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Julius Caesar: The Making of a Dictator

  • TV Mini Series
  • 2023
IMDb RATING
6.9/10
365
YOUR RATING
Julius Caesar: The Making of a Dictator (2023)
Watch Trailer[OV]
Play trailer0:31
2 Videos
1 Photo
DocumentaryHistory

He came. He saw. He conquered. The tale of an ambitious power-grab that turned to tyranny. How Julius Caesar dismantled five centuries of ancient Roman democracy in just 16 years.He came. He saw. He conquered. The tale of an ambitious power-grab that turned to tyranny. How Julius Caesar dismantled five centuries of ancient Roman democracy in just 16 years.He came. He saw. He conquered. The tale of an ambitious power-grab that turned to tyranny. How Julius Caesar dismantled five centuries of ancient Roman democracy in just 16 years.

  • Stars
    • Janet McTeer
    • Ian Hanmore
    • Alex Brockdorff
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    6.9/10
    365
    YOUR RATING
    • Stars
      • Janet McTeer
      • Ian Hanmore
      • Alex Brockdorff
    • 7User reviews
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • Episodes3

    Browse episodes
    TopTop-rated1 season2023

    Videos2

    Trailer[OV]
    Trailer 0:31
    Trailer[OV]
    Julius Caesar: The Making Of A Dictator
    Trailer 4:02
    Julius Caesar: The Making Of A Dictator
    Julius Caesar: The Making Of A Dictator
    Trailer 4:02
    Julius Caesar: The Making Of A Dictator

    Photos

    Top cast27

    Edit
    Janet McTeer
    Janet McTeer
    • Narrator
    • 2023
    Ian Hanmore
    Ian Hanmore
    • Spurinna
    • 2023
    Alex Brockdorff
    Alex Brockdorff
    • Mark Anthony
    • 2023
    Rosie Jones
    Rosie Jones
    • Fulvia
    • 2023
    Andonis Anthony
    Andonis Anthony
    • Julius Caesar
    • 2023
    Johnny Palmiero
    Johnny Palmiero
    • Cassius
    • 2023
    Wanja Mary Sellers
    Wanja Mary Sellers
    • Aurelia
    • 2023
    Tom Holland
    • Self
    • 2023
    Orlando Brooke
    Orlando Brooke
    • Cato
    • 2023
    Jake J. Meniani
    • Clodius
    • 2023
    Shaila Alvarez
    • Pompeia
    • 2023
    David Buttle
    • Brutus
    • 2023
    Rory Stewart
    Rory Stewart
    • Self
    • 2023
    James Graeme
    James Graeme
    • Cicero
    • 2023
    Antony Gabriel
    • Pompey
    • 2023
    Keira Jacobs Shrivastava
    • Julia
    • 2023
    Carlo Spano
    Carlo Spano
    • Crassus
    • 2023
    Andrew Wallace-Hadrill
    Andrew Wallace-Hadrill
    • Self - Emeritus Professor of Roman HIstory
    • 2023
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews7

    6.9365
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    Featured reviews

    8batman50

    History becomes clearer

    My understanding of Roman history is fairly limited but this short series without speaking characters but a range of speaking heads blends nicely the facts, so far as they go, and a feel for the harsh Roman times. There are clearly parallels to be drawn with later political events although it would be stretching it to say the moral is clear. Caesar was an ambitious man and his way forward was helped by other ambitious but less capable men.

    That the Roman republic lasted so long was itself amazing and that the dictatorial system which followed was also pretty successful is a commentary on both systems, but we should be cautious in applying more than some general principles to modern democracy or to modern self appointed demi-gods.

