The Fall of the Roman Empire (1964) --- Senate scene

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  • Опубліковано 29 січ 2025

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  • @TheIamtheoneandonly1
    @TheIamtheoneandonly1 4 роки тому +1854

    “The best answer to anger is silence.” - Marcus Aurelius

    • @indigoali5612
      @indigoali5612 4 роки тому +16

      And yet he said that- Alan Watts

    • @indigoali5612
      @indigoali5612 4 роки тому +1

      Lol jk

    • @subashgrg4666
      @subashgrg4666 4 роки тому +6

      buddha also said that hundreds of years before mark aurelius.

    • @saa82vik
      @saa82vik 4 роки тому +36

      "...and a big stick, just in case."

    • @hari-xo2fm
      @hari-xo2fm 3 роки тому +10

      Doesn't work in all situations.

  • @1rjona
    @1rjona 4 роки тому +2377

    Truly, the verbal dialogue of this scene is better than any special effects

    • @boomerhgt
      @boomerhgt 4 роки тому +31

      Definitely

    • @monarchblue4280
      @monarchblue4280 4 роки тому +91

      Good writing trumps flashy CGI effects every single time.

    • @Rman10102
      @Rman10102 4 роки тому +53

      That’s how movies used to be. Much better imo

    • @prototropo
      @prototropo 4 роки тому +31

      That is a wonderful observation. My head was groping for what I loved in this scene and why it generated so much more satisfaction than a contemporary film. You answered my confusion.

    •  4 роки тому +5

      Nothing was above "good acting" and verbal dialogue back then... A lot movies made today are of no substance... Today, you have an array of actors, with very little talent... Then in Hollywood, you had to have talent... Now, it's just about being marketable... This takes a level of intelligence to understand and appreciate today.

  • @jordanvex4846
    @jordanvex4846 7 років тому +906

    James Mason never fails to deliver an excellent performance.

    • @sadsackkvisling9694
      @sadsackkvisling9694 5 років тому +9

      Especially with Bob Larson

    • @ivorbiggun710
      @ivorbiggun710 4 роки тому +2

      I once saw a video of someone doing a fantastic impression of James Mason with their arse. Seriously.

    • @pato2200
      @pato2200 4 роки тому +6

      Yes.
      A master actor.

    • @southtexasprepper1837
      @southtexasprepper1837 4 роки тому +15

      James Mason's portrayal of Erwin Rommel in "The Desert Fox" was excellent as well.

    • @pato2200
      @pato2200 4 роки тому +5

      @@southtexasprepper1837 yes fantastic.
      Also in Lolita.

  • @kyliam80
    @kyliam80 3 роки тому +1937

    I love these old movies. These are the days when actors were legit, professional and didn't care about looking good for the camera, they simply wanted to nail their part no matter how big or small. You feel like you're watching a stage play, not a movie.

    • @AndreNitroX
      @AndreNitroX 2 роки тому +80

      Agreed this was a time of true artistic drama and acting

    • @drafalkdraven1059
      @drafalkdraven1059 2 роки тому +59

      They seem more mature older all together.

    • @2msvalkyrie529
      @2msvalkyrie529 2 роки тому +44

      Yes ! At that time an actor's VOICE was his greatest and most
      important ability. Many of those appearing here were stage trained
      REAL actors !!

    • @JBravo69
      @JBravo69 Рік тому +33

      Older movies has so long scenes without cuts. So good. Today’s movies is ruined by post processing.

    • @osrichitt5269
      @osrichitt5269 Рік тому

      Seems like all you guys are watching pretty shit movies. Just google Daniel day Lewis or Frances Mcdormand and start watching. You’ll change your mind if you’re actually open minded

  • @chaschk2
    @chaschk2 4 роки тому +186

    In 7th grade we had the opportunity to see this film for extra credit. I loved it. I always loved history. With Stephen Boyd ( an under rated actor) and the great Christopher Plummer it was a great movie. RIP Stephen Boyd and Christopher Plummer.

    • @milesmartig5603
      @milesmartig5603 2 роки тому +9

      I know this is a one year old comment, but I hate to break it to you that this film is completely fiction. From the comments I gather that some elements of the set design were accurate, but the actual story is not even close to anything that happened in Rome. In fact, several of the basic assumptions it makes are flat out wrong. For example, there is a consensus among the senators that slaves produce less than free men. This may be true, but the senators (who were nearly always rich aristocrats) profited immensely off of their slaves. No senator would ever free his slaves without payment. This was true for slavery up until the industrial revolution. It was hugely profitable for those in charge, and so it stuck around. It was not a "peculiar institution" as one of the US founding fathers put it, it was the status quo in every part of the world, even pre-contact Americas. The idea that slavery was wrong was something that came about in the mid 1700s, with the Enlightenment. This film sort of puts a weird, enlightenment spin on things, from what I can tell from this scene. It fails to consider that rulers' philosophy was completely different from our thinking today.
      That last paragraph was all my knowledge, but if anyone reading this is especially curious, this quora post talks more about why the story, while trying to present a historical narrative, ends up not hitting a bullseye, but instead veering to the right and killing the neighbor's dog. www.quora.com/Is-Edward-Gibbons-The-History-of-the-Decline-and-Fall-of-the-Roman-Empire-historically-accurate

    • @markmaki4460
      @markmaki4460 Рік тому +1

      @@milesmartig5603 Yes - such films as this are never to be regarded as true to history, but rather to be valued for their performances (as with Shakespeare histories)

  • @Warmaker01
    @Warmaker01 6 років тому +842

    The insult of "Greek" leveled at the guy was fun, because it was in Greece that the last bastion of the Roman Empire lasted for about 1000 years after the fall of Rome itself. They considered themselves Romans, because their institutions were in lineage from Rome.
    Great movie though!

    • @soyusmaximus7176
      @soyusmaximus7176 4 роки тому +114

      The Greeks helped influence Rome in it's birth, and carried on Rome's legacy millennia after Rome fell.

    • @ivorbiggun710
      @ivorbiggun710 4 роки тому +90

      @@soyusmaximus7176 I often think that the derision that Romans displayed towards Greek culture was just a manifestation of their jealousy.

    • @FAMA-18
      @FAMA-18 4 роки тому +37

      Rome was influenced by their Neighbors the mighty Etruscans and everything else fell into place, and the Roman Senate is founded by Rome not Greeks.
      But regardless ROME & ATHENS were two great civilizations the western world as ever known period.

    • @hannibalburgers477
      @hannibalburgers477 4 роки тому +4

      Gr*ekoids were always second class citizens in empire, fulling their twink stock.

    • @chm5750
      @chm5750 4 роки тому +10

      @SSJ That's not what you unitially said!!!! You said that "the Romans saw the Greeks as degenerates", meanwhile Rome was tremendously intertwined with Greek civilization.

