IMDb RATING
5.6/10
109
YOUR RATING
This film features a colossal clash between a mass of invaders and the faithful Roman soldiers who must fight to defend the Roman Empire.This film features a colossal clash between a mass of invaders and the faithful Roman soldiers who must fight to defend the Roman Empire.This film features a colossal clash between a mass of invaders and the faithful Roman soldiers who must fight to defend the Roman Empire.
Vassili Karis
- Quinto Fabio's Brother
- (as Marco Vassilli)
Featured review
BRENNUS takes various elements from Livy's history of the Gauls' attack on Rome, plus Plutarch's biography of Camillus, and cleverly remixes them to fashion a ripping yarn of an adventure movie. The banishment of the Roman general Camillus, the controversy over the spoils of Veii, the involvement of the Fabius brothers, the flight of the Vestal virgins from Rome, the barbarian who tugs the beard of a Roman elder, the honking of the sacred geese, and even Brennus's scornful "Woe to the vanquished!" as he heaps his sword onto the scales, are all from the historical record.
To be sure, the historical accounts are a bit more complicated and far less flattering to the Romans, but this variant is exactly the sort of heroic tale an ancient balladeer might have come up with to flatter his hosts at a Fabius family banquet. (Our hero is the dashing young Quintus Fabius, appealingly played by Tony Kendall.)
As for the barbarous Brennus, the more I see of Gordon Mitchell, the more I respect him as an actor. He makes a terrific villain; when he declares that he'll enter Rome with his new bride's head impaled on his sword, I believe it! Mitchell was equally impressive playing a tortured hero (see THE FURY OF ACHILLES and GIANT OF THE METROPOLIS).
No luck so far in finding this sword and sandal classic on DVD, alas. I managed to track down a VHS tape, but it was from a degraded full-screen print in black and white. I'd love to see this in full color and widescreen.
To be sure, the historical accounts are a bit more complicated and far less flattering to the Romans, but this variant is exactly the sort of heroic tale an ancient balladeer might have come up with to flatter his hosts at a Fabius family banquet. (Our hero is the dashing young Quintus Fabius, appealingly played by Tony Kendall.)
As for the barbarous Brennus, the more I see of Gordon Mitchell, the more I respect him as an actor. He makes a terrific villain; when he declares that he'll enter Rome with his new bride's head impaled on his sword, I believe it! Mitchell was equally impressive playing a tortured hero (see THE FURY OF ACHILLES and GIANT OF THE METROPOLIS).
No luck so far in finding this sword and sandal classic on DVD, alas. I managed to track down a VHS tape, but it was from a degraded full-screen print in black and white. I'd love to see this in full color and widescreen.
- steven-222
- Mar 2, 2006
- Permalink
Storyline
Did you know
- TriviaSubmitted to the British Board of Film Censors on 26 August 1964 when it was passed with a "U" certificate under the title Battle of the Spartans. Not generally released on the major ABC or Rank circuits, but distributors Regal Films International circulated as many prints as possible. The ITV network eventually acquired the film and its television premiere (under the title Brennus, Enemy of Rome) was on 16 December 1991 on Yorkshire Television who screened it as the seventh and last in their "Roman Follies" series, a light-hearted season of the worst of the Italian epics.
Details
- Release date
- Country of origin
- Language
- Also known as
- Brennus, Enemy of Rome
- Filming locations
- Olimpia, Rome, Lazio, Italy(Studio)
- Production companies
- See more company credits at IMDbPro
- Runtime1 hour 35 minutes
- Sound mix
- Aspect ratio
- 2.35 : 1
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Top Gap
By what name was Battle of the Spartans (1963) officially released in Canada in English?
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