The Two Gladiators (1964) Poster

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5/10
Routine Italian Sword and Sandals movie with noisy action , fights , gladiator duels and spectacular scenarios
ma-cortes19 October 2020
Set in 161 AD , twins were born to Emperor Marcus and for reasons to avoid future wars , one of them must be killed and to be kept secret . But the kid is saved and brought up in a fine family . While Rome rules the World and emperor Marcus Aurelius battles Barbarians on the Eastern border of the Roman Empire. Later on , the king Marcus Aurelius has recently died, leaving as Máximus Imperator to his son Commodo : Mimo Palmara who governs tyrannically all around the World and in the noisy Rome . There Commodus organizes violent gladiator combats . Then the grown-up twin called Lucius Crassus : Richard Harrison, becomes a notorious Roman General and subsequently to lead a revolt against the evil ruler.

A run-of-the-mill Peplum with thrills, emotion, battles and spectacular Gladiator combats on the arena. Stars the robust and strong Richard in his first Italian role, as he is excellent as a brave gladiator. He was one along with Brad Harris, Kirk Morris, Rock Stevens, Reg Park, Mark Forest emigrated to Italy to seek for fame and fortune as muscle mythological figures, but anybody topped Steve Reeves and Gordon Scott in popularity. Harrison played in Hollywood some minor characters as in Kronos and South Pacific, while shooting a secondary role in Master in the World 1961. Frustated at not being able to secure meatier roles in America, Harrison jumped at the chance when offered this first character as a Gladiator, following other successful Peplum as Seven Spartans by Pedro Lazaga and Two Gladiators by Mario Caiano. As he wound up settling i Italy for the mext two decades. These Roman roles immediately typed him in other Herculean characters and to avoisd penned in too much as a muscle man, he turned into Spaghetti Western protagonists . Playing routine Spaghetti antiheroes as Texas the Red, Gringo, Reverendo Colt. And maybe his greatest contribution to film history not doing For a Fistful of Dollars and recommending Clint Eastwood for the part. Being an Italian production here shows up various regular secondaries , usual in Peplum and Spaghetti Western such as Giuliano Gemma , Mimmo Palmara , Moira Orfei , Alberto Farnese or Farley , Piro Lulli , Mirko Ellis , Nello Pazzafini, Álvaro de Luna , Enzo Fiermonte and Álvaro de Luna .

Atmospheric cinematography by Ludovico Pavoni , though a perfect remastering being really necessary. Filmed in De Paolis, Lacio , Rome . As well as moving and rousing musical score by Carlo Franci. The motion picture was professional but regularly directed by Mario Caiano . He was an Italian director who made successful films of all kinds of genres as Gothic Terror : Nightmare Castle with Barbara Steele , Thrillers and Gialli : a Tutte le Auto della Policía, Eye in the Labyrinth , Westerns : Avenger of California , Brandy, Ringo Face of Revenge , My Name is Shanghai Joe , Bullets don't argue , A train for Durango, and Peplum as Ulisse vs Ercole , Maciste Gladiatori di Sparta, I due Gladiator , among others . Rating 5,5 /10. Regular but passable and acceptable Peplum
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6/10
THE TWO GLADIATORS (Mario Caiano, 1964) **1/2
Bunuel197630 March 2014
Not wishing merely to watch yet another gladiator movie in such quick succession, I was relieved to find that this here revolved around the antics of the third mad man to lead the Roman Empire on a course of self-destruction, Commodus. According to the IMDb, this is also the second of three Peplums to deal with that tyrant out of a total of five movies made; the remaining two, quite obviously, are the acclaimed Samuel Bronston/Anthony Mann epic THE FALL OF THE ROMAN EMPIRE (1964; released two months prior to the film under review) and Ridley Scott's Oscar-winning and Malta-shot GLADIATOR (2000). While the Commodus of the latter two (portrayed by Christopher Plummer and Joaquin Phoenix respectively) had a lean built and were insane or ill-tempered egomaniacs, the one here – essayed as a virile, bloodthirsty athlete by a miscast Mimmo Palmara – falls far short of hitting their marks. Even so, this version of events is clearly the superior one to emanate from Italy; although this type of fare has not been broadcast on Italian TV as regularly as it used to be, some good souls have uploaded several rarities like this one on "You Tube" and, in this case, in a refreshingly good condition to boot!