  • @horsepukey
    @horsepukey 7 років тому +1287

    This film has a very interesting history. It was film entirely in Spain. And the scenes were done in actual Roman towns,the rest in studios in Madrid and Rome. This is close to historical accuracy. This is truly a well crafted film; from directing,writing,acting, and editing. No 21 century film can compare too this work. There is amount cgi or any computer simulation can produce this quality. Thank you for sharing this beautiful vignette.

    • @LordZontar
      @LordZontar 6 років тому +68

      The movie compresses a number of events but captures a true sense of how Rome's power and grandeur deteriorated. Bidding for the Imperium actually did take place at one point during the Year of the Four Emperors, and famine and plague struck during the time known as the Crisis of the Third Century, which post-dated the misrule of Commodus. But in how The Fall Of The Roman Empire depicts the dynamic of the slow Roman collapse, the forces that eroded the strength and morale of the Empire, is where it really shines. The movie's coda summed it up: "No great civilisation is conquered from without, until it has destroyed itself from within".

    • @stevenmarshall5244
      @stevenmarshall5244 4 роки тому +10

      Yep, totaly agree. No CGI present here. I think it's still the largest film set ever assembled ( of the Roman Forum). A true epic.

    • @buuuuuuurn-the-heretic
      @buuuuuuurn-the-heretic 4 роки тому +10

      HBO Rome is the only thing comparable

    • @anuradhainamdar8967
      @anuradhainamdar8967 4 роки тому +1

      Lawrence you have described the nature of the movie perfectly.

    • @remingron
      @remingron 4 роки тому +2

      Because cgi determines the quality of w film. Stupid boomers

  • @physical_insanity
    @physical_insanity 2 роки тому +161

    I absolutely love the acoustics in this scene. Almost makes you feel as if you're really there.

  • @OneTrueVikingbard
    @OneTrueVikingbard 4 роки тому +153

    The fact that Stephen Boyd is once again playing a Roman gives this movie some unintended continuity with 1959’s Ben-Hur

    • @yvonneplant9434
      @yvonneplant9434 9 місяців тому +3

      Boyd was supposed to play Marc Antony in Cleopatra.

    • @maestroclassico5801
      @maestroclassico5801 9 місяців тому +1

      It was supposed to be Chuck Heston but he turned the role down as he didn't want to work with Sophia Loren again after EL CID. So he recommended his Ben Hur Co-Star Stephen. Steve had as much chemistry with Sophia as Chuck did I think. An amazingly underrated actor.

    • @timcarpenter2441
      @timcarpenter2441 7 місяців тому +4

      …it goes on, Judah! It goes on!

    • @Silver_Owl
      @Silver_Owl 5 місяців тому

      Finlay Currie as well. OK, he wasn't a Roman in Ben-Hur, but he has the same kind of role in that movie, as Old Man Talking Sense And Peace.

  • @ashleyburns6752
    @ashleyburns6752 Рік тому +30

    Love watching old 50s/60s epic films, reminds of a lazy Sunday afternoons as a kid in the 90s.

  • @Rawhead_Rex
    @Rawhead_Rex 7 років тому +489

    Some of the greatest speeches ever filmed are contained in these ten minutes!

    • @gdiwolverinemale2745
      @gdiwolverinemale2745 Рік тому +14

      Very relevant for the present moment .... and shows how wrong it is to let barbarians in

    • @Kirkee7
      @Kirkee7 Рік тому

      No, philosophical naivety. The Roman Empire fell under it own corruption from within.

    • @muslimresponse103
      @muslimresponse103 Рік тому

      @@gdiwolverinemale2745i totally agree! look at what happened to the Palestinians after they welcomed in jewish European refugees fleeing christian Europe and the na z i s.

    • @Trusteft
      @Trusteft Рік тому +13

      @@gdiwolverinemale2745 Then you clearly understood nothing.

    • @jesavino1255
      @jesavino1255 Рік тому +2

      Finlay Curry is one of the greatest actors to come along in years. What adistinct voice hee had. May he RIP. A GREAT MAN.

  • @juerv1
    @juerv1 Рік тому +40

    Great and powerful acting here by the legendary, unforgotten James Mason.

  • @lisasimmons5362
    @lisasimmons5362 2 роки тому +71

    Utterly superb performances & dialogue. James Mason is always astounding.

    • @Fat12219
      @Fat12219 4 місяці тому +1

      The Roman Empire 😮

  • @CristeroFanatic
    @CristeroFanatic 4 роки тому +1050

    “How does an Empire die? Does it collapse in one terrible moment? No.”
    Alexander The Great’s Empire : Uhhhh, actually....

    • @sergiorossini8039
      @sergiorossini8039 4 роки тому +212

      Alexander never really had the opportunity to consolidate his "Empire" as such; and whilst we can call it that on paper. In actuality it would make more sense to call it his "realm" and the lands beyond Hellas as being mere "Conquests". Short of the establishment of over a dozen "Alexandrias" across his realm, and encouraging instances of Hellenisation throughout Asia Minor and Syria (which were already in part underway), the Empire wasn't nearly cohesive enough, nor did it possess the bureaucratic and political infrastructure to hold it together. Despite the best efforts of Perdikkas and Antipater, it was simply an impossible task to keep it together with Alexander's untimely death and the huge swaths of territory he subjugated, it was essentially an Empire in size and name only.

    • @rezadyn87
      @rezadyn87 3 роки тому +53

      his successors are the ones who destroyed his empire by their constant greed

    • @memezoffuckery3207
      @memezoffuckery3207 2 роки тому

      It *can* under a really stupid idea proposed by no faction or nation in history but libtards.

    • @BestKCL
      @BestKCL 2 роки тому +13

      Shaka Zulu: "Uhhhhhhhh"
      (his mom died and he went insane)

    • @stargazer4683
      @stargazer4683 2 роки тому +5

      Tora, Tora, Tora….

  • @zanthimos
    @zanthimos Рік тому +16

    Some of those words really hit hard and are still relevant to this day. Thank you for the upload.

  • @dumitrufrunza8136
    @dumitrufrunza8136 7 років тому +349

    It's so refreshing so see these old movies, after all the modern day CGI induced fatigue!

    • @Cortesevasive
      @Cortesevasive 4 роки тому +27

      Also there must be atleast one gay or lesbian, and there must be sex scenes for no reason all the time

    • @Nishkid641
      @Nishkid641 4 роки тому +2

      @Dumitru Frunza So ur saying Titanic, Jurassic Park, Terminator, Frozen, Warcraft, Aladdin,....... all sucks????????? Yet, these movies had earned massive around of money. Seem to me it's just u making fatigue comments around here.

    • @dumitrufrunza8136
      @dumitrufrunza8136 4 роки тому +7

      @@Nishkid641 Chill out my friend. Those movies are great. I'm talking about the progressive abuse of CGI as time goes on - movies made in the nineties, compared to those made in the 2000ths, etc. Take the Lord of the Rings series as an example. The early ones had CGI, but on the whole, was OK-ish. The more recent ones, the amount of CGI has increased gradually.
      If you find that OK - no problem. UA-cam is a big place for everyone's opinions, mine included.

