Menu
Gladiator II Poster

Gladiator II

Prepare to be entertained.
2024 | 148m | English

(272412 votes)

TMDb IMDb

Popularity: 16 (history)

Details

Years after witnessing the death of the revered hero Maximus at the hands of his uncle, Lucius is forced to enter the Colosseum after his home is conquered by the tyrannical Emperors who now lead Rome with an iron fist. With rage in his heart and the future of the Empire at stake, Lucius must look to his past to find strength and honor to return the glory of Rome to its people.
Release Date: Nov 13, 2024
Director: Ridley Scott
Writer: Peter Craig, David Scarpa
Genres: Adventure, Action, Drama
Keywords roman empire, sword fighting, ancient rome, second part, gladiator, sword and sandal, sequel, arrogant, epic, evil tyrant
Production Companies Paramount Pictures, Scott Free Productions, Lucy Fisher/Douglas Wick Productions
Box Office Revenue: $462,180,717
Budget: $310,000,000
Updates Updated: Aug 04, 2025 (Update)
Entered: Apr 13, 2024
Trailers and Extras

No trailers or extras available.

Full Credits

Name Character
Paul Mescal Lucius
Denzel Washington Macrinus
Pedro Pascal General Acacius
Connie Nielsen Lucilla
Joseph Quinn Emperor Geta
Fred Hechinger Emperor Caracalla
Lior Raz Viggo
Derek Jacobi Gracchus
Peter Mensah Jugurtha
Matt Lucas Master of Ceremonies
Alexander Karim Ravi
Yuval Gonen Arishat
Richard McCabe Quaestor
Tim McInnerny Senator Thraex
Alec Utgoff Darius
Rory McCann General Tegula
Yann Gael Bostar
Riana Duce Hyacinthia
Alfie Tempest Young Lucius
Amira Ghazalla Leta | Lucilla's Servant
Abdelmoula Ait Sidi Lhassan Boy (Numidia)
Mouaiz El Outmany Boy (Numidia)
Brahim Assagour Boy (Numidia)
Alexander Simkin Centurion (Branding)
Richard Katz Governor (Baboon Arena)
David Ganly Master of Ceremonies (Baboon Arena)
Anton Saliba Praetorian (Lucilla's)
Amal Ayouch Noble Bedouin Woman
Hadrian Howard Agedilios
Chidi Ajufo Gladiator
Lee Charles Slovak
Christopher Edward Hallaways Glyceo
Chi Lewis-Parry Phoebus
Ángel Gómez De La Torre Gnaeus
Brahim Ait Ben Azzouz Centurion (Lucius' Arrest)
Maxime Rauf Ruijselaar Centurion (Ostia)
Sana El Baghdady Wailing Woman
Nadia El Masnaoui Wailing Woman
Nisrine Machat Wailing Woman
Maud Oulhen Female Concubine
Estelle Courret Female Concubine
Line Ancel Female Concubine
Sixtine Gignoux Female Concubine
Igor Badnjar Male Concubine
Romi Debart Male Concubine
Arnaud Préchac Male Concubine
Tom Moutchi Brennos
Dean Fagan Dorso
May Calamawy Macrinus' Companion (uncredited)
Name Job
Matt Curtis Main Title Designer
Lisa Gerrard Vocals
Nouhayla Ayari Utility Sound
Luke Brickley Utility Sound
Peter Burgis Foley Artist
Matthew Collinge Supervising Sound Editor, Sound Re-Recording Mixer
Paul Carter Sound Designer
Jonathan d'Alessandro Utility Sound
Michael Fentum Sound Designer
Aleksey Kuznetsov Dialogue Editor
Stephane Malenfant Boom Operator
Paul Massey Sound Re-Recording Mixer
Joe O'Halloran Foley Editor
Rob Prynne Sound Effects Editor
Alyn Sclosa Sound Designer
Danny Sheehan Supervising Sound Editor
Rob Turner Sound Effects Editor
Mohamed Waaziz Boom Operator
Rowan Watson Sound Designer
Anna Wright Foley Artist
Conor Flannery Third Assistant Director
Justin Sysum Stunts
Fergus Clegg Assistant Set Decoration
Vasil Yordanov Stunts
Nikki Berwick Stunt Coordinator
Arthur Max Production Design
David Franzoni Characters
Neil Corbould Special Effects Technician, Special Effects Supervisor
Elli Griff Set Decoration
Kate Rhodes James Casting
Stéphane Bucher Sound Mixer
Cali Nelle Fight Choreographer
John Mathieson Director of Photography
Harry Gregson-Williams Original Music Composer
Janty Yates Costume Design
Charlotte Weston Production Assistant
Malcolm Ellul Assistant Location Manager, Unit Manager
Johnny Hopkins Location Manager
Kate Edmonds Casting Assistant
Ciro Candia Camera Operator
Clay Donahue Fontenot Stunt Double
Alexander Bracq Stunts
Morgan Chetcuti Stunts
Tony Christian Stunts
Genadiy Ganchev Stunts
Matthew Camilleri Stunts
Aurélia Agel Stunt Double
Harry Makanga Stunt Double
Philip McDean Stunts
Faisal Mohammed Stunts
Pablo Márquez Stunts