At first, I thought that the title was referring to nominal leads Richard Harrison and Giuliano Gemma – two Roman legionnaires – being arrested and pitted against one another in the arena at some point; however, since these two actually formed part of a devil-may-care trio, I realized that this was not going to be and, indeed, it is Harrison and Palmara (dressed in exactly the same gladiatorial garb from head to foot) who take on each other for the gratification of the Roman masses, with Commodus eventually landing on the wrong side of the blade. Apart from the three above-mentioned actors, there are a couple more genre regulars in the cast, namely Moira Orfei (as Commodus' neglected wife), Piero Lulli (as his ruthless adviser) and Alberto Farnese (as Lulli's henchman, who also nurses an unrequited love for his empress), not to mention director Caiano – of whose 7 such genre works this was his penultimate effort – and co-writer/2nd unit director Alfonso Brescia. Every self-respecting hero needs to have a virginal damsel-in-distress to save and, eventually, hook up with: that part is here played quite blandly by blonde actress Ivy Holzer (lusted after by Commodus and whose rejection he takes out on Orfei) – a name and a face that did not register with me at first but now I realize I have already caught her in a couple of other Peplums and, in fact, have two more lined up for viewing presently.

As already intimated earlier, the story does end exactly as the one told in the above-mentioned concurrent Hollywood epic with the soldier hero (here Commodus' unsuspecting twin brother!) declining the Senate's offer to become emperor…albeit with a more optimistic outcome as he leaves the reins of Rome in the hands of a trusted senator, while he runs into the arms of his beloved and the comfort zone of his cohorts of legionnaires. Before that, however, we have seen Commodus learning of Harrison's threatening existence, having him arrested and put in the dungeons in the same cell as Holzer (incarcerated by a jealous Orfei), escaping and leading a revolt with the help of the rather irritatingly gambling-mad Gemma, his equally-occupied pal and a sympathetic innkeeper. Orfei also eventually befriends Holzer, is subsequently rejected by Farnese and gets mowed down by pursuing Praetorians during a night-time excursion to the politically-charged tavern. All in all, while not a particularly notable entry in the prolific genre, it passes the time agreeably enough and does not outstay its welcome.
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4/10
Twin Brother Fight For The Roman Throne
Rainey-Dawn19 January 2017
The Roman Emperor Marcus Aurelius has died. Marcus' son Commodus, who is a thug and amateur fighter, is now on the throne and is ruining Rome with his ways. There is a secret that only the Roman Senator knows the truth and tells the respected Roman Solider, Lucius Crassus, the story. Marcus Aurelius has twin sons. Marcus kept Commodus but ordered the other child's death. Tarruntius was given the task to kill the child but he could not do it and gave the child to a foster family. The foster family named the child Lucius Crassus. Lucius has just as much right to the throne as his twin brother Commodus. Commodus finds out that Lucius is his brother and is angry, he wants Lucius dead. The populace will not challenge and rid Rome of the evil, childish Commodus even though he is bring Rome down. There is now a Gladiatorial battle between the two twin brothers, the better fighter will win and take the throne of Rome.

Richard Harrison plays the heroic Roman solider Lucius Crassus. And there are a bunch of others with names I do not recognize but are fine Italian actors.

This is not a big budget film but looks like quite a bit of money was put into it (just not BIG money). It's an okay film, not great but watchable.

The copy I have is rather faded and poor, it is from one of those cheap Mill Creek 50-packs, Warriors. I cannot expect them to take the time to clean up each of the 50 films for a bargain price. Besides, most of the films are not worth the time to restore anyway.

4.5/10
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Too cheap a try: where's "the grandeur that was Rome"?
frank_olthoff3 September 2001
If you are pretty mediocre as a director and they want you to make a film with only very little money, what's the outcome? - "I due gladiatori" is an excellent example of the cheap-produced Italian historical pictures of the early sixties. Relying partly on models such as "Ben-Hur", one could call them monumental, only there was nothing monumental left in 1964.

For instance: when a man is holding a rat that has been hunted by the hungry crowd, the next take shows a juicy meal, and, as the camera zooms, we see it being brought to the emperor at a small party. Nice idea so far, but we can be sure that Mario Caiano would have loved to show a vast orgy in consequence, but there's nothing more to eat than the bit that has just been carried in, and there's just a small number of guests standing around. As more examples, the arena fighting scenes are reduced to taking place at the 20-foot front of the stadium's wall, and what is supposed to be a battle between Romans and - Gauls (did I get that right?) is merely a skirmish of some 30 against 30.

The story, however, is somewhat interesting though not new at all. It is based on the true fact that emperor Commodus (180-192 AD) used to fight as a gladiator himself from time to time. Writers Amendola and Brescia also made use of the fact that Commodus had a twin brother (who died early); here, he survived and grew up unknowingly. - Now that emperor Mark Aurel has died (awkwardly dated into 191), his son Commodus succeeds to the throne and turns out to be a despot (that idea is poorly established). Loyal senator Tarrunio gets on his way to seek the twin brother he once was ordered to kill but saved. This man, Centurio Crassus, follows Tarrunio to Rome (hey, what about the Gallic invasion?) in order to overthrow the tyrant.

