Popularity: 11 (history)
Director: | Ridley Scott |
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Writer: | David Franzoni, John Logan, William Nicholson |
Staring: |
After the death of Emperor Marcus Aurelius, his devious son takes power and demotes Maximus, one of Rome's most capable generals who Marcus preferred. Eventually, Maximus is forced to become a gladiator and battle to the death against other men for the amusement of paying audiences. | |
Release Date: | May 04, 2000 |
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Director: | Ridley Scott |
Writer: | David Franzoni, John Logan, William Nicholson |
Genres: | Adventure, Action, Drama |
Keywords | gladiator, arena, roman empire, emperor, ancient rome, battlefield, historical fiction, combat, philosopher, 2nd century, commodus, serene, gladiador, epic, rome, italy, senate, parent child relationship, slavery, revenge, slave auction, ancient world, chariot, barbarian horde, successor, maximus, defiant |
Production Companies | DreamWorks Pictures, Universal Pictures, Scott Free Productions, Red Wagon Entertainment, Mill Film |
Box Office |
Revenue: $465,516,248
Budget: $103,000,000 |
Updates |
Updated: Aug 02, 2025 (Update) Entered: Apr 13, 2024 |
Name | Character |
---|---|
Russell Crowe | Maximus |
Joaquin Phoenix | Commodus |
Connie Nielsen | Lucilla |
Oliver Reed | Proximo |
Richard Harris | Marcus Aurelius |
Derek Jacobi | Gracchus |
Djimon Hounsou | Juba |
David Schofield | Falco |
John Shrapnel | Gaius |
Tomas Arana | Quintus |
Ralf Moeller | Hagen |
Spencer Treat Clark | Lucius |
David Hemmings | Cassius |
Tommy Flanagan | Cicero |
Sven-Ole Thorsen | Tiger |
Omid Djalili | Slave Trader |
Nicholas McGaughey | Praetorian Officer |
Chris Kell | Scribe |
Tony Curran | Assassin #1 |
Mark Lewis | Assassin #2 |
John Quinn | Valerius |
Alun Raglan | Praetorian Guard #1 |
David Bailie | Engineer |
Chick Allan | German Leader |
David J. Nicholls | Giant Man |
Al Hunter Ashton | Rome Trainer #1 |
Billy Dowd | Narrator |
Ray Calleja | Lucius' Attendant |
Giannina Facio | Maximus' Wife |
Giorgio Cantarini | Maximus' Son |
Malcolm Ellul | Centurion (uncredited) |
Ray Mangion | Centurion (uncredited) |
João Costa Menezes | Roman Soldier (uncredited) |
Mike Mitchell | Fighter (uncredited) |
Antone Pagán | Fighter (uncredited) |
Norman Campbell Rees | Sedan Chair Carrier (uncredited) |
Neil Roche | Roman Soldier (uncredited) |
Paul Sacks | Catapult Commander Shouts "Loose" (uncredited) |
Steve Saunders | German Barbarian (uncredited) |
Brian Smyj | Coliseum Gladiator (uncredited) |
Richard Stride | Swordsman (uncredited) |
Tony Tomlinson | Man (uncredited) |
Paul Woodadge | Germanian Barbarian (uncredited) |
Michael Yale | Rome Citizen (uncredited) |
Name | Job |
---|---|
David Franzoni | Screenplay, Story |
John Logan | Screenplay |
William Nicholson | Screenplay |
Arthur Max | Production Design |
Lisa Gerrard | Vocals, Original Music Composer |
Pietro Scalia | Editor |
Neil Corbould | Animatronic and Prosthetic Effects |
Nikki Penny | Visual Effects Producer |
John Mathieson | Director of Photography |
Scott Martin Gershin | Sound |
Janty Yates | Costume Design |
Tim Burke | Visual Effects Supervisor |
Phil Neilson | Stunt Coordinator |
Ali Cherkaoui | Assistant Director |
Pavel Vokoun | Stunts |
