The Rebel Gladiators

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The Rebel Gladiators
File:The Rebel Gladiators.jpg
Directed by Domenico Paolella
Produced by Splendor Film/ Ferdinando Felicioni
Written by Domenico Paolella
Sergio Sollima
Alessandro Ferrau
Starring Dan Vadis
Jose Greci
Alan Steel
Gloria Milland
Music by Carlo Savina
Cinematography Carlo Bellero
Distributed by Medallion; Palisades Intl.
Running time
98 minutes
Language Italian

The Rebel Gladiators (Italian: Ursus il gladiatore ribelle / Ursus, the Rebel Gladiator) is a 1962 Italian peplum film directed by Domenico Paolella.[1][2] The film is part of the Italian "Ursus" film series, but for some reason, distributors in other countries omitted Ursus' name from the title when the film was shown outside of Italy. The film appears to have been made in 1962, but only released theatrically in 1964. Dan Vadis plays mighty Ursus, and Alan Steel plays against type as the villainous dictator Commodus. Steel is particularly unlikeable in the part, making this film very effective in the "villain" department.

Cast

Plot

The newly crowned emperor Commodus (Alan Steel) kidnaps the beautiful Arminia, who happens to be betrothed to the mighty gladiator Ursus. Obsessed with a desire to physically best all other men, he uses the girl as a hostage to force Ursus to fight him in the arena, but when Ursus beats him up and actually forces the dictator to beg for his life, he accuses Ursus of being in league with a group of usurpers who oppose Commondus' tyrannical rule. Ursus finally leads a slave revolt that overthrows Commodus, who is killed in the uprising, and Ursus is reunited with Arminia.

The fight in the arena between Ursus and Commodus is very realistically staged, and really looks violent. However, Commodus is merely beaten up in this sequence. The villain's death at the end of the film is almost anticlimactic, as he is killed trying to hide behind a female hostage by an arrow in the back fired by a minor character. Ursus does nothing but watch mournfully, making this one of the most anticlimactic "villain's death scenes" in any peplum. The viewer almost feels bad for Commodus, after he is shown throughout the entire film as a vicious, self-absorbed murderer and bully.

References

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External links

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