    • @Nishkid641
      @Nishkid641 4 роки тому +1

      @@dumitrufrunza8136 yeah yeah. I just curious about those fools who keep complaining. My advice for them is that: why don't they join the film industry and change it instead of sitting and just criticizing. But I bet whatever they do, they will meet similar criticism from others.

    • @remingron
      @remingron 4 роки тому +2

      Oh stop generalizing ,boomer.

  • @tanatos5
    @tanatos5 4 роки тому +80

    Man this is pure, glorious acting! I though I would just skip after 10-15 seconds, but ooh no! I couldn't! The amazing acting had me hooked.

    • @MilesBellas
      @MilesBellas Місяць тому

      Did ancient Romans gesticulate more like modern Italians ?
      😃

  • @deadby15
    @deadby15 4 роки тому +397

    These arguments are intriguing in today’s context, too.

    • @seanoreiley48
      @seanoreiley48 6 місяців тому +49

      They’ve only gotten more accurate in the years since you wrote this.

    • @ljp400
      @ljp400 6 місяців тому +68

      @@seanoreiley48 true in the sense of mass immigration. letting in 'the hordes' is never a good thing, as in this case the vandals and visigoths did destroy them. and this is just in the context of europe. i see a rise in right-wing ideology (not necessarily bad within reason) that is definitely geared toward immigration, and the inability of a portion of a population/group to accept and assimilate into another culture, but rather attempt to destroy it. you definitely see this with a portion of muslim immigrants or those from war torn backgrounds that import it to their new country. and again, it just is a pipeline to having severe internal strife.

    • @danielbrown3461
      @danielbrown3461 6 місяців тому +2

      for a one world government yes

    • @phillipchapman169
      @phillipchapman169 6 місяців тому +10

      You said what I was about. And the first part where the senator argues against giving citizenship to “barbarians and savages that go around murdering might seem even more apposite. However, James Masons oratory while well delivered, in today’s context and potentially then is a nice idea, but somewhat unrealistic. Certain problematic people come with hate, which they brought with them and are indoctrinated in and filled with envy and an ideology that believes itself superior and consequently that it must subdue others. As my history of Rome and the barbarians reminds me, the barbarians were not exactly adverse to conquest. And as for the old senator saying we must open the gates more or less and change ourselves, misses the point of the first senator that a viper remains a viper even if you treat it nicely.

    • @raphael1442
      @raphael1442 6 місяців тому +6

      @@ljp400 I don't think you know anything about how Rome was "destroyed". Please look at it, it's more interesting than "muslin barbarian bad destroy civilisation"

  • @stargazer4683
    @stargazer4683 2 роки тому +32

    I’m starting to love classic movies. Actors loving their craft wanting to do their best.

  • @Hakspheenom
    @Hakspheenom 4 роки тому +34

    Rip Christopher Plummer, the original crazed Commodus. Both actors played role brilliantly

  • @rileywise2455
    @rileywise2455 7 років тому +53

    What an incredible piece of film.

  • @jdghgh
    @jdghgh 6 місяців тому +45

    James Mason has a special, compelling presence.

  • @frogocric
    @frogocric 3 роки тому +318

    "Fellow Romans"
    This is too much.
    Truly life imitates art

    • @accountreality1988
      @accountreality1988 2 роки тому +96

      and the senator with the hooked nose at the end giving the open the gate and embrace the hordes speech, certainly ahead of it's time in self awareness of the situation.

    • @crimsonthumos3905
      @crimsonthumos3905 Рік тому +64

      The irony is that it is virtue signalling yet history shows that the Vandals DID destroy Rome

    • @betrayer1350
      @betrayer1350 Рік тому +71

      @@crimsonthumos3905 It is pretty humorous. Mass immigration is not a good thing, I don't understand how people still can't see it. Even similar groups have great strife, but completely different ones causes untold chaos.

    • @LordVader1094
      @LordVader1094 Рік тому +25

      ​@@accountreality1988Also not hard to find the early life section of the lead writer for the film

    • @xanshen9011
      @xanshen9011 6 місяців тому +18

      The nose gave it away 😂

  • @2msvalkyrie529
    @2msvalkyrie529 2 роки тому +16

    Wow !! This is powerhouse acting ! What voices ! And what
    beautiful dialogue !!!

  • @anubisd613
    @anubisd613 4 роки тому +36

    Damn...they knew how to make a movie back then.And I love the old man's speach

  • @jamesgarfield1279
    @jamesgarfield1279 6 років тому +43

    The acting in this movie is phenomenal! Thanks for uploading ^_^

  • @Falconlibrary
    @Falconlibrary 8 років тому +278

    I wish I lived in ancient Rome, but just so I could wear those helmets. Their hat game was strong.

    • @karlsmith6690
      @karlsmith6690 7 років тому +15

      Or you could just buy the materials used and go cosplaying instead. Less death and more pussies achieved.

    • @noblechief4023
      @noblechief4023 4 роки тому +12

      Yeah, now helmets look like turtles thrown into your head. I would add the same material but make it a Roman looking helm and add a pilum.

    • @Tom-iw3zh
      @Tom-iw3zh 3 роки тому +1

      One could clean the dust off their feet with that brush on that helmet. It seems they wore sandals.

    • @TheDrunkHamster
      @TheDrunkHamster 3 роки тому +5

      Their helmets were sick. Also back into the bronze age. They had colorful horse tail plumes. Damn they looked stylish

    • @BrutalEnough
      @BrutalEnough 9 місяців тому +3

      As far as I know the Italian army's Bersaglieri infantry units still have a black feather bush on their combat helmets to this day!

  • @justjohn1121
    @justjohn1121 5 років тому +202

    “We have changed the world, can we not change ourselves?”

    • @adamplentl5588
      @adamplentl5588 4 роки тому +4

      Powerful line.

    • @remingron
      @remingron 4 роки тому +2

      @Robo Redneck
      Oh shut up, the romans would be laughing at you if they understood you're nonsense.

    • @desertfox20
      @desertfox20 3 роки тому +8

      *cough* America? Hear that?

    • @bengens6070
      @bengens6070 3 роки тому +9

      Yeah, good call old man, America, I mean Rome is dead now

    • @alexmuenster2102
      @alexmuenster2102 6 місяців тому +2

      No, we *should* not change ourselves!

  • @InFltSvc
    @InFltSvc Рік тому +67

    These were the glory days of the real Hollywood. Back then the pictures where HUGE productions. Just look at all the cast and extras in this scene. Imagine the wardrobe, catering , lighting all in a HUGE way to produce such a play like act yet for the camera. And notice the actors did the lines by the page without a cut or edit. They were real professional actors. Not like today. They can’t remember two lines. I love to watch these older moves as well as the black and white movies. They captivate me and demand attention and then you know they have truly done their job well as professionals they were. it’s wonderful that we have these great pictures to be entertained and to take us to a place and time forgotten.