Brian Smyj | Stunts |
Martin Hub | Stunts |
C.C. Smiff | Stunts |
Ray Nicholas | Stunts |
Peter Miles | Stunts |
Tony Lucken | Stunts |
Derek Lea | Stunts |
Morgan Johnson | Stunts |
Chuck Jeffreys | Stunts |
Charles Jarman | Stunts |
Neil Finnighan | Stunts |
Zdeněk Dvořáček | Stunts |
Eugene Collier | Stunts |
Alejandro Cobo | Stunts |
Stuart Clark | Stunt Double |
Branko Lustig | Unit Production Manager |
Peter White | Stunt Double |
Bill Hargreaves | Propmaker |
Crispian Sallis | Set Decoration |
Alexander Witt | Second Unit Director of Photography, Second Unit Director |
Louis DiGiaimo | Casting |
Colin Coull | Visual Effects |
Graham Johnston | Hairstylist |
Ivana Němcová | Hairstylist |
Anita Burger | Hairstylist |
Carmel Jackson | Hairstylist |
Alex King | Hairstylist |
Marese Langan | Hairstylist |
Paul Engelen | Makeup Artist |
Laura McIntosh | Makeup Artist |
Trefor Proud | Makeup Artist |
Melissa Lackersteen | Makeup Artist |
Jo Allen | Makeup Artist |
Ivana Primorac | Makeup Artist |
José Luis del Barco | Assistant Art Director |
Adam O'Neill | Assistant Art Director |
Keith Pain | Art Direction |
Peter Russell | Art Direction |
Roger Holden | Greensman |
Cynthia Sadler | Scenic Artist |
Bob Walker | Scenic Artist |
John T. Cucci | Foley |
James Moriana | Foley |
Dan O'Connell | Foley |
Jeffrey Wilhoit | Foley |
Christopher Assells | Sound Effects Editor |
Dino DiMuro | Sound Effects Editor |
Randy Kelley | Sound Effects Editor |
Jon Title | Sound Effects Editor |
Bob Beemer | Sound Re-Recording Mixer |
Scott Millan | Sound Re-Recording Mixer |
Frank A. Montaño | Sound Re-Recording Mixer |
Astrig Akseralian | Animatronic and Prosthetic Effects |
Laurent Hugueniot | CG Supervisor |
Rob Harvey | Visual Effects Supervisor |
John Nelson | Visual Effects Supervisor |
Clive Jackson | Camera Operator |
Branko Knez | Camera Operator |
Felix Schroer | Camera Operator |
Ben Gooder | Camera Operator |
Klemens Becker | "B" Camera Operator, Steadicam Operator |
Jaap Buitendijk | Still Photographer |
Agapios Louka | Camera Technician |
Michael Reynolds | First Assistant Editor |
Chisako Yokoyama | First Assistant Editor |
Dashiell Rae | Music Editor |
Gerry Gore | Transportation Coordinator |
Terry Blyther | Location Manager |
Mike Higgins | Location Manager |
Jeremy Johns | Location Manager |
Rob Harris | Unit Publicist |
Stephanie Corsalini | Casting Associate |
Miroslav Lhotka | Stunts |
Simon Stanley-Clamp | Compositors |
Daniele Botteselle | Gaffer |
Benjamín Fernández | Supervising Art Director |
David Allday | Supervising Art Director |
John King | Supervising Art Director |
John Evans | Special Effects |
Lisa Dennis | Post Production Supervisor |
Dale E. Grahn | Color Timer |
Eddie Stacey | Stunts |
Bruce Bigg | Property Master |
David A. Cohen | ADR Editor, Dialogue Editor |
Simon Coke | Dialogue Editor |
Lauren Stephens | Dialogue Editor |
Philip McDonald | Property Master |
Graeme Purdy | Property Master |
Laura Graham | ADR Editor |
Chris Jargo | Supervising ADR Editor |
Richard Dwan Jr. | Foley Editor |
Lou Kleinman | Foley Editor |
Annie Penn | Script Supervisor |
Mark Taylor | Set Production Assistant |
Ken Weston | Production Sound Mixer |
Tubardh Wilson | Stunts |
David Weiss | Stunts |
Seoras Wallace | Stunts |
Ian Walker | Stunts |
