look in his face. We get a feeling of the weight of the moment. Then he begins climbing the stairs and we feel his loneliness, when it is just him at the stairs. And at the end of it all, it is as if he reaches the top of Mount Olympus and the Gods sit there, with the Supreme God - the Emperor - at the center of it all. The message, both for the Romans and for us viewers, is unmistakable: this is the Emperor, the most powerful man on the planet.
Jack Hawkins 100% DESERVED his Academy Award for his performance! Just look at him climbing the stairs at ~ 1:12, every inch a triumphant Roman general!
Hawkins did not win any Academy Award for Ben-Hur or any of his other films. The Best Supporting Actor award in Ben-Hur went to Hugh Griffith for his part as the Arab owning Ben-Hur's chariot horses.
Director Wyler had the Romans portrayed by British actors; the Emperor Tiberius here is played by a fine old British character actor called George Relph. Uncredited as his scribe who almost forgets to give him his scroll is Ralph Truman who specialised in villains and is particularly good as the head of the Praetorian Guard in the first of the 50s epics, "Quo Vadis".
This is the best triumphal music ever. I remember it from the movie like it was yesterday. What a set, what costumes! No graffiti, no trash, no dirty clothes, no poor people and a main street and forum grander than any ever dreamed of by any Roman, lol. The Hollywood Roman costumes with the peach colored plumed helmet for the commander, no cheek guards and barely a neck guard for the common soldiers who all in Hollywood style of course must have crests in their helmets. Thanks for uploading this!!!
that was kind of refreshing when HBO produced the serie showing how dirty and stinky a city like Rome really, was full of narrow streets and crampy living.
@@kamion53 very true. Big budget movies from this period always glossed over the dirt, poverty of the average Roman. However since this is Imperial Rome, the triumphal march was probably done in the very good part of town away from the neighborhoods. If you know Washington DC, it’s pretty much the same. Pennsylvania Ave from the White House is kept up with Neo Classical bldgs and is a very broad street.
Whoever's reading this, I pray that you repent of your sins, you turn to Jesus Christ, you confess Him as your Lord and Savior, and you inherit the good eternal life. AMEN!
@@laimonassileika2285 Yes he is. When Augustus adopted him, Caesar became his patronymic. As emperor his name was Tiberius Caesar Augustus. Caesar eventually became a duty title, but even then it sort of was.
What an honor for Judah, from Galley slave to riding next to a conquering general of the greatest empire in the world at that time. Though not always, it does go to show how doing the right thing can lead to unsurprising benefits and rewards. Edit: Never do the right thing for what you might receive, do it because it's the right thing to do.
Actually, research shows that this is correct. And the instruments here are correct. In fact one of the few films that almost gets the period nearly correct.
Eine wundervolle Szene, mit der Seeschlacht die Beste im gesamten Film, man spürt die Kraft und Macht des Imperiums, als der göttliche Kaiser Tiberius den Sieges und Marschallstab dem Arius übergibt! Dazu kommt noch die fantastische imperiale Musik, die einfach eine Gänsehaut macht. Toller Film, so etwas wird heutzutage nicht mehr Produziert, leider. Heil Arius !
The triumphator's face would have been painted red, making him a symbolic representation of Mars. The procession would go along the via sacra through the forum, up to the temple of Jupiter Optimus Maximus on the Capitoline hill. There is a sort-of legend that a slave would have ridden behind the consul, and whispered into his ear reminding him that he was not a god, just a mortal. The procession would have begun with spoils of war, and prisoners...the most important of which would have been executed at the end of the procession. Caesar kept Vercingetorix alive for YEARS just so he could be executed during his triumph! The consul's legions would follow, making it the only time an army was allowed to cross the sacred city boundary (the pomerium) under arms. The senate had to approve of a triumph, and there was a lesser award called an ovation for those not deemed worthy enough to celebrate one. Consuls might have at times camped for weeks or even months with their army outside of the city, waiting for approval. It marked the high point of a man's political career during the republican period if it was awarded. The crowds would have also been quite rowdy! I think out of all of the depictions of a triumph, HBO's Rome got it most accurate, at least in terms of depicting a generic triumph, and not so much the specifics of Julius Caesar's. I'm speaking from the viewpoint of the republican period, at least during the second and first centuries BC. I'm not sure how much the triumph changed after Augustus! Consuls no longer commanded legions. Instead legates chosen by the emperor did.