    • @highend79
      @highend79 Рік тому +1

      True and as bad as Hollywood becomes because it adapt to the audience. Put those lines in today cinema.. everyone slept ^ ). That's the real horror. Also the same scene apply to today , the burning street of France, inheritance of Roman system still can't master culture integration.

    • @davidpineda9160
      @davidpineda9160 Рік тому

      Old people being old, example #5446565643543

    • @2msvalkyrie529
      @2msvalkyrie529 6 місяців тому +4

      These were actors who had spent years in theatre learning their craft
      and perfecting their technique .
      Unlike today where it's straight from Stage school to the screen .!
      And it shows..!!

  • @MrGoblin60
    @MrGoblin60 Рік тому +31

    And this kiddies, is what real script writing and acting looks like. What a pity we don't see such eloquence in movies today.

    • @mikavirtanen7029
      @mikavirtanen7029 Рік тому +3

      Stephen Boyd is the only weak link here, and while he had theatrical experience the competition was tough....Alec Guinness, James Mason, Christopher Plummer, Anthony Quayle, Omar Sharif...Russell Crowe had it more easy in the remake...which we could call...The Gladiator.

  • @richardhall4502
    @richardhall4502 8 років тому +453

    There is truth with all those speeches that resonate today!.

    • @gurugeorge
      @gurugeorge 7 років тому +38

      It'as knotty a problem, with some truth on both sides, as it ever was.

    • @hots4jc
      @hots4jc 7 років тому +35

      Sounds good but here's the problem...history notes that when Rome did that, the immigrants would not assimilate. They would not learn the language or break from the customs that were harmful to keep peace. Rome was then destroyed from within. But of course that was only a symptom of the fall. The real fall of Rome was that it refused to accept the one True God but instead followed non-gods. Any nation that does this is only asking for the inevitable. Judgement. We will all reap what we have sewn.

    • @lamentobtv01
      @lamentobtv01 7 років тому +41

      +hots4jc
      Are you stupid? The Roman empire had been christian for quite some time during its fall (which was one of the reasons why it collapsed in the first place.

    • @thedemonhater7748
      @thedemonhater7748 6 років тому +2

      hots4jc that was because the Romans asked them to come in. No, they BEGGED them to come in. In their moment of weakness, they asked others to protect them, so they never respected them.

    • @17Watman
      @17Watman 6 років тому +24

      hots4jc Rome was strongest before becoming Christian.

  • @airplanestoragehanger5283
    @airplanestoragehanger5283 7 років тому +54

    I like the use of skulls close to the ceiling, foreshadowing death.

    • @AlexSDU
      @AlexSDU 7 років тому +2

      I didn't notice it at all.
      Guess I have to go back watching the video again.

  • @StoicNatsoc
    @StoicNatsoc 7 років тому +891

    This is how the empire falls....with thunderous applause.

    • @Mr.LaughingDuck
      @Mr.LaughingDuck 7 років тому +95

      Movie takes place in 180 AD. The Western Roman Empire falls almost 300 years later. The Eastern Roman Empire fall about 1,200 years later. Curiously, both empires fell because of Germanic invaders: the Goths for the former, and Frankish Crusaders of the 4th Crusade for the latter.

    • @Mr.LaughingDuck
      @Mr.LaughingDuck 7 років тому +26

      Read up on what the 4th Crusaders did, and then reply back.

    • @Mr.LaughingDuck
      @Mr.LaughingDuck 7 років тому +63

      Saying that is like ignoring all the preexisting health conditions that lead to terminal illnesses. While the Ottomans weakened and ultimately ended the Byzantine Empire, it cannot be ignored that it was the Roman Catholics who fatally backstabbed and fragmented the empire to easily conquerable rump states. Even after the the Byzantines regained their lands from the Latins, they were left militarily and economically crippled. All the Ottomans had to do was pick up the scraps that the Latins left behind.

    • @richardscanlan3419
      @richardscanlan3419 7 років тому +4

      Yes,Manuel.Starting at the Battle of Manzikert in 1071.

    • @veronicawhatley5044
      @veronicawhatley5044 7 років тому +75

      An empire disappears when you start letting in individuals who have no interest in maintaining it

  • @MadilynnBrock-f5w
    @MadilynnBrock-f5w Рік тому +7

    The acting in this movie is phenomenal! Thanks for uploading ^_^. What an incredible piece of film..

  • @robertcross9047
    @robertcross9047 Рік тому +43

    "my fellow romans we must let in the foreigner hordes seeking to destroy us"
    where have we heard this one before? lmao

  • @ScapularSaves
    @ScapularSaves Рік тому +5

    Best acting ever. Most underrated film. Film should be restored and relaunched. This the Senate and People of Rome in the drama of a session.

  • @MrKrumpetz
    @MrKrumpetz 7 років тому +25

    They all do so good in this scene. The man presenting a hard argument to the senate looks nervous and clenches his hands in a way to show his anxiety.

  • @hollyshippy7417
    @hollyshippy7417 Рік тому +7

    Incredible production design and a great score by Dimitri Tiomkin. And, yet, there exists no American Blu-ray release and no 4K. It is films like this that remastering and 4K were developed.

  • @perfectplayingplaids
    @perfectplayingplaids 2 роки тому +128

    I love Roman history so much because of moments like these. It’s so grandiose, so poignant- it makes me think of the word “legendary” and how it comes from *legendarius* (the gerund of *legere,* *legendum* + arius), which pretty much means “you’ve gotta read about it,” where the *leg-* is just like in legitimate, legal, and legible. Roman History is just legendary: you have just got to about it.

    • @bladerunner12
      @bladerunner12 2 роки тому +20

      I have a personal theory that much of Rome's ability to become a great society came in their intrinsic value of communication, where clear communication is considered the source of order. We know from contemporaneous writings that oration was a highly respected skill among Romans and especially among the political classes, so much so that they developed an entire system of hand gesticulation for the purposes of heightening and clarifying verbal communication. We know that at the height of the Legion's proficiency at war there were literacy requirements among the lower ranks. They placed a huge value on record-keeping, recording more than just people's words but also constant detailed recording of statistics and events. We have more detailed accounts of Roman affairs than we do of most of the European kingdoms that followed Rome's collapse. Studying Roman history really gives you a sense of how dark the Dark Ages were--in many respects Rome feels like an out-of-place modern society that was teleported into Antiquity, and it's a little saddening to think of the cessation of advancement that occurred after their end. I often wonder where we'd be today if the inheritors of the Roman West had retained Rome's appreciation for the spoken and written word.

