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16 May, 2007

The story of Rome

By Sonia Faleiro

image

Title: Rome

By: John Milius, William Macdonald and Bruno Heller (creators)

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HBO’s Original Series capture remarkably, and it appears, in totality, a slice of life, an environment and the people who occupy it and make it distinct. Sex and the City immortalized New York and its single women; The Sopranos did the same for New Jersey’s gangsters, and with Entourage, those obsessed with Hollywood’s celebrity culture have a show to call their own. 

With its dramatic series Rome, about to enter Season 3, HBO achieves trademark intimacy; bringing us the story of Rome at the time when it was a Republic about to metamorphose into an Empire. All the familiar figures are present, Julius Caesar, Mark Anthony and Cleopatra, as they would in any documentary, but what elevates Rome and makes it such a captivating watch above any documentary and many contemporary dramas, is its superb script, which is bitingly sharp and extremely funny, and has at its centre, neither Caesar nor Cleopatra, but two Roman soldiers and best friends, Lucius Vorenus (Kevin McKidd) and Titus Polo (Ray Stevenson). The entire cast, in fact, is exceptional, and one cannot imagine them in any other role but as the masters and slaves, husbands, wives and lovers that they portray in this series. 

All this would have come to naught, however, if HBO had skimped on the sets and costume design, but the people who introduced Choos and Blahnik’s into our vocabulary, have raised the bar. The recreation of Rome and Alexandria takes you into the past, but for me, more impressive was the variety of sets—from the Forum to the Temple of Jupiter, the Senate and the backdrop to war scenes—and the attention to detail; seamy spice markets where murders can be bought, fish markets where intrigues are fed, and panoramas of the teeming populace who are but pawns in the political wars, which will determine the fate of Rome. 

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Comments

I agree! Rome is very engrossing. Slickly produced, well acted (although sometimes the British accent is a little jarring) and plenty of sex and action - what more could one want? But I thought the series has been cancelled because it was too expensive to produce.

Posted by Soumya Banerji on Wed, May 16, 2007 at 8:59:24

I had to google Choos and Blahnik to realize they are designer brands - probably featured in SitC. Obviously, I live under a rock. :)

I have heard good things about Rome but seen a single episode of the series either. Not having HBO (premium TV channel here in the US), I never saw SitC or Sopranos either.

This rave makes me want to start renting Rome DVDs…

===
And to answer Soumya’s question about what more could one want…

well.. see this Japanese anime classic from the 70s.

Cleopatra - part 1 - on youtube at http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZPlKWzF1Kos (right side of the link has subsequent parts.)

Unfortunately, its in Japanese and English translations are not easily available for this movie. I did not see the whole thing but fast-forwarded through a few of the parts...and wow...interesting and sometimes hilarious take on the whole scene in Rome. :)

Warning:  It is bizarre and weird .... will take time to appreciate, if at all.

Posted by Sanjeev on Thu, May 17, 2007 at 5:23:00

I think the “say only good things” rule of thumb sometimes gets in the way of—and sometimes even undermines—a good piece (and Rave Out has many, congratulations on assembling a good team of writers). I suggest you relax that a little bit, because sometimes all the positive things that everyone here has to say about everything they write about get’s a little… uni-dimensional.

Posted by Ashwin on Thu, May 17, 2007 at 5:38:03

I’ve got the Rome box set but haven’t found the motivation. Hope it’s more like Sopranos and less like ‘Sex In The City’ (didn’t require the usage of a single brain cell that one).

Posted by Nanda Kishore on Sun, May 20, 2007 at 1:59:45

Ashwin, the format of RaveOut really is for people to share some of the great things they’ve found in various forms of art.  If it is unidimensional, it is because these are not full reviews of the works in question. 200 words or thereabouts is quite restrictive for that purpose, and wouldn’t even come close to delivering much more than a spotlight on some good work, or great aspects thereof, which I feel it does quite admirably.

Posted by Sumant on Tue, May 22, 2007 at 3:01:21

Cool. I just got into anime, any suggestions?

Posted by Anime on Fri, May 30, 2008 at 8:20:41

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