
I made the connection from this book
to the movie Gladiator with Russell
Crowe. In this movie, Maximus is a well known Roman general; unfortunately, he
loses his position after the infamous Roman emperor, Marcus Aurelius, is
murdered by his own son, who wants to seize power. The emperor’s son, Commodus,
wants Maximus dead due to his faithfulness to the true Roman emperor and he witnessed
the whole murder. Commodus’ soldiers lead Maximus to the woods to kill him off
but Maximus triumphantly beats the few soldiers and rides to go save his wife
and son. When he reaches his home he finds his wife and son burnt and
crucified. He loses consciousness and wakes up to find himself a slave.
He is sold to a master, who trains them in
the art of gladiatorial fighting. None of these other slaves realize he is the general, just
another face to be slaughtered in the arena. Maximus and the other slaves are
taken to the Coliseum, where they must fight in front of the Roman emperor,
Commodus. Once the gladiators win triumphantly against the barbarians, the
emperor wishes to see Maximus not realizing who he is. Once he recognizes him,
he is merely a grain of dust compared to the valor of Maximus. Commodus tries
to come up with ideas of how to kill this unyielding Maximus. Maximus’ friend
Juba states, “You have a great name. He must kill it before he kills you,”
meaning that if his name rises above the Emperors, he is certain to be a dead
man walking.
Awesome post Nat! I totally love the reference to the Gladiator; it was fun and insightful!
ReplyDeleteI like your connection with Gladiator because even though I haven't seen that movie you were able to explain it really well, plus the pictures helped to emphasize your writing!
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