Rob Pavey Stunts
Laurent Plancel Stunts
Mike Snow Stunts
Phillip Ray Tommy Stunts
Vencislav Stojanov Stunts
Richie Wilson Stunts
Bogdan Kumšackij Stunts
Ayesha Hussain Stunts
Peter Craig Story
Ridley Scott Director
David Scarpa Story, Screenplay
Roberto Bolea Sculptor
Sara Taddei Assistant Art Director
David Ingram Supervising Art Director
Laura Miller Art Direction
Raja Achoukhane Set Dresser
Rino Banko Sculptor
Francesca Birri Art Department Coordinator
Mohamed Bouhadra Painter
Vjekoslav Filipovic Sculptor
Aomar Hessaini Painter
Roger Holden Greensman
Danijel Mataija Sculptor
Emanuela Piu Assistant Art Director
Samah Saoui Painter
Melkior Serdarevic Assistant Art Director
Josselin Panchout Boom Operator
Elena Rotatori Costume Coordinator
Maurizio Torti Assistant Costume Designer
Tibor Skornyak Special Effects Technician
Charles Montebello Special Effects Technician
Joe Montabello Special Effects Technician
Robert Grech Special Effects Technician
Kenneth Cassar Special Effects Supervisor
Graziella Cassar Special Effects Coordinator
Karl Brincat Special Effects Technician
Lawrence Attard Special Effects Technician
Paul Biddiss Military Consultant
Salaheddine Benchegra Casting
Tarik Ait Ben Ali Second Assistant Director
Jaafar Ameur Second Assistant Director
Ben Burt First Assistant Director
Eamonn Cawley Third Assistant Director
Callum Dawson Third Assistant Director
Oana Ene Second Assistant Director
Conor Feltham Second Second Assistant Director
Dylan Henricson Assistant Director
Dan John Second Assistant Director
Diara Vassallo Ndiaye Set Production Assistant
Mohammed Hamza Regragui Third Assistant Director
Rafael Salazar Set Production Assistant
Krishan Sharda Third Assistant Director
Nick Thomas Second Unit First Assistant Director
Kieron Walshe Third Assistant Director
Vanluke Watson Assistant Director
Curtis Burrell Location Manager
Taha Drissi Location Assistant
Yann Mari Faget Location Manager
John David Gunkle Location Manager
Georgia Jones Assistant Unit Manager
Tony Lewis Music Editor
Stefano De Marco Assistant Editor
Danielle El-Hendi First Assistant Editor
Roddy McDonald Assistant Editor
Tamsyn Lee Wilson Textile Artist
Hassan Taghriti Costume Set Supervisor
William Steggle Costume Set Supervisor
Rupert Steggle Costume Assistant
Emma-Louise Ryan Costumer
Emma Rawnsley Costume Assistant
Melissa Moritz Assistant Costume Designer
Alesha Mitchell Costume Assistant
Angeliki Michaelidou Matsi Costume Assistant
Claudio Manzi Assistant Costume Designer
Anna Izquierdo Costume Assistant
Samuela Galea Costumer
Amelia Bianchi Costume Supervisor
Stella Atkinson Assistant Costume Designer
Craig Anthony Costumer
Othmane Ajana Costume Assistant
Brenda Camilleri Casting Coordinator
Hamid Ait Timaghrit Casting Coordinator
Saïd Aamoum Casting Assistant
Kenza Tazi Camera Trainee
Dave Wells Key Grip
Adrian Sworn Lighting Technician
Katie Swain Camera Operator, Second Unit Director of Photography
Basil Smith Camera Operator
Massimo Rinella Dolly Grip
Chris Plevin "B" Camera Operator
Richard Philpott "C" Camera Operator
Aidan Monaghan Still Photographer
Youssef Mohattane Video Assist Operator
Keith McNamara Focus Puller
Driss Marzak Gaffer
Aerial Malta Drone Operator
Lee Knight Gaffer
Jack Kelly Video Assist Operator
Hassan Hajhouj Rigging Grip
Ryan Gatt Digital Imaging Technician
Donavan Gallagher Dolly Grip
Gastone Ferrante Digital Imaging Technician
Mario Demanuele Drone Operator
Maverick Debono Key Rigging Grip
James Culloty Video Assist Operator
Pete Cavaciuti Steadicam Operator, "A" Camera Operator
Benjamin Borg Cardona Camera Operator
Gabriel Bucher Camera Trainee
Amine Boudour Camera Operator
Gordon Borg Best Boy Grip
Amadeo Bezzina Video Assist Operator
Jake Bennett-Young Data Management Technician
Yassine Abounouom Rigging Gaffer
Steve Abela Stunts
Younes Afroukh Stunts
James Apps Stunts
Victor Aquilina Stunts
Tarik Belmekki Stunts
Lucas Breathnach Stunts
Paul Burke Stunts
Ryan Busuttil Stunts
Daniel Carrión Stunts
Peppijna Dalli Stunts
Hayden Grech Stunts
Richard Hall Stunts
Chris Hallaways Stunts
Viktor Hristov Stunts