only an Imperator can triumph, for a general to want or conduct one would be seen as rebellion. That said triumphs were held to honour the Emperor's "victories"
also the triumphator would not wear a military outfit but the toga picta ( god and purple) The senate not only had to give their approval, the senators also walked themselves in the triumphus., they came next after the display of spoils of war and scenes of the war. the chariot shown in the Holywood pictures is the same type as in the chariot races, but actuall it was a four wheel chariot big enough to have the familie of the triumphator in it too. These Holywood scenes are pretty impressive of course, but had not much in common with historical accuracy.
@@TeutonicKnight92 This is Hollywood, you think there was a military industrial complex turning out exact copies of uniforms? And a Roman military official wearing what colored plumes-peach or ochre?
I've never been the type to say "Actors back then were all so good"--no fan of MST3K/Rifftrax is lol--but scenes like this make you appreciate where that sentiment comes from. Emperor Tiberius here only has one, maybe two, scenes but you can just *feel* the authority and power the actor gives him (which, ironically, may have been lacking in the real Tiberius at this point--fascinating man by the way. Look up Tiberius if you can read between the lines and are in the mood for a tragedy)
1:57 the emperor (that is the Emperor, right? Been a long time since I saw Ben Hur) is like "Umm.. do you expect me to take this myself?!" to his aide. Hilarious expression for some reason.
As a Roman, I like this video. Immense hard work leads to triumphs. Body and mind 100% dedicated to Rome will make any man free and strong like no other before or after. ( listen many times over this song, so you can have an idea of what fruits your hard work and dedication to the highest human challenges will bring to you).
Si .... e i barbari sassoni & company tagliavano le teste dei nemici e appendevano i loro crani fuori le loro capanne di paglia e fango..... spero di esser stato chiaro. STRONZO!
THIS THEME VICTOR PARADE OF BEN HUR ROZSA IS VERY WELL ,WAS THE VICTORY THEME OF ROYAL RUMBLE 1993-victory of yokosuna winner in this royal rumble. Is your re recording ben hur rozsa of carlo savina the theme victory yokosuna in this event. M13012015.
When i didn't know nothing about matte painting effects in movies and knowing that computers could do this only in late 90s....I was so confused how did they make that huge set? :)))
What a feeling it must have been to be at a Triumph like this.😮 You might well be living in poverty and squalor in an insulae but being present at something like reminded you that you were a citizen in the greatest empire in the known world.
It's really amazing to see. In these days there were no CGI...so if you needed a big crowd?. Guess what, you hired a few thousand extras off the street and paid them a few bucks to stand there and cheer like an idiot lol.
This scene is far cooler than anything i see in modern movies. Either movies should be realistic and historically accurate, or they should be awesome and epic like this classic.
You are exactly right. There are so many things wrong with his entrance. Heston shouldn't have been there at all, a slave would hold a wreath over him, and certainly he wouldn't be wearing a yellow/ochre/peach group of feathers in his helmet and certainly not wearing a cape with the Greek key design border. There is a multitude of errors,--- but it is all Hollywood, accuracy goes out the window and grandeur and spectacle are created to make the audience feel immersed in what they think Rome, et.al. should look like.
@@DesertAres I'm no expert at Roman history (I only studied the "usual" amount at school and some Roman Law at the university) but is the victory procession in Quo Vadis more accurate? As far as I remember, there was a slave there behind Marcus Vinicius who constantly told him he was only a mortal.
@@peterkiraly1058 Yes that is correct. But in general never, never take what Hollywood movies purport to show as historical anything. Experts could find at least 10 mistakes in this scene alone.