    • @perfectplayingplaids
      @perfectplayingplaids 2 роки тому +2

      @@bladerunner12 There’s so much truth here that it’s hard for me to even unpack it all. 👏🏻👏🏻👏🏻
      The literary tradition that was alive in Rome is still with us today, of course. The great authors like Cicero and Seneca never truly died out- trust me, I speak Latin- but you do too, sort of, in that you and I are still using the Latin alphabet; not the Greek or the Persian one but *this* Latin one, of course.
      “Rome is words that seem like they fit together.” Is also something I’m fond of saying, and it’s true, and the beauty and simplicity of Latin make this all the more true.

    • @robertkreiling1746
      @robertkreiling1746 Рік тому

      Rome rotted from the inside , just like America is rotting from the inside !

    • @tr7b410
      @tr7b410 Рік тому +3

      As an X-Roman centurion I concur.Hail Testacleze.

    • @Johnconno
      @Johnconno Рік тому +2

      I Am Leg-End

  • @paulbale3872
    @paulbale3872 6 місяців тому +5

    I love this movie. Truly epic in every way. Huge stars in a huge cast, huge screen, huge sets, great music score, wonderful performances. Yet the cost meant it had to be monster box office hit to make money and it didn’t. They wouldn’t make another another epic for decades.

  • @zhouwu
    @zhouwu 5 років тому +262

    I used to think the hardest fights are fought on the battlefields. Now, after these 10 long minutes, I see that they are fought over the debating chambers before the final arbiter.
    A battlefield only decides the outcome of the fight. The debate decides the future of the entire realm.

    • @greg_4201
      @greg_4201 4 роки тому +25

      if anyone debating there had seen a battlefield they wouldn't need to debate such obvious common sense things as to keep the barbarians out... Rome's political class stopped being soldiers, then only money rules and everything is up for grabs; citizenship, franchise, the army itself...

    • @zhouwu
      @zhouwu 4 роки тому +1

      @B Dan Spoken like someone who has never heard of the battle of Gate Pa.
      The Maori overwhelmingly won the battle, but lost the peace.
      Those who live by the sword, die by the sword.
      And they conquer the world for the sake of the meek, who will inherit the earth.
      It has been written, so also, it must be fulfilled and is indeed being fulfilled as we yet speak.
      ;)

    • @zhouwu
      @zhouwu 4 роки тому +8

      @@greg_4201 Rightly, you have said it was not the Romans who fought anymore, but rather, the barbarians recruited into Roman armies.
      You can't have your cake and eat it too.
      If you can't fight your own battles, who are you to think you can continue to hold on to your own realm?
      Simple logic.

    • @zhouwu
      @zhouwu 4 роки тому +3

      @B Dan you've seen them? Have you also seen the 100% of empires which fall? Maybe you should look at those too! Have you never read that those who live by the sword also die by the sword?
      You can conquer by the sword, but you cannot rule by the sword. The pen is always mightier than the sword. Always.

    • @zhouwu
      @zhouwu 4 роки тому +1

      @B Dan Pheh! You're quoting my fellow countryman as if his words were gospel.
      By the stroke of a pen, an entire army is demobilised. What use is the weapons of the infantrymen when they've lost their job? If they turn on their masters, their own comrades will slay them.
      Authority triumphs over power, every single time.
      A general or warlord or political leader can wreck as much havoc as they like, but at the end of the day, they are at the mercy of the historians.
      The traffic cops can be taken to court if they disobey the law.
      Leaders of countries can be dragged off as war criminals.
      No one is above the Law.
      And at the end of the day, death slays all tyrants. And then, they face their judgement at the mercy of their own Maker, who won't be particularly impressed at the way they treated their fellow creatures.
      You say you live in the real world, as if you can tell the real world apart from your dogma. But may your karma run over your dogma.

  • @bloodfire1989
    @bloodfire1989 4 роки тому +348

    "There comes a time when the people no longer believe in it. Then, then does an empire begin to die."
    With the riots going on across America I can't help but feel this is more relevant for some people in the world than ever.

    • @vlife_ke
      @vlife_ke 4 роки тому +12

      I had the same thought pal

    • @vlife_ke
      @vlife_ke 4 роки тому +21

      @Peter Rogan personally I think Amerca of all the countries need to be united more than ever being that now it has an evil moving target on its back, the US is supposed to be a living example of democracy but I'm afraid some individuals in power are now destroying the very one thing that makes America outstanding. It is it is in the best interest of the world that America remains the Superpower... I weep for the world.

    • @sarahjames927
      @sarahjames927 4 роки тому +23

      rencrow one dies another rises. As for best interest ... well we shall see. Only time will tell. But if America falls China becomes the superpower without strong opposition ... and that’s something we all should be afraid of.

    • @edwardyang8254
      @edwardyang8254 4 роки тому +6

      @@sarahjames927 Ask yourself... what did China ever do to warrant your prejudice? China didn't initiate any war nor sanction for the past 70 years. How many wars have the U.S. waged over the last 20 years? All you proved is that you're a racist and a bigot.

    • @raymondspada4684
      @raymondspada4684 4 роки тому +11

      Americans (especially AA) no longer believe in it - This is a "Red Flag" for America.

  • @FRANKTHRING1
    @FRANKTHRING1 6 років тому +62

    Great speech from dear old Finlay Currie, a great Scottish character actor who appeared in several other epics, most notably as Peter, the disciple of Jesus, in the first big costume spectacular of the 50s, "Quo Vadis".

    • @ivorbiggun710
      @ivorbiggun710 4 роки тому +5

      My favourite performance by him is as Magwitch in Davis Lean's Great Expectations.

    • @Wixom2200
      @Wixom2200 3 роки тому +3

      All these actors honed thier skills on the stage first. That's where acting is learned. These men and women have failed somewhere to succeed here. Bravo.

    • @LordZontar
      @LordZontar Рік тому +2

      Currie also appears as Balthazar in Ben Hur (1959) and Sir Cedric in Ivanhoe (1952).

    • @nelliethursday1812
      @nelliethursday1812 Рік тому

      He was also epic in the movie People Will Talk with Cary Grant a movie with subject matter that was taboo at the time

    • @timcarpenter2441
      @timcarpenter2441 7 місяців тому

      @@ivorbiggun710”Jesus has a way at getting at a young boy, and his liver…”

  • @MichaelSmith-ij2ut
    @MichaelSmith-ij2ut Рік тому +151

    The "rights to all thing" in this was a product of the time the film was written. 1964 was the same year the Civil Rights Act was passed in the U.S. (this is an American film). The lead writer of the film was a Jewish Canadian who was blacklisted during McCarthyism for he and his wife's Communist affiliations.
    Citizenship to all was something Emperor Caracalla passed 30 years after the events of this scene, and Roman historian Cassius Dio asserts this was done to expand the tax base of eligible citizens. Another reason might have been to expand the recruitment pool of eligible draftees into the Legions. Unfortunately that wound up reducing the appeal of the Auxiliaries, non-citizen soldiers who would enlist to seek citizenship as a reward for service; citizenship came with legal protections that subject/auxiliary status didn't have and so it provided an attractive incentive for willing service. Uniform citizenship also blurred the legal distinction between the Italian "core" of the Empire and the auxiliary provincials. All were subject to the same laws now, and over time the centralness of Italia shifted away.
    This film also directly inspired Ridley Scott's 'Gladiator' 36 years later. The overall plot is almost beat for beat identical, right down to the final duel between Commodus and the fictional protagonist. In this one, Commodus is killed in the Forum instead of the Arena, but it still pre-kills him about 12 years before his real historical death (he was sole Emperor for 12 years). There's also a scene involving the fictional Timonides (the Greek ex-slave in this scene) holding his hand in a flame without crying out to prove his bravery; it's a direct lift from the tale of Gaius Scaevola doing the same when he was captured by the Etruscan Clusium King.

