Las crónicas del liderazgo de Cómodo, el emperador cuya regla marcó el comienzo de la caída de Roma.Las crónicas del liderazgo de Cómodo, el emperador cuya regla marcó el comienzo de la caída de Roma.Las crónicas del liderazgo de Cómodo, el emperador cuya regla marcó el comienzo de la caída de Roma.
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A dramatized documentary on the Roman Empire, focussing in each season on one of its most famous, or infamous, emperors.
This series had some potential: a dramatized documentary on the Roman Empire - sort of The World At War meets Rome or Spartacus, right? An edifying documentary mixed with realistic, gritty, action-filled dramatizations.
Well, no. It doesn't even come close.
The documentary side is pretty basic. Sean Bean is no Laurence Olivier when it comes to narrating: he really doesn't have the gravitas or accent for it. The facts presented in the documentary are then sometimes distorted to make for better drama (though some of the original facts were interesting enough, so why change them?). So, as a documentary it is mediocre.
The drama itself is pretty bland. There's a few good action scenes but it is mostly pretty dull. Performances are at best passable and nothing more. Some of the minor actors are quite bad.
So history got rewritten for the sake of drama, and the drama largely sucks. Seems like they should have just stuck with the facts. And got a better narrator.
This series had some potential: a dramatized documentary on the Roman Empire - sort of The World At War meets Rome or Spartacus, right? An edifying documentary mixed with realistic, gritty, action-filled dramatizations.
Well, no. It doesn't even come close.
The documentary side is pretty basic. Sean Bean is no Laurence Olivier when it comes to narrating: he really doesn't have the gravitas or accent for it. The facts presented in the documentary are then sometimes distorted to make for better drama (though some of the original facts were interesting enough, so why change them?). So, as a documentary it is mediocre.
The drama itself is pretty bland. There's a few good action scenes but it is mostly pretty dull. Performances are at best passable and nothing more. Some of the minor actors are quite bad.
So history got rewritten for the sake of drama, and the drama largely sucks. Seems like they should have just stuck with the facts. And got a better narrator.
Ok, so after watching season one and starting season 2, I have a few nitpicks.
Even though the story of the first season was amazing. Of course, it did help that it might be the most interesting emperor of all time, and despite all the bad things I'm gonna write here, the sets of the actual important story elements looked and were quite good.
So, firstly, I must say, the battles they show in the beginning of S2, with scesar, were very inaccurate. Romans fought in organised lines and formations.definitely not in a large battle, without shields in a huge chaos of 1on1 fights. I mean, it's the minimum. You get experts, which aren't so insightful to be frank, and sell this to me as a almost science docu and get that wrong? Idk.
So yeah. Like I said in the title, for some reason all the long shots are weirdly bad In a way that just doesn't make any sense, In any context.
I mean, the regular scens look great, but you just feel your watching two different productions.
One made in India on Redmi 6a and the other, well, an actual film studio. It's confusing and got me really un immersed in scenes switching back and forth. There is litterly no reason. Put a stock photo instead. Anything. It's not complicated .You can get much better phootage in the 50s.
I don't get it.
Even though the story of the first season was amazing. Of course, it did help that it might be the most interesting emperor of all time, and despite all the bad things I'm gonna write here, the sets of the actual important story elements looked and were quite good.
So, firstly, I must say, the battles they show in the beginning of S2, with scesar, were very inaccurate. Romans fought in organised lines and formations.definitely not in a large battle, without shields in a huge chaos of 1on1 fights. I mean, it's the minimum. You get experts, which aren't so insightful to be frank, and sell this to me as a almost science docu and get that wrong? Idk.
So yeah. Like I said in the title, for some reason all the long shots are weirdly bad In a way that just doesn't make any sense, In any context.
I mean, the regular scens look great, but you just feel your watching two different productions.
One made in India on Redmi 6a and the other, well, an actual film studio. It's confusing and got me really un immersed in scenes switching back and forth. There is litterly no reason. Put a stock photo instead. Anything. It's not complicated .You can get much better phootage in the 50s.
I don't get it.
Expected better quality from a Netflix-backed series. C-list actors that look like porn stars, strange sound design,and borrows clips from other recent documentaries. It's Boring to watch even with Sean Bean's narration and weird game of thrones-esque dry humps.I've only given the series a brief chance but the content is not engaging enough. BBC docudramas from 10 years ago feel more authentic and more informative than this series. Hardcore history and Rome buffs you won't miss much by passing on this.
If you can keep yourself from dozing off during the 'acting' and want some uncommon tidbits of information on the life of Commodus it may be enough to watch the series to the end.
If you can keep yourself from dozing off during the 'acting' and want some uncommon tidbits of information on the life of Commodus it may be enough to watch the series to the end.
There's definitely a lot of historical inaccuracies but it's entertainment and there's lots to learn for people that don't know anything about that time period.
sadly another typical 'modern' docudrama with unnecessary acting to expand viewer reach. while the acting ls atrocious, at least they cast most actors close to contemporary descriptions. quite a few of the reviewers have commented ln actors looking like pornstars, along with 6 packs and being built. if they'd listened to the academics and not focused on something trivial, they'd have learned commodus was an athlete and in real life built. this doc has well explained academic commentary on a often criticized, yet rarely lectured about emperor. here, ignoring the sensationalized acting, we come away with an interesting chronicle of the emperor who began the downfall of rome. his father is often declared the last good emperor. while it'd save time to just read about commodus' failures, a new roman documentary is always worth it to history buffs. Senātus Populus que Rōmānus!
¿Sabías que…?
- TriviaAaron Jakubenko and Jared Turner both guest starred on Starz's Spartacus: War of the Damned. John Bach guest-starred on an earlier season, Spartacus: Blood and Sand. Aaron Irvin served as Historical Consultant for the Starz series.
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Detalles
- Fecha de lanzamiento
- Países de origen
- Sitio oficial
- Idioma
- También se conoce como
- Roman Empire: Master of Rome
- Locaciones de filmación
- Auckland, Nueva Zelanda(on location)
- Productora
- Ver más créditos de la compañía en IMDbPro
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