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Rome Full Movie In Hindi Free Download Mp4



Rome Full Movie In Hindi Free Download Mp4 ->->->-> http://urllio.com/qze8y


Original Title: Rome

Genge: Action,Drama,History,Romance,War

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

A down-to-earth account of the lives of both illustrious and ordinary Romans set in the last days of the Roman Republic.
In this British historical drama, the turbulent transition from Roman republic to autocratic empire, which changed world history through civil war and wars of conquest, is sketched both from the aristocratic viewpoint of Julius Caesar, his family, his adopted successor Octavian Augustus, and their political allies and adversaries, and from the politically naive viewpoint of a few ordinary Romans, notably the soldiers Lucius Vorenus and Titus Pullo and their families.
An excellent piece of acting almost universally throughout the cast. Kudos go particularly to the wonderful actor Ciaran Hinds, who gave Gaius Julius Caesar a humanity which did not subtract from the regality of the character. Costuming was excellent and the action, of both the Mars and Venus kind, was breathtakingly realistic and definitely not for the kiddies. The only real drawback; the very British accents displayed throughout the cast that occasionally were a bit distracting from the time & place setting. This series is one that is definitely worth the money of purchasing in DVD. One can only hope that the series will continue. I for one can say that it has a true fan here in New Hampshire.
I'm delighted to see that decades after, "I, Claudius", we finally have another chance to enjoy Roman History (this time, years before Claudius were born). I'd like to make a remark, though, in regards to the word "F*ck", pronounced several times in almost every episode. Well, I'm afraid that, at that particular time, this word was completely unknown, and it would take CENTURIES to appear, as an acronym for the words 'For Unlawful Carnal Knowledge' at colonial times, standing for "Fornication Under Consent of the King", in ancient England or, if you prefer, derived from Germanic or Nordic languages. In any case, not in use in the ancient Rome!

Another aspect that disappointed me is that some characters are given completely fictional importance (Servilia, Atia..) whereas some other simply disappeared (where's Cleopatra?? and the FACT that Julius Caesar died at Pompey's statue feet uttering "You too, my son??" after being stabbed by Brutus??)

In compensation, it was a VERY NICE touch recreating in the last episode of the series the scene by which historically Pullo and Vorenus have arrived to our tines (see Commentarii de Bello Gallico -literally "Commentaries on the Gallic Wars" in Latin-, an account written by Julius Caesar about his nine years of war in Gaul). In the Book 5, Chapter 44, of this compilation, there's an episode that describes the two (Pullo and Vorenus) as roman centurions, approaching the first ranks, and who shared a bitter rivalry. It relates how Pullo charges the enemy (the Nervii) in the heat of battle. He casts his javelin at one of the enemy from a short distance, but he is in turn pierced by a spear and surrounded by other Nervii who prevent him from drawing his sword. At that moment, his rival Vorenus, who had followed him from the fortifications, reaches the site where the fight is taking place and draws the enemy's attention away from Pullo by engaging in hand-to-hand combat with those assailing him. After slaying one of the enemy and driving back the rest, Vorenus loses his footing on the irregular terrain; as the Nervii draw closer to him, Pullo comes to his rescue and, after slaying many of their opponents, the two retreat to the fortifications amidst roaring applause from their comrades in arms.

This historical fact is somehow recreated in the last episode of the first season of the series, when Vorenus jumps into the arena to help Pullo fighting the giant gladiator. Again, a very nice touch, remembering the exploit of these two roman soldiers who lived for real in the ancient Rome, long time ago...
Sadly, no. The popularity of the show was enough to greenlight a second season, with an option for three more seasons afterwards. Seasons three and four would have revolved around the war between Octavian and Mark Anthony in Egypt, with season five focusing on the rise of Jesus in Palestine. However, due to the show's enormous costs, the cancellation was announced midway through the production of season 2. This forced the writers to end the Octavian-Mark Anthony story arc in the second season. The necessity to cover two seasons worth of history in a few episodes explains the large jumps in time had to be made at the end.

Due to the very solid receipt of the series, HBO executives later expressed some regret in the cancellation. Writer Bruno Heller is quoted as saying that he is still interested to give the series a proper wrap-up with a movie. (source: http://www.reuters.com/article/2008/12/01/us-rome-idUSTRE4B00VV2008...