    • @notsocrates9529
      @notsocrates9529 7 місяців тому +22

      _noticing intensifies_
      It has always been in our faces, hasn't it? Good catch.

    • @thomast8539
      @thomast8539 6 місяців тому +8

      With the HUGE exception that Scott's Gladiator didn't mention the dilutuion of Roman citizenship at all.

    • @chamuuemura5314
      @chamuuemura5314 4 місяці тому +2

      @MichaelSmith-ij2ut
      Gladiator sure ripped off the ending but I still prefer the original.

    • @Reinhard_Erlik
      @Reinhard_Erlik 3 місяці тому +4

      Well well well

    • @jirojhasuo2ndgrandcompany745
      @jirojhasuo2ndgrandcompany745 2 місяці тому

      muh j00s ​@@notsocrates9529

  • @ccbaxter47
    @ccbaxter47 6 місяців тому +5

    A tragically underrated motion picture. And for my money, some of the most impressive sets in film history.

    • @barriolimbas
      @barriolimbas 6 місяців тому

      Came out past it's time. Already a fatigue among audiences for epics.

  • @LeontiusInvictus
    @LeontiusInvictus 4 роки тому +153

    From the story, to the themes, to even the very costumes..it is clear that Gladiator is a spiritual successor to this film. I thoroughly enjoyed it. And to see Alec Guinness as Marcus Aurelius was perfect. I've never known him in any other role than as Obi-Wan...it was somehow like I was watching the same character.

    • @grayfox6518
      @grayfox6518 3 роки тому +14

      He's good in Lawrence of Arabia as well.

    • @machirim2805
      @machirim2805 2 роки тому +18

      He played King Charles I in the Cromwell movie. And Cromwell’s actor Richard Harris would go on to play Marcus Aurelius in Gladiator.
      Just som fun facts I wanted to say.

    • @stephensczurek6286
      @stephensczurek6286 2 роки тому +9

      He played Colonel Nicholson in Bridge over the River Kwai, probably the main part in that film.

    • @geoffreycarson2311
      @geoffreycarson2311 2 роки тому +1

      SEE Sir Alec as CHARLES The 1st In CROMWELL 😁SUBLIME g

    • @rosswatson9144
      @rosswatson9144 Рік тому +3

      He is in David Lean films...masterpieces all.

  • @mr.milanos3090
    @mr.milanos3090 4 роки тому +21

    So Stephen Boyd played another roman role. He was Messala from Ben Hur before that movie. He's really a brilliant actor. 😊

    • @paulbale3872
      @paulbale3872 3 роки тому +3

      I was lucky to be taken to a lunch he was at in 1973. I just sat there looking at him and thinking 'that's Messala'!

  • @arthurconan1899
    @arthurconan1899 Рік тому +8

    One of or if not the greatest movie made about Rome.. So historically spot on

  • @haraldgriefbacon1373
    @haraldgriefbacon1373 6 днів тому +1

    "There comes a time when its people no longer believe in it. Then does an empire begin to die."
    Thank goodness, as an American, I can't see any connection between this wise statement and our present situation.

  • @jonsmitt9769
    @jonsmitt9769 Рік тому +3

    Such voices, beautiful, strong, clear, persuasive, articulate and passionate.
    Sad we have so few great orators these days, none of them among politicians.

    • @celtspeaksgoth7251
      @celtspeaksgoth7251 Рік тому

      I recall broadcasts from the parliament in Westminster going back 50 years. Boris Johnson is hands down the best speaker over that period. A born entertainer. Thatcher was very prepared and highly organised but lacked any flair or spontaneity.

  • @pugsy606
    @pugsy606 Рік тому +4

    The acting in this is being played out by absolute masters of their craft.

  • @ArmenianBishop
    @ArmenianBishop 6 місяців тому +2

    This is an underrated movie. I've seen its entirety, and very well done.

  • @Diamonddogusa
    @Diamonddogusa 6 місяців тому +8

    Remember when movies had dialogue? So few and far between they are today.

  • @T.R.75
    @T.R.75 13 днів тому +1

    the greed and corruption of the patrician class of Rome was what ended their empire. all empires fall, usually from the graft within. great scene, great movie.

  • @jasonlovelace3930
    @jasonlovelace3930 Рік тому +7

    This was a and is a great movie! Very depictive of the USA...

    • @chrisholland7367
      @chrisholland7367 6 місяців тому

      It could have been depective of the British empire.

  • @wratiqjenej
    @wratiqjenej 8 років тому +7

    thank you very much for a video!

  • @stevem.1417
    @stevem.1417 4 роки тому +33

    Every drop of water contains a tempest, an entire ocean. Every snowflake contains an avalanche, a glacier. Do not be fooled by the benign innocence of a singular victim, who contains vengeance and wrath en masse. Educate barbarians first before allowing admission, lest their barbarism infect the developed host.

  • @saidtheactress
    @saidtheactress 4 роки тому +4

    The production qualities on this film are so impressive.

  • @phillipsolesky2677
    @phillipsolesky2677 5 місяців тому

    Very, very timely! Exactly what is happening mainly in the US but the world in general. Beautiful!

  • @ViriatoII
    @ViriatoII Рік тому +7

    Oikophobia - "the aversion to one's Home, own identity and society", creeps in paradoxically when a civilization reaches peak greatness

  • @Mute_Nostril_Agony
    @Mute_Nostril_Agony Рік тому +8

    I never knew that the Roman Empire lasted until 1964

  • @dave55ides
    @dave55ides 3 роки тому +5

    Excellent scene - and gosh doesn’t the dialogue from nearly sixty years ago resonate today?

  • @richin2123
    @richin2123 2 роки тому +9

    I saw this film for the first time in 2018, after hearing what a flop it was on its initial release...and it's become one of my favorites. But it's truly before its time, and its concepts are as relevant today (maybe even more so) than in 1964 when it was first released.

  • @stevendaniel8126
    @stevendaniel8126 Рік тому +1

    LOVE it !!! Thank you so much.....

