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Synopsis: The year is 52 B.C. Four hundred years after the founding
of the Republic, Rome is the wealthiest city in the world, a cosmopolitan
metropolis of one million people, epicenter of a sprawling empire. The
Republic was founded on principles of shared power and fierce personal
competition, never allowing one man to seize absolute control. But now,
those foundations are crumbling, eaten away by corruption and excess.
The ruling class has become extravagantly wealthy, with a precipitous
decline in the old values of Spartan discipline and social unity. There
is now a great chasm between the classes. Legal and political systems
have weakened, and power has increasingly shifted to the military.
After eight years of war, Gaius Julius Caesar has completed his masterful
conquest of Gaul, and is returning to Rome. He brings with him legions
of battle-hardened, loyal men, unimaginable riches in slaves, gold and
plunder, and a populist agenda for radical social change. The aristocracy
is terrified, and threatens to prosecute him for war crimes if he enters
Rome. The delicate balance of power lies in the Senate with Caesar's
old friend, partner and mentor, Pompey Magnus.
Such is the situation when two soldiers of Caesar's 13th Legion, Lucius
Vorenus and Titus Pullo, are ordered into the wilds of Gaul to retrieve
their legion's stolen standard, the unifying symbol of Caesar's legion,
setting off a chain of circumstances that will entwine them in pivotal
events of ancient Rome. An intimate drama of love and betrayal, masters
and slaves, and husbands and wives, ROME chronicles epic times that
saw the fall of a Republic and the creation of an empire.
"You rarely see onscreen the complexity and color that was ancient Rome,"
says co-creator, executive producer and writer Bruno Heller. "It has
more in common with places like Mexico City and Calcutta than quiet
white marble. Rome was brightly colored, a place of vibrant cruelty,
full of energy, dynamism and chaotic filth. It was a merciless existence,
dog-eat-dog, with a very small elite, and masses of poverty. We see
the same problems today - crime, unemployment, disease, and pressure
to preserve your place in a precarious society. There's the potential
for social mobility, if you're smart.
"Human nature never changes," continues Heller, "and the great thing
about the Romans, from a dramatic perspective, is that they're a people
with the fetters taken completely off. They had no prosaic God telling
them right from wrong and how to behave. It was a strictly personal
morality, and whether or not an action is wrong would depend on whether
people more powerful than you would approve. You were allowed to murder
your neighbor or covet his wife if it didn't piss off the wrong person.
Mercy was a weakness, cruelty a virtue, and all that mattered was personal
honor, loyalty to yourself and your family." (Courtesy HBO, 2005)
The Cast:
Kevin McKidd as Lucius Vorenus
Ray Stevenson as Titus Pullo
Ciaran Hinds as Gaius Julius Caesar
Kenneth Cranham as Pompey Magnus
Polly Walker as Atia of the Julii
James Purefoy as Mark Antony
Tobias Menzies as Marcus Junius Brutus
Lindsay Duncan as Servilia of the Junii
Indira Varma as Niobe
Max Pirkis as Gaius Octavian
Kerry Condon as Octavia of the Julii
Production Credits:
Created by: John Milius and William Macdonald and Bruno Heller.
Written by: Bruno Heller, John Milius, David Frankel, William J. Macdonald,
Alexandra Cunningham and Adrian Hodges.
The Episodes:
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