Alard Hufner Stunts
Radoslav Ignatov Stunts
Ivan Iliev Stunts
Othman Ilyassa Stunts
Dylan Jones Stunt Double
Maureen Lavoyer Stunts
Vitas Le Bas Stunts
Will Mackay Stunts
Mark Mallia Stunts
Roberto Dias McCarthy Stunts
Grégory Nolbas Stunts
Michael Oladele Stunt Double
Chris Pace Stunts
Andrej Riabokon Stunt Double
Aitoufqir Rida Stunts
Florine Silva Stunts
Zach Roberts Stunt Double
Vasil Simeonov Stunts
Peter Syckelmoore Stunts
Harvey Taylor Stunt Double
Elmo Walker Stunts
Keith Ward Stunts
Peter White Stunts
Natalie Wright-Cella Stunt Coordinator
Lucky Johnson Stunts
Abdellah Ouksih Stunts
Ramon Álvarez Stunts
Reetu Aggarwal 3D Artist
Luke Armstrong Visual Effects Compositor
Ed Bruce Visual Effects Supervisor
Michael Cheung Visual Effects Editor
Zoltán Lányi 3D Artist
Edward Randolph Visual Effects Producer
David Schott Visual Effects Compositor
Wayne Simmons Animation
Bilal Terrar Visual Effects Compositor
Máté Vörös 3D Artist
Adrian Nica Special Effects Technician
Justin Montebello Special Effects Technician
Zuzana Milfort Special Effects Coordinator
Mike March Special Effects Technician
Gavin Kidner Special Effects Assistant
Adam Howarth Special Effects Technician
Will Harvey Special Effects Technician
Laila Ait Oujamaa Art Department Coordinator
Tarik Amchemar Set Decoration Buyer
Andrea Arces Assistant Art Director
Youness Benbakrim Standby Property Master
Molly Blake Set Decoration Buyer
Cesco Bonello Assistant Art Director
Sven Bonnici Assistant Art Director
Giuseppe Cafagna Painter
Olivia Carney Construction Coordinator
Lino Chetcuti Scenic Artist
Archie Cook Set Dresser
Mojca Crnic Assistant Set Decoration
Charlo Dalli Art Direction
Garry Dawson Property Master
Branislav Dimov Assistant Art Director
Betane Driss Set Decoration Buyer
Nathan Elliott Assistant Set Decoration
Isabella Faull Assistant Set Decoration
Kim Frederiksen Concept Artist
Damián Galán Álvarez Assistant Art Director
Dylan Gouder Construction Manager
Abdenabi Izlaguen Props
James Laing Assistant Art Director
Candice Marchlewski Assistant Set Decoration
Tamara Marini Supervising Art Director
Ana Martínez Fernández Assistant Art Director
Piotr Micyk Set Dresser
Dániel Miklós Assistant Art Director
Krstic Milan 3D Artist
Sonja Nenadić Assistant Set Decoration
Nikolai Nikolov Assistant Art Director
Julie O'Connor Scenic Artist
Ellie Pash Assistant Set Decoration
Aoife Power Assistant Set Decoration
Markus Ruiz Painter
Kenrick Ruthven Standby Property Master
Ana Saric Set Designer
Natali Shershulskaya Art Department Coordinator
Jessica Sinclair Concept Artist
Chris Straessle Assistant Art Director
Darren Chesney Unit Production Manager
Sam Courtnage Unit Manager
Nath Rodriguez Production Manager
Rasul Kalyayev Unit Manager
Matthew Camilleri Unit Manager
Eva Fernández Hairstylist
Jana Carboni Makeup Designer
Daniele Fiori Hairstylist
Nicola Griguoli Hairstylist
Charlie Hounslow Makeup Supervisor
Alexander Simkin Assistant Set Decoration
Elizabeth Eva Hedley Makeup Artist
Said Lachkar Hairstylist
Hamdan Malika Hairstylist
Luca Mazzoccoli Makeup Artist
Lisa Pantaleoni Makeup Artist
Kerstin Weller Hair Supervisor
Fabrizio Fenech Post Production Assistant
Jille Azis Set Decoration
Dario Nolé Assistant Art Director
James Offield Stunts
Mark Bakowski Visual Effects Supervisor
Courtney Ullrich Hairstylist
Dan Snape Visual Effects Supervisor
Georgi Manchev Stunts
Freddie FitzHerbert Second Assistant Camera
Chuck Finch Gaffer
Neil Ferris Art Department Production Assistant
Redouane Ouadi Transportation Coordinator
Sam Restivo Editor
Claire Simpson Editor
Adam Behan Stunts
David Crossman Costume Design
Pietro Ponti Visual Effects Supervisor
Abdelaaziz Attougui Stunts
Freddie Mason Stunts
Elizabeth Donker Curtius Stunts
Name Title
Laurie MacDonald Executive Producer
Walter F. Parkes Executive Producer
David Franzoni Producer
Ridley Scott Producer
Douglas Wick Producer
Lucy Fisher Producer
Winston Azzopardi Co-Producer
Raymond Kirk Executive Producer
Michael A. Pruss Producer
Aidan Elliott Executive Producer
Organization Category Person
Popularity Metrics

