Gladiator: Film and HistoryISBN: 978-1-4051-1043-3
Hardcover
256 pages
May 2004, Wiley-Blackwell
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"A most welcome addition to this rapidly expanding discourse. It
succeeds in collecting an insightful and diverse set of reflections
'inspired by' Gladiator (as filmmakers might say) and will
hopefully encourage similar explorations of more recent and
forthcoming films set in antiquity." Bryn Mawr Classical
Review
"This book provides a very useful resource that will enhance the
analytical sophistication of students of Scott's film and one that
will deepen their appreciation of the complexity of Roman society
in the reign of Commodus as well as the problem of imperialism then
and today. I have no doubt that it will be a great success and a
distinct credit to its editor and his contributors."
Scholia
"Martin Winkler is one of the pioneers in the use of film
as applied to classical antiquity." New England Classical
Journal
Winkler has created an unlikely meeting of brains and brawn in
this collection of papers from classicists who contemplate the
popularity of Ridley Scott's film Gladiator." Reference and
Research Book News
"Martin Winkler has brought together classicists who understand
and respect the power of modern film. This volume will set the
standard for the serious study of the reflections and influence of
the classical world on contemporary popular culture." Gregory N.
Daugherty, Randolph-Macon College
"Boasting its own triumphant array of stimulating double takes
on the film Gladiator, this book successfully recaptures the
excitement and immediacy of the turn of the 21st century cinematic
epic." Paula James, The Open University
"A promising model of the multiple approaches that may be taken to a single cinematic text ... Its demonstration that even highly commercial products of popular culture can still yield serious insights and analysis can only benefit the study of classics and cinema." Journal of Roman Studies