The senate would habe never granted arius a tribute, just for taking out a few pirate ships to be granted a triumph at least 5000 enemys had to be killed in a single battle
The Senate had no real power by that point. They served merely as a rubber stamp for the Emperor. If the Emperor decreed that someone should have a triumph, then that was that. If he wanted to grant you a triumph for picking your nose, there's nothing the Senate could say or do about it!
Anybody that has been to Rome knows there's not that much flat area like the street they show in this scene and the streets were certainly not that wide.
this how I want to be remembered when I receive my employee of the month award
Breaking good LOL
LOL
Amen.
LOLOLOLOLOL I HOPE SO!!!!
Yes my Praetor
1:56 "If I'd wanted to reach over there for it, I'd have put my hand over there."
That quiet, arrogant display, while unscripted, sets up the emperor's character so well. Absolute power, spoiled rotten.
Tiberius is the emperor in this film IIRC. Virtually EVERY Roman emperor had an ego the size of the empire (it's almost comical how huge and numerous the monuments they built for themselves are).
@@thunderbird1921
Well, as monuments go, they accomplished their work. We remember them still.
Who said it was unscripted? Of course it was scripted.
@@thunderbird1921 Well, monuments were necessary, their version of scoring Time's Man of the Year. Monuments were the New York Times or the Guardian; wall graffiti were the tabloids.
@@thunderbird1921 Tiberius in particular was very arrogant some emperors earned the right to feel this way others like Tiberius did not.
The Emperor only has this one scene, but you can really feel the power this man has.
I think there are a couple more scenes he's in.
@Nemanja ĆIrić there is another scene, where he talks to Jack Hawkins
@Bb Sz Is that so? I'm not very knowledgeable about Ancient Rome, but I'm doing medieval reenactment. And in this particular domain, people often confound average life expectancy with the age one can reach when being lucky. Stillborn childs dramatically reduce average life expectancy in the Middle Ages to around 30 years, but what this means is that for every dead newborn, one other person reached the age of 60, and there are a lot of examples of older people.
So, you are surely correct that there would be much less old people back then than today, especially amongst the common people. But I wouldn't be surprised that powerful and influential people would become old if they managed to survive assassination attemps or illness.
Casear died age 55 assassinated
Pompeius died age 57, assassinated
Crassus died age 62 in battle
Augustus died age 75 of natural death or poisoning
Important to see is that except emperor Augustus, all of the mentioned were still in full fighting capabilities, no one expected them to be close to their death by age. So, while your general comment about people often dying around 40/50 is probably correct in general, I don't think that it is completely wrong for a movie to show old senators or emperors.
@Bb Sz there were a notable amount that died in their old age. Augustus died of old age, so did Tiberius?, Claudius, Marcus Aurelius and others
Not with the cheap orange rags he is wearing.
The scene is classic.
Look at the Emperor's expression when the guy's not paying attention who hands him the baton.
LOL!!!
I think that is scepter.
But yeah.
According to "Making Of" back stories, that moment was unrehearsed, but it was so appropriate that Wyler kept it in.
A good decision
Its that time when Tiberius has not been "yet" catched by the sickness called, psychopath.
@@jedchristian3423 Probably caused by lead poisoning. (Really! They used lead pitchers for acidic drinks like wine, and certain fruits. Plus basically everything that they ate off of, plumbing pipes, etc., etc. was lead!!! The poorer people used clay pottery for these things!)
Ah. Miklos Rozsa! No one else did "Roman" music as exciting as his.
Rocza rules. No doubt about
With Dmitry Tiomkin
Miklos Rozsa ~ Hungary is bron
Dmitry Tiomkin ~ Russia is born
I think I may have seen this movie more times than any other. What an amazing production, writing, cast and sets. Unequaled in modern times.
i agree
Agreed - but disagree what it would result into today. If let´s say it would be a Netflix production, the day after the trailer releases there would be a huge shitstorm, because its....fill int the blank "too woke" ...wrong clothes , etc. the world is gotten ignorant.