A couple of the ideas, especially the setting, are taken from Anthony Mann's "The Fall of the Roman Empire" (1963, with Christopher Plummer as Commodus), while the linking of brothers Commodus and Crassus reminds of Stephen Boyd and Charlton Heston's doomed relationship in "Ben-Hur" (1959) - "closer than brothers", as Boyd says.

Handsome Richard Harrison is a poor replacement for Boyd (in "The Fall..."); but especially the task of writing effective women's rôles into the story remained unaccomplished. (Moira Orfei is a beautiful temptress as ever, though.) Giuliano Gemma and Alvaro de Luna as Harrison's faithful friends add to the hero's nonchalant bravado. Mimmo Palmara is an excellent fighter (as he has often proved in the genre), but as Commodus he is colourless. Peplum's classic heavies Piero Lulli and Alberto Farnese do well as the emperor's sinister advisors Cleander and Leto. Yet, it is not enough to make this cheap flick average at least, in a genre that had lost most of its momentum and magic anyway. Composer Carlo Franchi, too, has contributed better scores before.
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2/10
Roman Knockoff
bkoganbing1 December 2010
Whatever you think of his films, Samuel Bronston did spend a lot of money on them, gave them lavish sets, a topflight cast, good direction and script. So when his The Fall Of The Roman Empire came out in March of 1964 I'm sure Bronston was waiting for the inevitable imitations to come out.

He didn't wait long. In June of 1964 probably using a lot of his abandoned sets and also those of Quo Vadis and Ben-Hur, came Two Gladiators which told the same story. Only the plot was reworked to have incorporated Alexander Dumas's The Man In The Iron Mask into the Roman Empire.

Once upon a time there were born two twin boys to Emperor Marcus Aurelius and for reasons of dynasty the birth of twins was kept secret. One of the twins was supposed to be drowned at birth, but fate intervenes and the kid is brought up in a good household and enters Rome's legions and becomes a centurion. He's played by American expatriate Richard Harrison who stars here.

The other grows up to be Commodus the emperor who for pleasure would compete in the gladiatorial games. He's too busy to be running the Empire so corrupt favorites do it for him. Some folks in the know feel it's time to bring out the lost twin.

Just think of Two Gladiators as The Fall Of The Roman Empire done by Ed Wood with an Ed Wood budget.
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6/10
Italian Peplum Film with Richard HARRISON and Giuliano GEMMA
ZeddaZogenau16 November 2023
This sandal film is a copycat production based on the Hollywood success THE DECLINE OF THE ROMAN EMPIRE with ACADEMY AWARD winner Sophia LOREN. Almost 40 years later, both films provide the blueprint for the mega-success GLADIATOR from 2000.

A gladiator (Richard HARRISON) fights with his buddies (Giuliano GEMMA and Alvaro De LUNA) against the evil Emperor Commodus (Mimmo PALMARA can really play it big ;-) There is a scheming beauty (Moira ORFEI) and a blonde beauty (enchanting : Ivy HOLZER). There's a lot of fighting, but the fun isn't neglected either.

Quite a passable sword and sandal film from Italy!
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7/10
Two Gladiators
coltras357 February 2024
Once upon a time there were born two twin boys to Emperor Marcus Aurelius and for reasons of dynasty the birth of twins was kept secret. One of the twins was supposed to be drowned at birth but fate intervenes and the kid is brought up in a good household and enters Rome's legions. He is unaware of his Lineage, until the person, who was meant to drown him but couldn't, tells him the truth. The reason - the brother in charge of Rome is no good.

Two Gladiators stars Richard Harrison, who starred in quite a few peplums, and Mimmo Palmara as Emperor Commodo - they are brothers, one good - Richard Harrison as Lucius Crassus - and Palmara is the bad guy who runs Rome cruelly. He steals the scene, playing his character as an unbalanced and cruel individual. Moira Orfei - Marzia - is his mistress who he treats badly.

The Two Gladiators is a pulpy version of the Fall of the Roman Empire with good production values and the actors seems to be enjoying themselves. It's really entertaining, engaging and it's quite spirited - it has more in common with 1940's swashbucklers than blood-drenched gladiator films. The fight scenes range from well choreographed to clumsy, but liveliness is always apparent. Plus Moira Orfei is a sight for sore eyes - what a beauty.
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spirit of the time
Kirpianuscus28 September 2021
It is just unfair to be too severe about this film. It reflects the spirit and the taste of a public, a form of easy heroic passion, a genre so explored than it gives nothing new, very easy entertainment. To expect more is just bizarre. Sand and sandals, historical episodes as pretextes and good memories for today about actors. So, this story about brothers, revenge and justice, friendship and identical gladiators, with the spice of the love story is just decent. Not high expectations, not great revelations only a nice time front to romantic to naive film.
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