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More details of product: Julius Caesar

Julius Caesar

Category: DVD
List Price: $14.98
Our Price: $12.99
Usually ships in 24 hours
As of: January 09th, 2009 08:31:42 AM
Customer comments on this selection.

2 Star Rating Julius Caesar: His Time Has Come
This is not one of the best movies that I have seen. However, Considering the timeframe the movie takes place I can't completely say it is all bad. Sure it's a movie but it shows possibly how Julius Caesar become who he was. How his accention to power proved to be his own downfall.

4 Star Rating Entertaining
An entertaining movie, I know better than to get correct history facts from the movies

5 Star Rating Vini Vidi Vici!
This feature was very beautifully done, with a great script and a stellar performance from some B+ list actors. As a lover of Rome, I found the story to be very historically accurate, which is always a nice thing for a history geek like me. Furthermore, the script was so full of depth and heart that I actually found myself crying at Caesar's death. It takes a lot for a tragedy to still make someone cry when they know what's coming, yet "Julius Caesar" achieved it.

5 Star Rating Much more intimate than the bloated movies about Rome
This was almost like watching a play. Very well done TV movie. Jermey Sisto was excellent as Ceasar, I hope he gets more good parts. Most of the cast was very good, except for the Italian import Vareria Golino, who, I felt, is a drippy actress at best. Other than that it was quite a suprise to watch a accurate movie about an ancient culture that we really have just scratched the surface of.

3 Star Rating Not so mighty Caesar
Recently I saw Jeremy Sisto in a film in the cinema, and as my movie-going friend and I were dissecting the film afterward, we both were impressed with Sisto's performance, and tried to recall what we'd seen him in before. I remembered this production of Julius Caesar, but only after a while - Sisto's role in the other film (a light drama with a comedic edge) is very different from the epic, super-serious Julius Caesar.

This production is a good one for a straight-to-television production. It is a four-hour miniseries (the television nomenclature equivalent for `epic'). It plays a bit loose with the historic progression, but keeps many of the broad strokes intact - Rome's trouble under Sulla, Caesar's early difficulties becoming established, his military alliance and familial partnership with Pompey, destined to falter; the conquest of Gaul and the march back to Rome, the fiery oratory of Cato, and the climactic death in the Senate.

Caesar is a complex character, one who defies encapsulation in so short a span as four hours. Given that Caesar was surrounded by many equally intriguing characters, it is little wonder that productions about Caesar often fall victim to a particular interpretation. Sisto's performance, and Edel's direction, makes Caesar in some ways a walking statue - and this is not a necessarily inappropriate style. Caesar was very conscious of appearances and public perceptions, and took great pains to always appear in a certain fashion that would enhance his power and reputation. Sisto's Caesar does show such some emotional range, but this is often mitigated by `events of state'.

Richard Harris, in one of his final performances as Sulla, puts in a much more dynamic performance, however brief; some may recall Harris as the wise emperor Marcus Aurelius in `Gladiator' a few years prior to this production, a very different role indeed from the ambitious, capricious and over-emotional Sulla. Christopher Walken as Cato also turns in an almost over-the-top performance (Cato and Cicero seem to be a combined character here, in some respects). Christopher Noth plays Pompey, but does so at extremes - he is either flat and ineffective, or overly emotional and ineffective. Noth has done good work elsewhere, but this is not one of his better pieces.

The female characters in this production are largely marginalized; even the famous Cleopatra/Caesar affair in minimized. While the role of Cleopatra is often overplayed in the Caesar story, it does have a decided role. Also, the role of Augustus is completely missing.

Filming was done in Malta and in Bulgaria, which brought in lots of locals into the production. A replica of the Roman Forum was constructed, which is an impressive piece of scenery. Also, the Gaul encampment, where Caesar overcomes Celtic warriors, is well constructed and visually powerful. German actor Heino Ferch plays the role of the Celtic leader with aplomb. In scenes where he appears, he steals the show so completely that no Caesar could resist.

It is interesting that the television series, `Rome', is currently enjoying a major success with essentially the same time period. This could have been a great epic / mini-series; instead, it is passing fair. Costumes are great, sets and location good. The story line is interesting, even if out of sync with actual history. The performances are spotty but occasionally effective. The writing takes the story along, but almost as if it were a rendering about Rome and Caesar than a piece for actors to perform in.

Those who like the `sword and sandals' kind of film will find this interesting. Others may find it tolerable. Those who are easily irritated at historical inaccuracies of detail may well find this film infuriating, as lots of bits are rearranged for dramatic effect. Even so, it is an epic that might be worth a rainy day or night's viewing.

There are no real DVD extras to speak of, at least not on the copy I have.


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