Reminds me of my victory march to the podium after my stunning victory at the first ( & only) full contact tiddlywinks championship of 1967.
Glory was never so grand.
A real clever use of the camera from 01:00 on when the general climbs the stairs. We first see the general look up, with a serious look in his face. We get a feeling of the weight of the moment. Then he begins climbing the stairs and we feel his loneliness, when it is just him at the stairs. And at the end of it all, it is as if he reaches the top of Mount Olympus and the Gods sit there, with the Supreme God - the Emperor - at the center of it all. The message, both for the Romans and for us viewers, is unmistakable: this is the Emperor, the most powerful man on the planet.
Jack Hawkins 100% DESERVED his Academy Award for his performance! Just look at him climbing the stairs at ~ 1:12, every inch a triumphant Roman general!
Admiral?
Heston should have been driving the chariot tho.
Hawkins did not win any Academy Award for Ben-Hur or any of his other films. The Best Supporting Actor award in Ben-Hur went to Hugh Griffith for his part as the Arab owning Ben-Hur's chariot horses.
@@brianhill5009 Yeah, that's why OP said he deserved it.
@@brianhill5009 Hawkins was one of the better actors of all times
Director Wyler had the Romans portrayed by British actors; the Emperor Tiberius here is played by a fine old British character actor called George Relph. Uncredited as his scribe who almost forgets to give him his scroll is Ralph Truman who specialised in villains and is particularly good as the head of the Praetorian Guard in the first of the 50s epics, "Quo Vadis".
……he played King Ferdinand in film, ‘El Cid’, (1962)
No CGI massive number of people. These were real good movies.
Took tremendous skill. Obviously. And talent.
This is the best triumphal music ever. I remember it from the movie like it was yesterday. What a set, what costumes!
No graffiti, no trash, no dirty clothes, no poor people and a main street and forum grander than any ever dreamed of by any Roman, lol. The Hollywood Roman costumes with the peach colored plumed helmet for the commander, no cheek guards and barely a neck guard for the common soldiers who all in Hollywood style of course must have crests in their helmets. Thanks for uploading this!!!
that was kind of refreshing when HBO produced the serie showing how dirty and stinky a city like Rome really, was full of narrow streets and crampy living.
@@kamion53 very true. Big budget movies from this period always glossed over the dirt, poverty of the average Roman. However since this is Imperial Rome, the triumphal march was probably done in the very good part of town away from the neighborhoods. If you know Washington DC, it’s pretty much the same. Pennsylvania Ave from the White House is kept up with Neo Classical bldgs and is a very broad street.
Whoever's reading this, I pray that you repent of your sins, you turn to Jesus Christ, you confess Him as your Lord and Savior, and you inherit the good eternal life. AMEN!
@@RepentJC But what if the Roman gods are real? Better pray to Jupiter too, just in case!
I love the way Caesar can't be asked to extend his hand 2 inches, then looks at him as to say don't play with me next time it's your head.
That's not Caesar.
@@laimonassileika2285 Yes he is. When Augustus adopted him, Caesar became his patronymic. As emperor his name was Tiberius Caesar Augustus. Caesar eventually became a duty title, but even then it sort of was.
@@laimonassileika2285 The German equivalent is Kaiser (Emperor).
@@laimonassileika2285 Caesar's name became title of power: Czar & Kaiser
More likely the poor sod ended up in the galleys.😊
The Emperor looked at his servant like he was a Starbucks Barista who brought him a Java Chip Frappucino when he'd ordered a Matcha Green Tea Creme.
LOL
Miklos Rosza’s score added so much to this film
ONE OF THE BEST MOVIES ever MADE. ( Kon ).
Die ist einer der besten Moviesounds der Filmgeschichte!!!
Man those were the days
strength and honor
What an honor for Judah, from Galley slave to riding next to a conquering general of the greatest empire in the world at that time. Though not always, it does go to show how doing the right thing can lead to unsurprising benefits and rewards.