Popularity History


Year Month Avg Max Min
2024 4 29 43 17
2024 5 25 40 17
2024 6 23 38 15
2024 7 74 174 19
2024 8 51 76 38
2024 9 73 150 46
2024 10 122 247 62
2024 11 1350 2557 261
2024 12 1879 7979 798
2025 1 2777 6685 953
2025 2 805 1292 138
2025 3 206 875 5
2025 4 68 78 58
2025 5 46 60 39
2025 6 36 45 31
2025 7 30 36 25
2025 8 23 32 19
2025 9 20 29 16

Trending Position


Year Month High Avg
2025 9 65 335
Year Month High Avg
2025 8 58 232
Year Month High Avg
2025 7 45 191
Year Month High Avg
2025 6 39 172
Year Month High Avg
2025 5 28 117
Year Month High Avg
2025 4 14 68
Year Month High Avg
2025 3 9 32
Year Month High Avg
2025 2 13 52
Year Month High Avg
2025 1 3 17
Year Month High Avg
2024 12 1 9
Year Month High Avg
2024 11 1 7
Year Month High Avg
2024 10 16 87
Year Month High Avg
2024 9 12 139
Year Month High Avg
2024 8 64 303

Return to Top

Reviews

msbreviews
8.0

FULL SPOILER-FREE REVIEW @ https://talkingfilms.net/gladiator-ii-review-a-legacy-sequel-that-triumphs-through-spectacle-and-emotion/ "Gladiator II may not achieve the groundbreaking impact of the original film, but it remains an impressive cinematic experience, transporting audiences into an epic ... filled with emotional and visual grandeur. Ridley Scott once again showcases his mastery in blending narrative, action, and thematic depth, delivering a sequel marked by superb technical execution and standout performances, particularly from Denzel Washington. Despite the inevitable comparisons to the classic, the iconic filmmaker presents a story that justifies its existence, even if it treads familiar ground. Necessary or not, what truly matters is the strength (and honor) with which a work captivates us - and here, Gladiator II triumphs." Rating: A-

Nov 14, 2024
Ditendra
1.0

Another trash Woke movie from Hollywood. There were never black (African) emperors in Roman empire... This movie is simply false propaganda. ...

