
Director: Ridley Scott
Starring: Paul Mescal, Pedro Pascal, Joseph Quinn, Fred Hechinger, Lior Raz, Derek Jacobi, Connie Nielsen, Denzel Washington
Certificate: 15
Run Time: 148 mins
Gladiator II is the long-awaited sequel to the Best Picture winning 2000 original. Directed once again by Ridley Scott, this sequel picks up sixteen years after Marcus Aurelius’ (the late Richard Harris) death in the first film. His grandson, Lucius (Paul Mescal) lives under the alias ‘Hanno’, with his wife Arishat (Yuval Gonen) in Numidia. Their peace is short-lived after the Romans invade, led by General Acacius (Pedro Pascal). Hanno swears revenge against Acacius, becoming a gladiator for Macrinus (Denzel Washington), a former slave who has his own sights on the throne.
Ridley Scott’s hit-and-miss when it comes to historical epics. On the one hand, he’s made hits such as Gladiator and The Last Duel but on the other hand are the disasters that are Kingdom of Heaven, Robin Hood and Napoleon. While Gladiator was an entertaining film, I wouldn’t have called it Oscar material and there are many other Ridley Scott films I’d have preferred he received awards recognition for. This sequel’s gone through a lengthy production period, with musician Nick Cave initially writing a script that saw Russell Crowe’s Maximus battle the gods in purgatory that was rejected. The story that Scott’s ultimately settled on is far more conventional – was the 24 year wait worth it?
Gladiator II is an excellent sequel and although it shares some similar story beats to the original, it shakes things up more than enough to avoid it being a simple rehash. At its height, it almost has a soap opera quality (much in the same vein as House of Gucci and Napoleon) but in a good way. There’s an immense pleasure in anticipating how the different characters are going to eventually clash with their various motivations, and David Scarpa’s script sets them up well. Some of the characters are gleefully horrible and the cast are more than game for it. Scott’s also concocted some thrilling (if wildly historically inaccurate set-pieces with sharks and killer monkeys) that lean into the gore – this is very much a film about revenge and retribution. It’s also vividly shot by returning cinematographer John Mathieson, who lends the film a rich colour palette.
Paul Mescal makes for a brilliant lead, almost channeling Oliver Reed in his Shakespearean delivery. Although he’s not going to receive the same level of acclaim as Russell Crowe, I predict Mescal will be fondly remembered for this role as time passes. Denzel Washington’s brilliant as Macrinus and steals his scenes as the influential and complexly written slave trader. Pedro Pascal is another highlight, who’s also written in a multi-layered fashion, who we initially regard from a villainous perspective but are then later asked to view him in a different light. Joseph Quinn and Fred Hechinger are also excellent as the mentally unstable Emperors and they make for refreshingly different villains from Joaquin Phoenix’s Commodus in the original. And then when Matt Lucas turns up as a ceremonial host for the gladiatorial battles, you know this isn’t a film that’s taking itself very seriously.
That Ridley Scott can still be directing a sword-and-sandals sequel like this with so much energy in his late eighties is nothing short of miraculous. Gladiator II is a film to watch on the biggest possible screen and it’s a compelling sequel that I think matches the original. There’s a real energy to it with a more complex set-up to it than the original and the thrill in watching how all the characters play each other result in a hugely enjoyable sequel.


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