Tag Archives: Ridley Scott

Movie Review: “Gladiator II”

Rip-roaring sword-and-sandal sequel returns to the arena for more blood sport action in good ol’ ancient Rome

Gladiator II
Starring Paul Mescal, Pedro Pascal, Denzel Washington & Connie Nielsen
Directed by Ridley Scott
R

In theaters Friday, Nov. 22

Director Ridley Scott returns to the scene of the crime—the Roman Colosseum—in this big, brawny, blood-spattering, furiously entertaining sequel to his 2000 sword-and-sandal Oscar winner.

And the impressive shadow of Russell Crowe’s Maximus, the Roman slave who became a revered gladiatorial hero in the original Gladiator, looms large here, in more ways than one—in flashbacks, lines of dialog and visuals, woven into the movie’s very DNA. There’s even a hallowed, altar-like display in the catacombs of the arena, with Maximus’ armor and sword. Pretty impressive for a character who died, strolling off into the fields of Elysian afterlife nearly 25 years ago!

Paul Mescal plays Lucius, a farmer who becomes a slave forced into service as a gladiator (just like Maximus). Pedro Pascal is a lauded Roman general, increasingly conflicted about the part he’s playing in the empire’s ruthless quest for world domination. As a sly slave master plotting a bold power play, Denzel Washington chews the scenery like basilicas were made of beef jerky. Petulant, prissy twin-brother emperors (Joseph Quinn, and Fred Hechinger) rule like Romulus and Remus crossed with Beavis and Butthead, topped with a sneery dash of Caligula.

Denzel Washington

Danish actress Connie Nielsen reprises her role from the first film, as the daughter of Rome’s former emperor Marcus Aurelius. All the characters find themselves connected and drawn together in the drama swirling around the arena.

It’s a grand, gloriously rendered spectacle, just like events in the ancient Colosseum itself, where the citizenry of Rome cheered on hyper-violent blood sports. We see Lucius and his gladiator cohorts fighting in faux sea battles, the arena flooded with water churning with sharks waiting to chomp down on anyone who goes man-overboard. Warrior slaves defend themselves against the massive horn of a monstrous galloping rhino, and in another battle, face ferocious CGI baboons that look—curiously—like mutations from a mad scientist’s lab, or another planet. And, of course, they fight each other, often to the death.

It’s all supposedly mostly historically accurate—sea battle reenactments, wild animals against humans, all those togas and stewing senators. (But did so many Roman muckity-mucks wear eyeliner and rouge?? Really, now?)

The scenery and world-building are truly impressive, and the performances gritty and committed. Mescal—in quite a departure from his portrayal of a soft, sensitive gay man in All of Us Strangers—digs into the layered complexities of his character, hiding a big secret and channeling a fiery inner rage to become a crowd favorite down on the field… kinda like the A.D. equivalent of Patrick Mahomes.

There’s some deep-dish commotion—political intrigue, conspiratorial subterfuge and whispers of treachery—going on in the royal palace, the slave market and the side streets of the piazza, and a bit of recurring blather about the “dream of Rome.” But the movie’s real draw is its brawly, gut-punch wallop of its action scenes in the epicenter of ancient Roman life, where combatants often fought to the death.

Gladiator II is a movie that knows its place and hews to its mission, just like the Colosseum—to keep the crowd roaring, revved and ripped for the eye-popping, head-lopping, flesh-tearing show they’re watching.

Neil Pond

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Hey, Mr. Spaceman

Super-smart astronaut survival yarn will leave you cheering

The Martian

Starring Matt Damon, Jessica Chastain, Jeff Daniels and Chiwetel Ejiofor

Directed by Ridley Scott

PG-13

Super-smart, sharp-witted, funny, dramatic and moving, The Martian is a gripping, gorgeous, geeky, high-tech, big-screen adventure-survival yarn that will leave you cheering.

When a brutal, blinding surface dust storm causes a group of scientist-astronauts to abort their Martian expedition after only a few sols (days, or solar cycles), one of them gets left behind, lost and believed to certainly be dead. But after the Ares III blasts off and heads for home and the Red Planet dust clears, botanist Mark Watney (Matt Damon) revives, wounded but very much alive.

NASA and his crewmates have no idea he survived. He has to find some way to let them know, some way to stay alive, and some way to keep his hopes from fading—knowing that it could take years for another mission to mobilize and reach him.

What to do, what to do?

Matt Damon portrays an astronaut who draws upon his ingenuity to subsist on a hostile planet.

Matt Damon portrays an astronaut who draws upon his           ingenuity to subsist on a hostile planet.

“In the face of overwhelming odds, I’m gonna have to science the s— out of this,” Watney says into a camera, in the video log he begins filming as a high-tech diary.

It’s not a spoiler to tell you that Watney “sciences” how to grow his own food, rig up a communication device, make water and generate heat from radioactive material. One of the coolest things about The Martian is the way it makes knowledge hip and cool, how Watney’s process of discovery and learning and figuring things out are integral parts of its plotline.

Kristin Wiig and Chiwetel Ejiofor

Back on Earth, the world becomes transfixed with the man marooned on Mars. NASA officials (Jeff Daniels, Chiwetel Ejiofor, Kristen Wiig, Sean Bean) race to figure out how to reach Watney before he runs out of time and resources. America’s competitors in the space race on the other side of the world, the Chinese, offer their top-secret technology to help. And once Watney’s crew mates (Jessica Chastain, Michael Peña, Kate Mara, Aksel Hennie, Sebastian Stan) find out they’ve accidentally left him behind, they’re willing to spring into action, even if it means staying in space for another year or longer.

Director Ridley Scott is no stranger to space or the future, from Blade Runner and Alien to Prometheus. But there are no bioengineered androids, ancient astro-gods or acid-drooling space creatures anywhere to be found in The Martian—just real people, working together, using their heads, solving problems, focused on one man 50 million miles away and united in a single goal: to “bring him home.”

And despite its big ensemble cast, gorgeous special-effect space shots and marvelous, desolate red-orange Martian landscapes, this is Damon’s show. He is The Martian, and he sells every minute of it in a bravura, mostly solo performance that radiates humanity and humor, and shows the amazing, odds-defying things that science—and brainwork, and dedication and teamwork—can do.

—Neil Pond, Parade Magazine

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