Edit: Never do the right thing for what you might receive, do it because it's the right thing to do.
2000 ANNI DI STORIA GLORIOSA IL MONDO NN HA MAI VISTO NULLA DI SIMILE
Non ti preoccupare, un giorno noi Italiani faremo rinascere Roma.
E QUEL GIORNO IL MONDO RITROVERA' LA LUCE
Internume Ave Roma Aeterna.... Let it be so...
S. Alexander De La Rosa ROMANVS VICTRIX
Si , ma ora non ci resta che Dolce e Gabbana (
2:14 The Force is strong with this one! lol
I love how one hand movement quietens the crowd
If I went back in time and saw a Roman triumph it would be so disappointing. Why? Because they wouldn't be playing this music!!!
John Williams apparently was inspired by Miklos Rozsa for his sound tracks. One master influenced another!
Actually, research shows that this is correct. And the instruments here are correct. In fact one of the few films that almost gets the period nearly correct.
@@andrewstackpool4911 funny guy
Eine wundervolle Szene, mit der Seeschlacht die Beste im gesamten Film, man spürt die Kraft und Macht des Imperiums, als der göttliche Kaiser Tiberius den Sieges und Marschallstab dem Arius übergibt! Dazu kommt noch die fantastische imperiale Musik, die einfach eine Gänsehaut macht. Toller Film, so etwas wird heutzutage nicht mehr Produziert, leider. Heil Arius !
Awesome march music ...... triump and pride on full display
The best scene ever filmed in Hollywood.
No in cinecitta' Rome
Good grief, that's a huge movie set.
Some of it is a matte painting, but yeah, the old Hollywood epics were something special.
The triumphator's face would have been painted red, making him a symbolic representation of Mars. The procession would go along the via sacra through the forum, up to the temple of Jupiter Optimus Maximus on the Capitoline hill. There is a sort-of legend that a slave would have ridden behind the consul, and whispered into his ear reminding him that he was not a god, just a mortal. The procession would have begun with spoils of war, and prisoners...the most important of which would have been executed at the end of the procession. Caesar kept Vercingetorix alive for YEARS just so he could be executed during his triumph! The consul's legions would follow, making it the only time an army was allowed to cross the sacred city boundary (the pomerium) under arms. The senate had to approve of a triumph, and there was a lesser award called an ovation for those not deemed worthy enough to celebrate one. Consuls might have at times camped for weeks or even months with their army outside of the city, waiting for approval. It marked the high point of a man's political career during the republican period if it was awarded. The crowds would have also been quite rowdy! I think out of all of the depictions of a triumph, HBO's Rome got it most accurate, at least in terms of depicting a generic triumph, and not so much the specifics of Julius Caesar's.
I'm speaking from the viewpoint of the republican period, at least during the second and first centuries BC. I'm not sure how much the triumph changed after Augustus! Consuls no longer commanded legions. Instead legates chosen by the emperor did.
only an Imperator can triumph, for a general to want or conduct one would be seen as rebellion. That said triumphs were held to honour the Emperor's "victories"
Fame is fleeting.--Patton
also the triumphator would not wear a military outfit but the toga picta ( god and purple) The senate not only had to give their approval, the senators also walked themselves in the triumphus., they came next after the display of spoils of war and scenes of the war. the chariot shown in the Holywood pictures is the same type as in the chariot races, but actuall it was a four wheel chariot big enough to have the familie of the triumphator in it too.
These Holywood scenes are pretty impressive of course, but had not much in common with historical accuracy.
@@TeutonicKnight92 This is Hollywood, you think there was a military industrial complex turning out exact copies of uniforms? And a Roman military official wearing what colored plumes-peach or ochre?
@@DesertAres I didn’t say anything about the uniforms I mentioned then generals in the imperial period don’t get triumphs
I've never been the type to say "Actors back then were all so good"--no fan of MST3K/Rifftrax is lol--but scenes like this make you appreciate where that sentiment comes from.