Dec 30, 2024
griggs79
8.0

_Gladiator II_, a polished echo of the original, is a testament to Ridley Scott's cinematic powers. It follows his hit-and-miss _Napoleon_ biopic last year, which was rather miss than hit. The sequel captures the original's essence while introducing elements, making it a worthy successor. Paul Me ... scal in the lead role - inherited from the ever-growling Russel Crowe, who was at the top of his career in the original - holds his ground against Denzel Washington, whose charisma cleaves through the screen as effortlessly as his character's sword. Ridley Scott admits he was prompted to revisit _Gladiator_ by the acclaim he received from those too young to have seen the original on the big screen. His mission to lure Gen Z away from their streaming devices may help to save cinema, ushering in a new era of appreciation for the big screen. But for the love of Jupiter, I hope they quickly learn that it isn't just a big iPad with comfy chairs. No pausing, swiping, mid-film selfies, dashes to the bar, or running commentary required. Screen four at your local cinema isn't the Colosseum but a place where the magic of film of this scale truly comes alive, offering a unique and immersive experience that can't be replicated at home.

Nov 15, 2024
r96sk
9.0

<em>'Gladiator II'</em> is awesome! I only watched the original three years ago, almost to the day in fact, but I was anticipating this follow-up after thoroughly loving the Russell Crowe film. Honestly, I think I kinda enjoyed this sequel more - at worst, the two are on the same level, for me an ... yway. Crowe is missed, though everyone in this movie more than makes up for his (obvious) absence. This is the first time I've seen Paul Mescal act, despite knowing of him for quite a while now. I'm impressed! He delivers a showing of great strength (pardon the pun). Pedro Pascal is very good too, as is Joseph Quinn; I wasn't instantly sold on the latter when he appeared onscreen, though when all is said and done I rate his performance positively. Denzel Washington... what a geezer. I'll never tire or turn down the chance at seeing that man act. Needless to say, given he's one of two favourite actors of mine, I loved his performance all the way through. The likes of Fred Hechinger and Connie Nielsen merit fair praise as well, interesting to see Rory McCann and Matt Lucas in there too. Oh, and the score... superb! Deafeningly grand.

Nov 15, 2024
Geronimo1967
6.0

Sixteen years after "Maximus" (Russell Crowe) bit the dust, we find ancient Rome under the control of twins "Geta" (Joseph Quinn) and his brother "Caracalla" (Fred Hechinger) and thanks to their general "Acacias" (Pedro Pascal) continuing to expand their empire. It's this latter man who leads an att ... ack on the home "Nanno" (Paul Mescal) shares with his wife "Arishat" (Yuval Gonen). That doesn't go so well and next thing, she's gone on ahead of him to the wheat fields and he's now a slave owned by the manipulative "Macrinus" (Denzel Washington) heading to the Colosseum to entertain the emperors and their cousin "Lucilla" (Connie Nielsen). What now ensues is a well produced and good looking rehash of the first film paying homage en route to "Spartacus" and it's the sheer predicability that I struggled with. It's episodically delivered with far too much script and though Mescal tries hard, his performance is largely charm-free and as wooden as a rudius, especially once the rather far-fetched familial back-story has been established. Sir Derek Jacobi sparingly appears as the other survivor from 2000 reprising his role as the senator "Gracchus" but to no real effect and the scene stealer for me is really only the megalomanic Quinn's imperial offering as he and his bonkers sibling teeter on the brink of inbred, sexually fluid, madness. Washington does well enough as the scheming slave-master, but he hasn't really enough to work with to stand out amongst what really are a mediocre collection of undercooked characters that just don't deliver any real sense of the hedonism and menace of this debauched and corrupt state. As with Sir Ridley Scott's "Kingdom of Heaven" (2005) the battle scenes are superb and action packed, as are the combat scenes in the vast marble auditorium filled with baying plebs and rhinos, but I am afraid that the shallow characterisations just didn't work well enough to keep this engaging and the plot was just too thin to stretch over a couple of hours that could have been so very much better. It really does need a big screen to appreciate the creatively crafted visuals, but I was still pretty disappointed, sorry.