Martin 'Mato' Uhrovcik | Stunts |
Marek Toth | Stunts |
Jennifer Stoute | Stunts |
R.J. Steel | Stunts |
Gordon Smith | Stunts |
José María Serrano | Stunts |
Ken Scotland | Stunts |
Jean-Phillipe Roman | Stunts |
Marc Roberts | Stunts |
Pauline Richards | Stunts |
Hernan Ortiz | Stunts |
Jane Omorogbe | Stunts |
Peter Olgyay | Stunts |
Mark Anthony Newman | Stunts |
Mirek Navratil | Stunts |
Mustapha Natouri | Stunts |
Graham Mullins | Stunts |
Randy Miller | Stunt Double |
Ivan Miča | Stunts |
Chris Manger | Stunts |
Robbie MacFarlane | Stunts |
Tom Lucy | Stunts |
Trevor Lovell | Stunts |
Guy List | Stunts |
Stephanie Lelievre | Stunts |
Ivo Krištof | Stunts |
Vincent Keane | Stunts |
Mike Lambert | Stunts |
Radowan Kak | Stunts |
Kevin Johnson | Stunts |
Peter Hric | Stunts |
Carlton Headley | Stunts |
Joss Gower | Stunts |
Alejandro García | Stunts |
Gary Fry | Stunts, Utility Stunts |
Kamil Fojtik | Stunts |
David Faivre | Stunts |
Mohammed Enahal | Stunts |
Walter Difrancesco | Stunts |
Michel Didier | Stunts |
Ricardo Cruz | Stunts |
Forbes Cowan | Stunts |
Gianluca Coppetta | Stunts |
Alessandro Casalino | Stunts |
Sergio Casadei | Stunts |
Sebastiano Cartier | Stunts |
Manuel Cabrera | Stunts |
Georges Branche | Stunts |
Ben Bellman | Stunts |
Vincent Bellina | Stunts |
Carlo Antonioni | Stunts |
Eugenio Alonso Yenes | Stunts |
Ryan Alber | Stunt Double |
Terry Needham | First Assistant Director |
Ty Warren | Production Supervisor |
Petr Drozda | Stunts |
Viktor Červenka | Stunts |
Peter Taylor | "A" Camera Operator |
Per Hallberg | Supervising Sound Editor |
Robert Dawson | Title Designer |
Colin Codner | Boom Operator |
Adrian McCarthy | Best Boy Grip |
William McPhail | Wardrobe Master |
Rosemary Burrows | Costume Supervisor |
David Appleby | Key Grip |
Rupert Lloyd-Parry | Key Grip |
Sallie Beechinor | Production Coordinator |
Lesley Keane | Assistant Production Coordinator |
Mustapha Charif | Location Casting |
Billy Dowd | Extras Casting |
Kathleen Mackie Higgins | Location Casting |
Rob Martin | Casting Assistant |
Barbara L. Roche | Extras Casting |
Hamid Ait Timaghrit | Extras Casting |
Yann Mari Faget | Casting Assistant |
Pia Zammit | Casting Assistant |
Thierry Le Portier | Animal Wrangler |
Hans Zimmer | Original Music Composer |
Wesley Sewell | Visual Effects Editor |
Adam Somner | Second Assistant Director |
Ridley Scott | Director |
Jille Azis | Set Decoration |
Djivan Gasparyan | Music |
Robert Allman | CG Artist |
Name | Title |
---|---|
David Franzoni | Producer |
Branko Lustig | Producer |
Laurie MacDonald | Executive Producer |
Walter F. Parkes | Executive Producer |
Douglas Wick | Producer |
Terry Needham | Associate Producer |
Ridley Scott | Executive Producer |
Organization | Category | Person | |
---|---|---|---|
Golden Globes | Best Actress | Judi Dench | Won |
Academy Awards | Best Picture | N/A | Won |
Academy Awards | Best Director | Ridley Scott | Won |
Golden Globes | Best Picture | N/A | Won |
SAG Awards | Best Picture | N/A | Won |
SAG Awards | Best Director | Ridley Scott | Won |
Popularity History
Year | Month | Avg | Max | Min |
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2024 | 4 | 99 | 129 | 67 |
2024 | 5 | 96 | 191 | 1 |
2024 | 6 | 81 | 123 | 58 |
2024 | 7 | 113 | 151 | 67 |