Emperor Tiberius here only has one, maybe two, scenes but you can just *feel* the authority and power the actor gives him (which, ironically, may have been lacking in the real Tiberius at this point--fascinating man by the way. Look up Tiberius if you can read between the lines and are in the mood for a tragedy)
This Rome feels more alive than the one from The Gladiator (2000).
Gladiator's Rome was pitiful by comparison.
To be fair, the Emperor during Gladiator was indeed an incompetent scoundrel. So the grim theme of the movie was fitting.
@@JessicaChastainFanyeah i believe the movie is overrated
Love the little bit where the emperor is handed the baton on the pillow and the fellow didn't put it close to the emperors hand.
there is no emperor in movie history like him.
How else silenced a crowd with a tiny gesture of his hand like this #goat
1:57 the emperor (that is the Emperor, right? Been a long time since I saw Ben Hur) is like "Umm.. do you expect me to take this myself?!" to his aide. Hilarious expression for some reason.
1:56 "Why is not in my hand?"
"Oh!"
LOL
Greece is the mother of Europe, but Rome is certainly the father
The Glory of Greece.
The Grandeur of Rome🦅
for a 1959 film thats ALLOT of people man
They used to call it a "cast of thousands" ... a style of movie making (epics) best associated with Cecil B DeMille
This makes me proud to be Italian!
+bronsongt me too.. Gladiator makes me proud too.
Peter Navarini e allora perché parlate inglese?
Sorry to disappoint you, but the Romans originally came from Romania NOT Italy.
Guido Harmeling Romania is named after the Romans. The Ancients Romans originate from around Greece to Asia minor
hope you are sarcastic because if you are not you are very uneducated
what an understatement
a maior obra ja realizadas na sétima arte , não tem imitação que iguala, 11 oscares foi pouco.
As a Roman, I like this video.
Immense hard work leads to triumphs.
Body and mind 100% dedicated to Rome will make any man free and strong like no other before or after.
( listen many times over this song, so you can have an idea of what fruits your hard work and dedication to the highest human challenges will bring to you).
Ese actor que interpreto a Tiberio Cesar es considerado como el mejor interprete a ese personaje histórico
Me and the Boys after our Fishing Trip
Pure epicness
Ea incredibilis auditu, filii Aeneae posse faci!!!
One of my cats wants to be honored thus.
Only one of them?
Amen, brother. Western & Orthodox christian civilizations forever!
E土 ;.難mpjor09一點崩,2075上悔3
Beautiful Music
The Glory of Rome.
They should have shown the part where they strangle the prisoners before the temple of Jupiter. That was the best part of a triumph.
Si .... e i barbari sassoni & company tagliavano le teste dei nemici e appendevano i loro crani fuori le loro capanne di paglia e fango..... spero di esser stato chiaro. STRONZO!
roman emperor was Tiberuius, George Relph played Tiberius
The only thing this scene misses is a slave on the back of the carriage whispering memento mori, memento moir, memento mori...
What a dream come true for Ben Hur what almost seemed surreal to him.
Movie so well made.
THIS THEME VICTOR PARADE OF BEN HUR ROZSA IS VERY WELL ,WAS THE VICTORY THEME OF ROYAL RUMBLE 1993-victory of yokosuna winner in this royal rumble. Is your re recording ben hur rozsa of carlo savina the theme victory yokosuna in this event. M13012015.
When i didn't know nothing about matte painting effects in movies and knowing that computers could do this only in late 90s....I was so confused how did they make that huge set? :)))
Nah, they literally rebuild Roma!
I like this march even better than Parade of the Charioteers which was great. Miklós Rózsa was the man for monumental movie themes.
They’re not all cubes, someone lied to me…
Me after I just finished reorganizing the library I work in.
the Roman empire was unique and lasted a thousand years and nodule the western world 🏛️🏛️🏛️🏛️
I was there in a past life.
What a feeling it must have been to be at a Triumph like this.😮 You might well be living in poverty and squalor in an insulae but being present at something like reminded you that you were a citizen in the greatest empire in the known world.