Nov 16, 2024
DWP
7.0

Comparisons will be inevitable and Gladiator II will never be as iconic as the 2000 classic. However it is very good, strong all-around with gripping action and a well executed script. Performances are very good, with some pleasant surprises. ...

Nov 20, 2024
ChrisSawin
5.0

Gladiator II features some impressive action sequences. Every battle in the Colosseum is fantastic despite how historically inaccurate they may be. The monkey sequence showcases how skilled Hanno (Paul Mescal) is not only as a fighter but also in how he interacts with others. Then there's the rhino ... sequence that plays out much like Bugs Bunny’s interactions with Toro the Bull in the Chuck Jones-directed Looney Tunes short Bully for Bugs (1953). While those sequences are fairly believable, the shark sequence seems like pure fantasy and that’s why it’s so incredible. They fill the Colosseum with water and let sharks loose while the opposing gladiators try to survive the onslaught on boats. It’s also interesting to note that every major actor who dies in the film has a spectacular death. Not only that but these gruesome deaths get increasingly more grisly and memorable as the film progresses. These bloody triumphs rarely delve any deeper than someone getting shot with a bunch of arrows or a beheading or appendage severing of some kind. This level of brutality escalates throughout the film and eventually culminates with the most satisfying kill that takes two and a half hours to achieve. The performances fluctuate between being top-tier perfection and mediocre overacting. Denzel Washington is having the time of his life as Macrinus. He has the most interesting storyline and Denzel dances in every scene with a giddiness that is unparalleled. Joseph Quinn seems to be acting in an entirely different film than everyone else as Emperor Geta. His mannerisms are operatic and theatrical with his wide eyes that rarely blink, grand body language and hand gestures, and explosive line delivery. Pedro Pascal doesn’t do anything in Gladiator II as Marcus Acacius that he didn’t do in Game of Thrones apart from having more screen time. Much like how his character is written, Paul Mescal’s performance is muddled. The Hanno character and who he is is a poorly kept secret that consistently pulls the character in several directions. Hanno is vengeful at first before succumbing to being the hero of the film and the evolution isn’t earned. The writing and pacing of Gladiator II feel like the film drops Hanno’s fate in his lap halfway through, which he’s either forgotten about over two decades or never knew until the audience did. Connie Nielsen, one of the few returning actors from the original film, is awful in this. Her acting in Gladiator II always comes off as forced as her crying scenes are often portrayed as constipated grunts with crocodile tears. Her dialogue delivery is also strained and broken despite being given some of the most important sequences of character connections and reawakenings of sorts in the sequel. Calling Gladiator II action-heavy is misleading because the film drags between every fight sequence. The film is largely dull and difficult to indulge during its quieter moments. The film is gorgeous with its incredible set pieces, intricate costume design, and impressive use of infinitely numerous extras. Director Ridley Scott reunites with all of the set decorators (Sonja Klaus, Crispian Sallis, and Emilio Ardura) and costume designer (Janty Yates) that he worked with on Gladiator in 2000. From a visual standpoint, Ridley Scott's films are highly detailed masterpieces. Denzel Washington’s extravagant performance makes Gladiator II worthwhile. Still, not even its excessively violent action sequences, beautiful cinematography, and masterful set and costume design can save the sequel from how boring it is. Ridley Scott waited over twenty years to make a sequel that is more than twice as expensive as the original only to rehash the same story points.

Nov 19, 2024
GenerationofSwine
1.0

pssst.... it's woke, but that's no surprise. What is a surprise is that people are giving spoiler alerts. I don't understand why. Like so many movie squeals and reboots what you have here is Gladiator with everything intelligent and entertaining sucked out of it. So it's the same movie, but sh ... orter. There are two emperors rather than ones. Rome is falling, but not from the debauchery, intellectual laziness, and over stretched militarism that really caused it's fall... that would be anti-woke to point out it collapsed for all the reasons they love. Instead some lazy leftism the right is evil crap, peppered with fiery but mostly peaceful protests blamed on the thinly veiled reference to Trump. Might as well have the baddies wear red hats that read "Make Rome Great Again." With lectures. And I don't need to go over the political lectures, they are all the same. Woke Hollywood is predictable and best described as "The Who to Hate Network." The worst part is Denzel, I mean I know he still needs to work, but come on man, you're better than this.

