Spartacus and the Ten Gladiators

Spartacus and the Ten Gladiators (Italian: Gli invincibili dieci gladiatori) is a 1964 international co-production sword-and-sandal film directed by Nick Nostro and co-written by Nostro, Alfonso Balcázar and Sergio Sollima.

Spartacus and the Ten Gladiators
Theatrical release poster
Directed byNick Nostro
Produced byAmando Morandi[1]
Screenplay by
Starring
Music byCarlo Savina[1]
CinematographyTino Santoni[1]
Edited byBruno Mattei[1]
Production
company
  • Cine Produzioni Associate
  • Les Films Copernic
  • Balcazar Producciones Cinematograficas[2]
Release date
  • 24 December 1964 (1964-12-24) (Italy)
Running time
88 minutes[1]
Country
  • Italy
  • France
  • Spain[2]

Plot

Rocca and his nine gladiators have just completed a triumphal show in the arena in front of the Emperor. However their ebullient mood changes to horror and sadness when they are followed by a group of a dozen gladiators from Thrace who are ordered to kill each other until one man is standing. In this group is a father and son. They reluctantly comply but when the son faces his father one of the gladiators steps in to prevent the son from killing his father then throws his sword at the Emperor's box.

The show is stopped with the manager flogging the defiant gladiator without effect until he is stopped by Rocca. A man named Chimbro offers to buy the survivors for his own use and mollifies the manager by not only the price paid but promising that they will suffer lifelong torment instead of an easy death. The manager takes his anger out on Rocca and his men by blacklisting them from ever appearing in an arena again.

The hungry gladiators travel through the countryside where they stop an attack by bandits on a group carrying the Patrician woman Livia who promises her rescuers a reward from her wealthy father. They are dismayed when their announcement that several of Lydia's slaves are mortally wounded is met by Livia reassuring them there is nothing to worry about; she has more slaves where they come from.

Over dinner at the villa of her father Senator Varro, Varro offers Rocca and his men the opportunity to perform in any venue they wish. Chimbro arrives to tell Varro that he is unsuccessful in capturing the elusive Spartacus who Varro claims is behind various raids and depredations in the area, though in reality it is Chimbro leading men of Varro's private army disguised as bandits who are responsible. Rocca and his men offer to capture Spartacus and bring him to justice, with Varro believing that the ten have the capability that Chimbro and his 50 soldiers did not.

A reconnaissance and raid on Spartacus' camp lead to the entire camp defending Spartacus who is revealed to be the gladiator who stopped the son from killing his father, threatened the Emperor, and escaped from Chimbro. Rocca and his men offer to make an offer from Spartacus that he will pay the ransom of him and all his escaped slaves to Varro once they escape from Rome by sea, but the treacherous Varro imprisons Rocca and his men and raids the camp of Spartacus. Rocca and his men escape and plan vengeance to Varro and loyalty to Spartacus.

Cast

Production

The film was shot in Rome and on location in Barcelona, Spain.[2]

Release

Spartacus and the Ten Gladiators was released in Italy on 24 March 1964.[1]

Notes

References

  • Kinnard, Roy; Crnkovich, Tony (2017). Italian Sword and Sandal Films, 1908-1990. McFarland. ISBN 1476662916.CS1 maint: ref=harv (link)
gollark: "oopsies", implying they are not basically a data-mining company.
gollark: There have been a bunch of instances of Google making it annoying or misleading to *actually* turn off location history on Android, for instance.
gollark: Okay? That doesn't actually mean Google aren't gathering data if you literally use their browser, OS and apps?
gollark: Do you just not care about privacy? All of those (I mean, except cloud storage) seem to be available in open source or more privacy-respecting forms which are *still* free.
gollark: <@209777632324091905> Firefox can do cross-browser syncing *too*, and the "just works" and "has all your data" thing means Google is also probably data-mining you to death.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.