2024 | 8 | 98 | 191 | 66 |
2024 | 9 | 81 | 110 | 64 |
2024 | 10 | 114 | 165 | 77 |
2024 | 11 | 415 | 864 | 136 |
2024 | 12 | 295 | 502 | 188 |
2025 | 1 | 227 | 347 | 138 |
2025 | 2 | 128 | 161 | 25 |
2025 | 3 | 42 | 143 | 4 |
2025 | 4 | 31 | 38 | 24 |
2025 | 5 | 28 | 37 | 22 |
2025 | 6 | 20 | 26 | 15 |
2025 | 7 | 17 | 22 | 15 |
2025 | 8 | 16 | 21 | 13 |
2025 | 9 | 14 | 20 | 11 |
Trending Position
Year | Month | High | Avg |
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2025 | 9 | 64 | 193 |
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2025 | 8 | 56 | 171 |
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2025 | 7 | 56 | 193 |
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2025 | 6 | 50 | 174 |
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2025 | 5 | 27 | 101 |
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2025 | 4 | 27 | 95 |
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2025 | 3 | 26 | 84 |
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2025 | 2 | 29 | 116 |
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2025 | 1 | 22 | 58 |
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2024 | 12 | 6 | 37 |
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2024 | 11 | 3 | 25 |
Year | Month | High | Avg |
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2024 | 10 | 54 | 110 |
Year | Month | High | Avg |
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2024 | 9 | 64 | 119 |
Year | Month | High | Avg |
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2024 | 8 | 88 | 146 |
Gladiator has been my most favorite film of all time. It is an epic masterpiece in many ways and it really explains why despite the numerous viewings, Gladiator still amuses me with its powerful imageries and many other crucial aspects so that it won five Academy Awards. This film is very well writt ... en, the well-ensemble casts, the A-class acting (especially Russell Crowe and Joaquin Phoenix), the stunning cinematography and definitely a strong character of Maximus (magnificently portrayed by Russell Crowe) whose life, struggle, disappointment and anger really move the audience, as if the world attention centers on him. Gladiator is not a historical film, because it only used the history of the ancient Roman Empire merely as the time setting. All other aspects namely those gorgeous shots, the great storyline/plot, the fantastic cinematography, the vividly lavish colors, detailed production design and digital imaging (that successfully rebuilt the stunning beauty of the ancient Roman Empire) and all sell really well, making the 170 minute-long running time definitely worthwhile. The visual of great battle in the first 15 minutes really stole my heart. The gruesome pictures, the blood and violence just to beautiful to abandon. Everything in this movie seems perfectly balanced, Ridley Scott as the film director really did his homework well in redefining and revitalizing the big battle sequence once considered masterpiece from Spartacus and Ben Hur. In the end, once again, I would say that Gladiator perfectly combines some crucial elements such as good, moving story, dazzling visual, beautiful scenery, filming techniques, direction and touching music score into one harmonious, action-packed film about heroism and its true meaning.