  • @r4kung
    @r4kung Рік тому +617

    It's funny, because the young senator was the clear antagonist of the scene, yet history proved him to be 100% right about everything. The citizenship became a cheap commodity and lost all value, the surrounding rulers believed Rome to have become weak, and the very people the heroes of the scene wished to shelter were the ones to hammer the final nail into the coffin of Rome.

    • @cpp3221
      @cpp3221 Рік тому +140

      Welp, a civil war every tuesday, stupid taxation system and the assassination the rare strong and loyal men who could have actually saved the empire also did not help.

    • @davidfinch7407
      @davidfinch7407 Рік тому +158

      It kind of reminds me of another great nation which decided it's citizenship wasn't worth much, and then began to perish under the weight of foreign immigration/invasion.

    • @PawelK198604
      @PawelK198604 Рік тому +25

      @@davidfinch7407 Wonder you meant Britain or America? ;-)

    • @kingconstantinusthesadisti133
      @kingconstantinusthesadisti133 Рік тому

      They killed great leaders from assassination every month. How can we expect the empire to last longer 💀

    • @TheTwofatgamers
      @TheTwofatgamers Рік тому +1

      @@davidfinch7407 America's inevitable fall has got fuck all to do with immigration and all to to with a few rich people stripping the county all its wealth and convincing the left and the right population that their each others enemy. The rich are the enemy not the immigrant

  • @Loccutus28
    @Loccutus28 7 років тому +28

    As a professor of history I heartily endorse this film. It has it's share of "Hollywood fiction" in it, but on the whole it is very accurate. Christopher Plummer does an excellent job as the Emperor, Commodus. This scene concerning the Roman Senate speaks volumes about he problems that will later bring down the Republic and Rome itself. It is a hard film to find, though!

    • @ds1868
      @ds1868 7 років тому +11

      "..later bring down the Republic...."? The Roman Republic ended with the settlement of the Emperor Augustus in 27 BC, some 200 years before the depiction in this film. en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Roman_Republic

    • @CameronAB122
      @CameronAB122 6 років тому +3

      ds1868 Romans referred to themselves as the res publica during the Imperial periods

    • @h.plovecraftn-4307
      @h.plovecraftn-4307 Рік тому

      No

  • @tommyharrington3094
    @tommyharrington3094 7 років тому +479

    Funny how history repeats itself

    • @Zartu_3rd_Overlord_of_Blargon7
      @Zartu_3rd_Overlord_of_Blargon7 7 років тому +52

      As a wise man once wrote, "there is nothing new under the sun."

    • @jacksonpettit9423
      @jacksonpettit9423 7 років тому +25

      As a wise old lady said ''humans don't live long enough to see history repeat itself''

    • @1969cmp
      @1969cmp 7 років тому +4

      Napoleon Did Nothing Wrong King Solomon 😉

    • @romanhujecek6221
      @romanhujecek6221 7 років тому +55

      As another wise man, Heraclitus of Ephesus, once wrote "δὶς ἐς τὸν αὐτὸν ποταμὸν οὐκ ἂν ἐμβαίης" (You could not step twice into the same river.) because the river changes constantly and it is not the same river as in the moment ago. The EU or the USA are not the Roman Empire. There are too many differences, you cannot make conclusions based on a few accidental similarities.
      The demise of the Roman Empire was caused by more factors. Internal wars, plague and economic collapse because cutting off the supply of the slaves were among them. When the Empire could not expand and plunder foreign territory or provinces anymore, its economy stagnated at best. After the Crisis of the Third Century, the Empire did not look as we imagine from historical block-busters.
      The Roman Empire was a military dictatorship, too big to be ruled from one centre effectively in those times. In the 5th century, the Germanic tribes weren't backward savages without a potter's wheel as in the 1st century. Their kings and leaders often grew up in Rome or Ravenna as noble hostages, their soldiers knew Roman tactics.

    • @clairestark9024
      @clairestark9024 7 років тому +13

      no it doesnt, it tends to rhyme however.

  • @ghostdivision7
    @ghostdivision7 7 років тому +6

    And still such a relevant topic today!

  • @rirayejohnson8079
    @rirayejohnson8079 4 роки тому +3

    A lot of great camera shots for a movie made in 1964

  • @HoTrEtArDeDcHiXx
    @HoTrEtArDeDcHiXx 3 роки тому +8

    The old guy at the end dampers the Greco-Roman spirit

  • @hariseldon3786
    @hariseldon3786 4 роки тому +118

    Regretfully the 'larger compassion' can lead to the undoing of any civilization. The price of freedom is eternal vigilance.

  • @israelasiku3975
    @israelasiku3975 Рік тому +10

    What stands out in this scene is one thing and one thing only.... GREAT DIALOGUE

  • @tancreddehauteville764
    @tancreddehauteville764 Рік тому +3

    Great film. The films of the 50s and 60s are the peak of cinema as an art form.

    • @ehought
      @ehought Рік тому +2

      It was the era of epics, and some great movies there were indeed, El Cid, Khartoum, Cleopatra, Spartacus, Ben Hur, the list goes on

  • @trwent
    @trwent 6 місяців тому +2

    Fun fact: James Mason was the first choice to play Harvard Law Professor Charles Kingsfield in 1973 film The Paper Chase. He turned it down, and the producers turned to a little-known British-American actor named John Houseman for the part. Houseman ended up winning the Academy Award for Best Supporting Actor for this role, which he later revised in a TV series of the same name as the film. Mason likely also would have been excellent in the role, though.

  • @jaydee3681
    @jaydee3681 Рік тому +4

    Great film….. remember though that Rome still stood for another 1000 years in the East! What an empire!

  • @eakintunde84
    @eakintunde84 7 років тому +120

    This might as well be the debate over the 1965 immigration act. Too many parallels to modern America.

    • @HostileLemons
      @HostileLemons 4 роки тому +20

      Except immigration didnt kill Rome. It was internal corruption and decadence

    • @unclesam5230
      @unclesam5230 4 роки тому +65

      @@HostileLemons immigration was a deciding factor on the destruction of Rome because most of the immigrants didn’t become dutiful citizens of the empire and often rebelled against Rome so immigration has massive impacts the 1965 Immigration Act was never voted on by the People it was the government that did that.

    • @Greyhawkwar
      @Greyhawkwar 4 роки тому +45

      propaganda piece to break a nations borders. Look at the West today. Its overrun & unable to fight its own destruction.

    • @occiderisaethiopissa3702
      @occiderisaethiopissa3702 3 роки тому +12

      @@HostileLemons Yes.It.Did.

    • @Nonviableaccount
      @Nonviableaccount 6 місяців тому +1

      It’s unfortunate that the protagonists in both have been proven by time to be wrong. 😊

  • @sid2112
    @sid2112 Рік тому +27

    Imagine a world where Timonides the Greek was heard and the promise of the Roman peace was achieved.