    Overall, informative and entertaining. Ideal television.
    4francocholo

    Criticizing Caesar based on present-day norms and values

    This is a program that attempts to apply modern values to ancient history in an effort to paint Gaius Julius Caesar as a tyrant and demagogue, ultimately making the show feel like a thinly veiled propaganda rather than a history lesson. Caesar was beloved by the Roman population and his desire for dictatorial power was driven by the need to integrate a rapidly growing empire into one cohesive unit without getting hung up in the politics of a bloated and increasingly corrupt Senate. Given the growth, stability and peace Rome saw during Augustus' reign following Caesar's death, it's hard to argue otherwise. He was a visionary, not a villain.
    2vespatian75

    Denigration of a great man

    This series feature a number of scholars of Roman History to comment on the life of the most famous Roman of them all. Nevertheless, it was terrible. The reason I awarded it even 2 stars is that it does get the chronology correct and manages to name the leading figures of the era, but it goes out of its way to denigrated one of history's great men.

    Julius Caesar was probably one of Rome's greatest generals. His conquest of Gaul gave Rome a buffer that protected the Empire for 300 years. He wrote one of the greatest war commentaries in history and ,within the context of his time, he was a humane individual. Of course his time was quite brutal and like all of us he was a person of times. For some reason this series seeks to portray as Attila the Hun.

    At his time the Roman Republic was collapsing of its own weight. It had just been governed by two brutal dictators, Marius, and Sulla who had cruelly slaughtered their political enemies. The Roman Senate was corrupt and self serving and dominated by strongmen such as Pompey, or Crassus or by incompetents such as the fanatic Cato or the ungrateful Brutus.,Caesar was assassinated because he did not slaughter his enemies. His intention was to spare Pompey, and Cato. He did spare his surviving enemies: Cicero, Brutus, Cassius, et al. He chose the most qualified Roman, his nephew Octavian to be his successor.

    In short the depiction of Caesar is senseless. It seems almost as if they were going after chose to view Caesar as a Latin Donald Trump. Love Trump or hate him it's safe to say that Mr Trump is no Julius Caesar.
    5paul2001sw-1

    A wasted opportunity

    'Julius Caesar: The Making of a Dictator' presents us with (dialogue-free) dramatic reconstructions of the great Roman's life, accompanied by modern experts telling us what they deduce he was really thinking and feeling. It's the same approach recently used in 'The Rise of the Nazis'. That series was marred by its need to tell us at every instant that the Nazis were bad; this one is similarly didactic, and its message is that Caesar overthrew Roman democracy. But the Roman republic was never democratic, and had endured not because it was a platonic ideal of government, but rather that the political system existed as part of a set of broader societal norms that aligned its leaders and the people. Moreover, by the time of Caesar's ascent, it had been in a state of near-continuous crisis for almost a century, as the patricians of the senate enriched themselves and no longer respected limits to their power. The story of Caesar's rise and fall is a good one, but Caesar was a symptom of the republic's demise, rather than it's cause. When eventually Octavian became the first Roman emperor, he spoke of having restored the Roman "res publica", which was one part cheap rhetoric but one part true. You don't have to admire Caesar to realise the republic was rotten (which was why his death did not lead to its recovery, but rather to its final fall). But this series gives us none of this complexity. It's a wasted opportunity to shed some real light on history.
    7seeleytony

    Et tu, Brute?

    Most of us are familiar with Caesar's achievements and demise. At school, I was seriously turned off by Shakespeare. The melodrama and archaic English did nothing for me. I hated Latin and dropped it as soon as I could. But Caesar's life and death are fascinating.

    This documentary style series fleshes out what really went on as Caesar emerges as the most successful Roman ever. He puts himself on a pedestal (tyrant/dictator) and undermines the 500 years of Roman democracy. Ultimately the only way the senate could cope was to murder him in full view of all the senior Romans. Lots of lessons for modern democracy!

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    • Goofs
      Dining scenes throughout show Romans sitting up to eat, rather than reclining on couches, which was the norm, especially in elite circles.

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    Details

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    • Release date
      • April 2, 2024 (United States)
    • Country of origin
      • United Kingdom
    • Official sites
      • BBC Two (United Kingdom)
      • PBS (United States)
    • Language
      • English
    • Also known as
      • Julius Cæsar - En diktator fødes
    • Filming locations
      • Somerset, UK
    • Production company
      • BBC Studios
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

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