For those interested in further viewing: the events in Octavian's life, concerning his later career, succession and death, are depicted in the classic series I, Claudius which starts in 23 BC (Rome season 2 ends in 30 BC). When Vorenus and Pullo learned that Erastes had taken his children, they storm his hideout and kill all of Fulmen's guards. When they confront Fulmen, Pullo says "Tell us where the children are, you might yet live." Fulmen scoffs at this because he knows what kind of man Vorenus is. Erastes admitting he sold the children into slavery wouldn't have boded well for him and Vorenus would have likely killed him anyway. So by lying and saying "I fucked them, I killed them and threw them in the river.", he is essentially killing Vorenus in turn. Had he told the truth, Vorenus would have had the hope of finding his children, knowing they were alive. But by lying and saying they were dead, would rob Vorenus of his will to live. As the creators of the series have always stated, they aimed for authenticity rather than accuracy. They enlisted the help of several historians and did quite an effort to recreate the Roman world, culture and habits into its tiniest details. The depiction of daily life, politics and warfare in Rome is therefore quite accurate, aside from some small issues (such as house decorations etc.) that still cause some controversy among historians.

The main story is also generally true. There was a long feud between Julius Caesar and Pompey Magnus that ended with Pompey's defeat, but Caesar was subsequently killed by his former enemies. In the vacuum of power, several groups kept fighting for the rule of Rome, which finally ended with the defeat and suicide of Mark Anthony and Cleopatra. The makers did, however, afford themselves quite some artistic licence with several historic facts and events, for the purpose of dramatic storytelling and to avoid unnecessary complexity.

The series greatly condenses the timeline of events and simplifies or alters both the politics and personal lives of people involved. For instance, Atia is depicted as a scheming, power-hungry vixen, which is quite contrary to historical evidence. She also lives through the entire series, whereas in reality, she died a year after Caesar, and was not present during most of the time depicted in season 2; Octavia, Atia's daughter, was never married to (and never divorced) a man called Glabius (as seen in season 1); she was married to someone else with who she had 3 children, all born after Caesar's death; the battle of Pharsalus was in reality preceded by the battle of Dyrrhachium, in which Pompey's army managed to defeat Ceasar's; The battle at Phillipi was not fought in one day; Cassius committed suicide during the first battle; Brutus was not killed either, he committed suicide after the second battle (although singly walking into the enemy's army could be considered suicide; his death by multiple swords was probably made to mirror Caesar's death); Brutus' mother Servilia did not commit suicide, she died a natural death (actually about a year after Atia's death); Mark Anthony already had two children with Cleopatra before he was married Octavia; he left Octavia to reunite with Cleopatra and have another child. Many of the real events have been moved in time to fit the time frame of the episodes better. For instance, Julia, Pompey's wife and Caesar's daughter, had already died years before the time depicted in the series; the siege of Alexandria already started before Caesar's battle with Ptolemy; and Cleopatra committed suicide 11 days after Mark Anthony's suicide.

Some accurate character traits known from historic sources made it into the show. Caesar was indeed of noble birth, but very popular with the commoners, also due to his habit of bribing people and being extremely merciful towards former enemies. Also correctly depicted is his brilliance as a general, being able to win several battles while being vastly outnumbered. Perhaps the most accurate characterization is that of Marc Antony, whom history describes as being a noted carouser as well as a brilliant general, and loyal ally to Caesar. His antagonism towards Cicero is also quite true; Cicero would described his disdain for Anthony, and wondered how someone of noble birth could be such a vulgar man.

Aside from altered facts, the writers inferred several facts for which there is no historical evidence (but technically no evidence against either). For instance, the secret relationship between Octavia and Marcus Agrippa, Mark Anthony's affair with Atia, the intensifying rivalry between Atia and Servilia, the incestual affair between Octavian and Octavia, Octavia's sexual relationship with Servilia, Servilia's active role in Caesar's assassination, Caesarion's escape from death, etc. The scene where Octavian helps cover up an epileptic seizure of Caesar's, which his mother mistakes for an affair between the two, is a combination of historical speculation that Caesar was an epileptic and an accusation from Marc Antony that Octavian had been Caesar's lover.

A completely fictionalised part of Rome is the entire Lucius Vorenus/Titus Pullo subplot. Vorenus and Pullo really existed, they are described by Caesar in his book De Bello Gallico (About the Gallic War) as rival officers. Everything aside from that (personal lives, historic roles, interaction with real persons) was created by the writers as a means to involve common men in the rich history and culture of the Roman Republic. The writers also invented Julius Caesar's slave Posca, his friendship with Caesar and his forced marriage to one of Octavia's friends.

The timeline for the series begins in 50 BC, when Caeser's term as consul ran out and the events of the story begin. They end in 30 BC, with the death of Mark Antony and Cleopatra. In the show this timeline seems to be greatly condensed. Despite the main action taking place over about twenty years none of the characters except for Octavian, who goes from a teenage boy to a man, and Caesarion who goes from an infant in season one to a pre-teen in season two, seem to age at all. Roughly 10 years pass in the two seasons of the show.

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