They said you were a giant. They said you can crush a man's skull with one hand. Ridley Scott's Gladiator is not a perfect film, I would think that the hardiest of fans, of which I'm firmly one, know this deep down. Yet just like Commodus in the film is keen to point out that he himself has other ... virtues that are worthy, so does Gladiator the film. Enough in fact to make it an everlasting favourite of genre fans and worthy of the Academy Award acknowledgements it received. In narrative terms the plot and story arc is simplicity supreme, something Scott and Russell Crowe have never shied away from. There has to my knowledge as well, never been a denial of the debt Gladiator owes to Anthony Mann's 1964 Epic, The Fall of the Roman Empire. Some folk seem very irritated by this, which is strange because the makers of Gladiator were not standing up bold as brass to proclaim they were unique with their movie, what they did do was reinvigorate a stagnant genre of film for a new generational audience. And it bloody worked, the influence and interest in all things Roman or historically swashbuckling of film that followed post Gladiator's success is there for all to see. What we do in life echoes in eternity. So no originality in story, then. While some of the CGI is hardly "Grade A" stuff, and there's a little over - mugging acting in support ranks as some of the cast struggle to grasp the period setting required, yet the way Gladiator can make the emotionally committed feel, actually overrides film making irks. Crowe's Maximus is the man men want to be and the man women want to be with. As he runs through the gamut of life's pains and emotionally fortified trials and tribulations, we are with him every step of the way, urging him towards his day of revenge splattered destiny - with Crowe superb in every pained frame, winning the Academy Award for Best Actor that he should have won for The Insider the previous year. Backing Crowe up is Joaquin Phoenix giving Commodus preening villainy and Connie Nielsen graceful as Lucilla (pitch Nielsen's turn here against that of Diane Kruger's in Troy to see the class difference for historical period playing). Oliver Reed, leaving the mortal coil but leaving behind a spicy two fold performance as Proximo the Gladiator task master. Olly superb in both body and CGI soul. Richard Harris tugging the heart strings, Derek Jacobi classy, David Hemmings also, while Djimon Hounso gives Juba - Maximus right hand man and confidante - a level of character gravitas that's inspiring. I didn't know man could build such things. Dialogue is literate and poetic, resplendent with iconic speeches. Action is never far away, but never at the expense of wrought human characterisations. The flaming arrows and blood letting of the Germania conflict kicks things off with pulse raising clarity, and Scott and his team never sag from this standard. The gladiator arena fights are edge of the seat inducing, the recreation for the Battle of Carthage a stunning piece of action sequence construction. And then the finale, the culmination of two men's destinies, no soft soaping from Scott and Crowe, it lands in the heart with a resounding thunderclap. A great swords and sandals movie that tipped its helmet to past masters whilst simultaneously bringing the genre alive again. Bravo Maximus Decimus Meridius. 10/10
Ridley Scott's Gladiator is a real masterpiece of its genre. With its unique battle scenes, cinematography, acting and directing. It's a real must-watch. Shame on you if you haven't watched this movie! ...
This has got just about everything from "Spartacus" (1960) to "Decline and Fall of the Roman Empire" (1964) via a bit of "Quo Vadis" (1951) to it - and Ridley Scott has managed to create a magnificent spectacle of a film. Russell Crowe is the eponymous soldier "Maximus". Commander of the Armies of t ... he Rhine for Emperor Marcus Aurelius (Richard Harris) and his designated successor - until, that is, the emperor's son "Commodus" (Joaquin Phoenix) and his sister "Lucilla" (an efficient Connie Nielsen) arrive and suddenly it's all change at the top. Betrayed and left for dead, our hero must now make other shifts if he is to survive in his new world - controlled by slave-owning "Proximo" (Oliver Reed) and deliver him of vengeance on his new Imperial nemesis. The film looks great, the cast - including some some strong supporting efforts from Sir Derek Jacobi, John Shrapnel, Djimon Hounsou and Tomas Arana all contribute well to this grandeur of this historical saga. The high politics, betrayal and duplicity are matched with a sense of integrity and camaraderie as "Maximus" begins to galvanise his colleagues and his political allies into something more than a disparate band fighting just to survive each day. Reed and Harris both feature only sparingly, but both add a richness to the characterisations that are dominated by two on-form performances from Crowe and Phoenix that epitomise a struggle of good versus evil and ultimate power in an empire where corruption and brutality trade human life as if it were a watermelon. Add to this some superb visual effects and a rousing score from Hans Zimmer (and Lisa Gerrard) and we have a compelling watch on a big screen that shows there is still a glimmer of the Cecil B. De Mille spirit left in Hollywood.
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An epic old movie, an absolute must watch. Even now, I can’t resist running my hands over tall plants whenever I pass by them ...