Nov 24, 2024
MovieGuys
5.0

Are you not entertained? Well, quite frankly, no.... Gladiator II or Gladiator lite as I like to call it is the "essentials" brand version of Gladiator. You know like, the "essentials brand" of underpants as opposed to known brands like Bendon or Jockey. They do the job, they're okay but still ... the brand names are just "better". Gladiator lite (II) mimics its predecessor but its predominantly just a bare essentials remake of a superior, original film. The story is a rather basic "almost" version of the year 2000 film starring Russell Crowe, the protagonists more or less fill the same or similar roles and well, that's about it. Oh but for a dash of difference, they do have CGI sharks, monkey's and rhino's, if, for whatever weird reason, that's your thing. In summary, this is really just a rather uninspiring "almost" facsimile, of a vastly superior, original film. Its not bad as such, its just feels like a beige re-run of sorts, that need not have been made.

Nov 25, 2024
Alacaea
9.0

After many years, the sequel of the movie is really great, go to the cinema and watch it. ...

Dec 10, 2024
chandlerdanier
4.0

Denzel is a badass. I love Denzel. He does the tongue thing from Joaquin's role in the first. Not even he could save this pile of crap. The CGI somehow is worse than the original. Historical battles are cool but not even historical battles could save this pile of crap. The Mandalorian is cool. ... Not even the Mandalorian could save this pile of crap. It's a pile of crap.

Dec 13, 2024
RalphRahal
5.0

When Ridley Scott decided to revisit Gladiator, it sounded like an opportunity to expand on one of the greatest historical epics. Instead, we got a rehash that feels more like a missed opportunity than a bold sequel. The first act rushes through familiar territory. A general, born out of combat, ... loses his family and ends up as a slave. Sound familiar? It’s the same setup as Maximus’s story, minus the emotional weight. And sending Lucilla’s son away to protect him? That’s not just a weak plot point, it spits on everything Maximus and Marcus died for. The second act brings nothing new to the table. The “twist” is predictable, the plot messy, and the villains uninspired. Commodus worked because he was layered, a mix of insecurity and cruelty. Here, the two emperors are generic placeholders. Even the attempted coup feels like déjà vu, with none of the intensity or buildup that made the first movie iconic. The third act delivers a visually stunning battle but lacks substance. The final showdown offers nothing fresh, and the death of the antagonist in front of everyone feels like it’s trying to copy the original. The speech about “Maximus and Marcus’s dream”? We’ve heard it before, and it meant more the first time. What was the point of that last scene? There were so many ways to end this movie with a high note, something meaningful to honor Lucilla or Acacius. Instead, we get a hollow, pointless ending that adds nothing to the story. Credit where it’s due: the cinematography, CGI, and score are outstanding. Visually, the movie is a masterpiece, with breathtaking scenery and polished editing. The music, while clearly inspired by the original, carries the mood well. But great visuals can’t save a story that refuses to move forward. Gladiator 2 had potential, but it’s stuck trying to recreate past glory instead of delivering something new. It’s visually impressive but ultimately hollow.

Dec 28, 2024
FerdinandoLM
4.0

$250 million, and the best we get is… rabid monkeys? Ridley Scott’s Gladiator 2 feels like a parody of itself. Pascal’s character is utterly unnecessary, a cardboard figure who exists solely to fill runtime without contributing anything memorable or meaningful. D.W., despite his undeniable talent, i ... s saddled with a bafflingly underwritten role, spouting clunky dialogue as the story collapses around him. As for the central narrative about Maximus Meridius’ son? Trivial and painfully predictable. The "legacy revenge" arc is telegraphed so clearly you could write the script after the first act. No twists, no depth—just a paint-by-numbers retread of the original’s emotional beats. Glory to Dondus indeed.

Jan 07, 2025
LuanBunyak
N/A

This is the story that answers how things went after the first movie. My hopes wasn't great for this part 2 but I was positively surprised. Its a great movie with lots of entertainment. 7/10 ...

Jul 08, 2025