Last night my nephew and I went to a Thursday preview of Gladiator II and we were both definitely entertained. Rome is now ruled by a pair of tyrannical twin emperors, Geta (Joseph Quinn) and Caracalla (Fred Hechinger), who are bloodthirsty in their desire to acquire more and more land. General Acacius (Pedro Pascal) leads an invasion of Numidia for them during which a Roman refugee named Hanno (Paul Mescal) is captured and his wife Arishat (Yuval Gonen) is killed. Hanno, as a prisoner of war, is eventually purchased by a former slave named Macrinus (Denzel Washington) and he agrees to become a gladiator for him in order to take his revenge on Acacius. Meanwhile, Acacius is growing disillusioned with fighting wars on behalf of the corrupt emperors and he and his wife Lucilla (Connie Nielsen), the daughter of Marcus Aurelius, plot to overthrow them with his personal army. Hanno begins winning the gladiator contests in the Colosseum and Macrinus plans to use him in his own plot to rule Rome but Lucilla recognizes him as her son Lucius who was sent away after the death of his father Maximus and is next in line to the imperial throne. Will Lucius fight for revenge, for Macrinus, or for Rome? The original movie is one of my very favorites and, while I did really enjoy this one, the plot often feels like a repeat without the same emotional stakes. I think that Mescal does a great job, especially in the action sequences, but his character is not as compelling as Maximus because Lucius achieves success in the arena by emulating him rather than because of his own skills (there are lots of callbacks to Maximus when Lucius is fighting). I also found Geta and Caracalla to be less villainous than Commodus because the two of them are unstable rather than evil (I hated Commodus by the end of the original but Geta and Caracalla are just annoying) and Quinn and Hechinger don't have a lot to do but wear more and more eyeliner to show their debauchery. Pascal provides a great moment of pathos in the arena but even Acacius has a similar character arc to Maximus. However, Macrinus is absolutely fascinating because he has risen from slavery to become a powerful political player and he gleefully treats everyone like chess pieces in the pursuit of his own agenda. Washington commands the screen in a riveting performance (while having the time of his life chewing the scenery). Finally, Ridley Scott can always be counted on to create a grand spectacle and he certainly does so here with some epic and exhilarating set pieces, especially those in the Colosseum involving a rhinoceros and the staging of a naval battle (although the battle with a bunch apes is a bit weird). I also really loved the visuals, particularly some black and white sequences involving the afterlife. This is ultimately a lot of fun (my nephew and I left the theater with big smiles on our faces) and, even though it doesn't reach the heights of the original, it is worth seeing on the biggest screen possible.
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