Makes a ticket tape parade look small.
the music of the romans is great.
I really liked the movie
"remember, thou art mortal, remember thou art mortal, remember thou art mortal..."
This song also played at the end of the 1993 Royal Rumble.
espectacular !!
Indeed !, Byzantium was the continuation of "Rome" !
Il film interamente girato a Roma Studios Cinecittà
Grande sea por siempre la Gloria de Roma
Una 💎 del 🎥 clásico de 🏛️
The music from this scene is also used in Caesar 3 for a city 7k+ in population...
Hail, Caesar!
_Hail,_ yes!
Viva Roma ! Ave Caesar !
Música extraordinaria
It's really amazing to see. In these days there were no CGI...so if you needed a big crowd?. Guess what, you hired a few thousand extras off the street and paid them a few bucks to stand there and cheer like an idiot lol.
Did he make it out of the friend zone or something?
i really don't like the latest youtube updates
Wasn't this piece of music also from que vadus?
Triumph total é muito filme e muita emoção somente no BEN HUR
This scene is far cooler than anything i see in modern movies. Either movies should be realistic and historically accurate, or they should be awesome and epic like this classic.
TheRomanRuler well if they were awesome and epic, people would bitch about it being innacurate
You are exactly right. There are so many things wrong with his entrance. Heston shouldn't have been there at all, a slave would hold a wreath over him, and certainly he wouldn't be wearing a yellow/ochre/peach group of feathers in his helmet and certainly not wearing a cape with the Greek key design border. There is a multitude of errors,--- but it is all Hollywood, accuracy goes out the window and grandeur and spectacle are created to make the audience feel immersed in what they think Rome, et.al. should look like.
@@DesertAres I'm no expert at Roman history (I only studied the "usual" amount at school and some Roman Law at the university) but is the victory procession in Quo Vadis more accurate? As far as I remember, there was a slave there behind Marcus Vinicius who constantly told him he was only a mortal.
@@peterkiraly1058 Yes that is correct. But in general never, never take what Hollywood movies purport to show as historical anything. Experts could find at least 10 mistakes in this scene alone.
Wonderful cini clip of Ben -Her
Great Miklos Rozsa.
Rozsa compositore eccelso
0:01 - How did they do this in 1959?
Benjámin Kurilla They build a real size Rome and hire thousand of actors.
@@empjorium A dollar really when a long way back then🤯
Miniature probably
Miniatures and painting on glass. The scene of Emperor Palpatine arriving on the second Death Star was done the same way.
Now *that* is what you call command presence.
The senate would habe never granted arius a tribute, just for taking out a few pirate ships
to be granted a triumph at least 5000 enemys had to be killed in a single battle
The Senate had no real power by that point. They served merely as a rubber stamp for the Emperor. If the Emperor decreed that someone should have a triumph, then that was that. If he wanted to grant you a triumph for picking your nose, there's nothing the Senate could say or do about it!
Girls walking back from gym class: thank god that's over
Boys walking back from gym class:
Wow the marching band sounds really good. Perfect tuning for a bunch of instruments with no valves! 😂🤪🤪
Best uniform to date still no matter where in the world you go they all know you're roman
🌊 BEN HUR IL FILM PIÙ COLOSSALE E SPETTACOLARE DELLA STORIA DEL CINEMA* 📽️
Quelle grande chose que Rome! On ne cessera jamais d'avoir la nostalgie de la "ROMANIA MORTE"...
i m p e r i a l
THE GOD
It's good to be the Emperor!
Mel agrees😀
I get a kick out of the fact they play essentially the same music before the chariot race, using different instruments.
That's me when I arrive for work every morning.
wow, there used to be good music before hip hop
Lo máximo
Anybody that has been to Rome knows there's not that much flat area like the street they show in this scene and the streets were certainly not that wide.
GOD can change your life 🙏 believe, always !
And no CGI in sight real people in teal crowds.