Instead of Russell Crowe, Ridley Scott’s sequel has ship battles, Denzel Washington and a rhinoceros fight. But is it the new Oppenheimer?
In the summer of 2023, we Barbenheimered. This coming November, who’s ready to be Gladicked? Since it proved so lucrative last time, two of the biggest films of 2024, Gladiator II and Wicked, are being released on the same date, November 15 - though in the UK, we’re getting Ridley Scott’s Roman spectacular one week early, so in the ensuing box office duel it will have a slight head start.
Many of us assumed that Gladiator II would be the Oppenheimer of the pair: epic, stern and magisterial, and likelier to win round Oscar and Bafta voters in the new year. But in the hotly anticipated first trailer, the Kenergy is frankly off the charts. Think sun, sand, rowing boats, dinky tunics, and more glistening abs than have seen the inside of a cinema since Ryan Gosling’s dance-off.
Hints of plot are dangled. We’re introduced firstly to Lucius, the son of Russell Crowe’s Maximus and Connie Nielsen’s Lucilla, who as a child unwittingly watched his father fight in the arena during the original 2000 film. Sent out of the city for his own protection, this one-time heir to Rome grows into Paul Mescal, and becomes mixed up with Denzel Washington’s Macrinus – a plotter and powerbroker who keeps a stable of gladiators, and sees Lucius as the key to toppling the empire itself. “Rome must fall,” he purrs. “I need only give it a push.”
Higher up the sales agenda than political and familial intrigue, though, is the spectacle – and the trailer delivers oodles of that. The already touted Mescal-versus-rhinoceros fight is previewed, but it’s outshone by a (historically accurate, amazingly) depiction of the Colosseum being flooded for a staged naval battle, with gladiators rowing galleys while what look like sharks and/or crocodiles circle the vessels.