    • @webo1521
      @webo1521 8 місяців тому +13

      roman empire fell because of barbarians who didint care about Rome and never bothered to become full, dutiful citizens of Roman empire, and yes... course there are some exceptions but still

    • @networknomad5600
      @networknomad5600 6 місяців тому +2

      @@webo1521Wow, that sounds like the US today!

    • @wertyuiopasd6281
      @wertyuiopasd6281 2 місяці тому

      @@webo1521 You cannot become what you are not. It's not that non-romans didn't bother becoming "dutiful citizens".
      Citizenship nationalism is cringe and fake.
      European barbarians could become romans purely because of race. When Rome became 60% extra-european by its fall, it was bound to happen. Just like in the West today.

    • @davidbanterford3216
      @davidbanterford3216 10 днів тому +1

      They did allow in huge numbers of Germans in the later empire after the 3rd century. Caracalla also extended the citizenship to every person in the empire in around 210 ad or something like that. And indeed the citizenship, exactly as the first speaker suggested, lost all relevance and significance and Roman power and that of the senate was weakened as a result

  • @PRubin-rh4sr
    @PRubin-rh4sr 2 роки тому +5

    Never have I been glued to the screen with just people talking. My god. When will we ever see these kind of performances again. It's like watching theater.

  • @danielanderson3286
    @danielanderson3286 6 місяців тому +2

    I love these old films no cgi just old fashioned sets and let the actors let rip.

  • @jupiterapollo4985
    @jupiterapollo4985 5 днів тому

    This long scene is probably better acting than anything I've seen in modern movies in a long time. I was captivated all the way through.

  • @khulekanimagubane9153
    @khulekanimagubane9153 6 років тому +8

    If the last of the "great emperors" that the old Senator served was Marcus Aurelius, then the Caesar sitting on that throne must be Emperor Commodus...oh shit...!

    • @zvimur
      @zvimur 4 роки тому

      Spoiler:
      This movie ends in a duel between Commodus and the General.
      Sigh: worse yet, for some reason I thought Oliver Reed played the German chieftain. Kept smirking watching Gladiator for first time.

  • @N9mber
    @N9mber 7 років тому +14

    Some people just never learn their history.

  • @michaelgibson4705
    @michaelgibson4705 Рік тому +3

    Even the small parts of the senators played by fine British actors Eric Porter,Finlay Currie,and Douglas Wilmer

  • @emperorconstantine1.361
    @emperorconstantine1.361 6 днів тому

    3:31
    James mason may have cut off the suave facial hair he wore in “20,000 Leagues Under The Sea”, but I recognize that voice anywhere!!

  • @thedukeofswellington1827
    @thedukeofswellington1827 Рік тому +3

    Wait until Biggus Dickus hears of this

  • @iJustFlyDammit
    @iJustFlyDammit 7 років тому +145

    I feel like I'm watching the US today

    • @paulgeach9319
      @paulgeach9319 7 років тому +11

      Extremely small is a bit of an understatement don't you think

    • @sonofnike2800
      @sonofnike2800 6 років тому +7

      >I feel like i'm watching the US today
      That was the point of the "movie".

    • @nicholasturner7931
      @nicholasturner7931 5 років тому

      iJustFlyDammit ignorant comment

    • @ignaciomondragon99
      @ignaciomondragon99 5 років тому +4

      iJustFlyDammit
      Lmao then you're an idiot, because while germanic immigrants violently attacked Roman citizens in hordes, immigrants in the US tend to keep to themselves & their families, hide & stay away from local authorities as much as possible, big difference dipshit, there are no hordes of illegal immigrants attacking & killing US citizens in scale breaking numbers unless you watch fox news (which you probably do) this comparison is as stupid as the 2 conservatives that raised you. Rome was the most prestigious, honorable & influential nation in human history, to even compare Rome to the US is like comparing a roaring lion to a newborn kitten. the US is NOTHING like Rome, get over yourself.

    • @archieames1968
      @archieames1968 4 роки тому +10

      @Rick O'Shay Libs: Illegal immigrants slaughtered native americans. Also Libs: So lets have more illegal immigration.

  • @feddyvonwigglestein3481
    @feddyvonwigglestein3481 4 роки тому +9

    "HONORABLE FATHERS...and senators of Rome. Have you heard....of the high elves?!"

  • @gaiusmarius8628
    @gaiusmarius8628 3 роки тому +4

    Claudius' speech was awesome

  • @Whatt787
    @Whatt787 8 днів тому +1

    Long and drawn out, but great acting by a great cast

  • @cotstu5683
    @cotstu5683 4 місяці тому +1

    This scene is a masterpiece.

  • @TEGRULZ
    @TEGRULZ 5 років тому +7

    Livius himself would have had speaking rights in the Senate as only Senators could serve as Legates of Legions. Ironically the biggest problem with Roman Government and Politics was that the terms of office were TOO short. Only one year in every office, and it was expected to move up or move out. Also the second biggest problem was the Gubernatorial system, devolving power to Governors and giving them Legions, even with service, the average Legate could have held his own in the Senate without troubles.
    On the other hand, who could not imagine James Mason himself as a Senator of Rome with the highest distinction?

    • @yochaiwyss3843
      @yochaiwyss3843 4 роки тому

      Usually, Preators and Consuls became Governors after their terms expired, then if they were leading a military campaign and their term ran out they were simply re-designated Proconsuls or Propreators to keep them in command for the remaining duration of the campaign under the stronger control of the Senate. After a Term of Office, the Higher officials would become Governours and then return to the Senate as Ex-Consul and Ex-Preator with possibility of re-election every 7 years.

  • @Skrimpish
    @Skrimpish 4 роки тому +9

    How subtle the tribe has been all this time. 110

  • @Baylescreen
    @Baylescreen Рік тому +16

    One of the last great film epics. Superbly acted by an unbeatable cast AND before the advent of CGI. The battle scenes and those of assembled armies were made up of thousands of extras!

  • @GlennHa
    @GlennHa Місяць тому

    At 5:55 looks like David Ogden Stiers in the background (starred in the TV show MASH, voiced Cogsworth in Beauty and the Beast)

  • @skipads5141
    @skipads5141 Рік тому +1

    That final bit was very pre-hippie for 1964.

  • @captnrobvious47
    @captnrobvious47 Рік тому +11

    That last speech given is so prophetic is hurts.

  • @peter6914
    @peter6914 Рік тому +7

    It’s actually harrowing how relevant this scene is to modern western discourse.

  • @marcel-ec6qe
    @marcel-ec6qe 2 місяці тому +3

    Gave roman citizenship to everyone, took every aspiration to earn it, took every possibility to show struggle to get it. That was true beginning of fall of rome.

  • @tysonas1
    @tysonas1 Рік тому +2

    I find amusing is that Roman interiors weren’t bland and dystopian as depicted but were extremely colorful with painted statues and mosaic walls

  • @SilentShadow269
    @SilentShadow269 19 днів тому

    Back when movies didn't need a constant OST in the background in every scene, like they're worried you'll lose engagement or something.