GLAD HE ATE HER TOO!Starring: Paul Mescal, Pedro Pascal, Joseph Quinn, Fred Hechinger, Denzel Washington, Connie Nielsen, Derek Jacobi, Lior Raz, Tim Mcinnery and Matt Lucas. Written by David Scarpa, based on a story by Peter Creaig and David Scarpa featuring characters created by David Franzoni. Directed by Ridley Scott. Budget $310 million dollars, running time 148 minutes long.
Hot on the heels of the original arrives, just 25 years later, this – Glad He Ate Her Too, the continuing adventures of a different gladiator caught up in the same shit twice. The story sees human vaccum, Paul Mescal (who?) valiantly trying to fill the sandals of Russell Crowe and failing spectacularly as he loses a war against a Roman fleet lead by Pedro Pascal, gets captured, then sent to fight in arenas until his success sees him transported to Rome to fight for the pleasure of not one, but two emperors (Joseph Quinn and Fred Hechinger), both whom are clearly on the looney spectrum and make Caligula look like a primary school teacher.
ANYWAY Mecal, waddles from one fight after another which promise much but delivers little. We learn that incredibly he's a survivor from the first film (not the only one, there are two others, Connie Nielsen and Derek Jacobi) and he becomes the pawn in their political manoeuvring. By a weird state of affairs, there's an army camped just outside Rome waiting for a leader to bring revolution to the city of Rome, just like in the first film. However this time we have the added value of Denzel Washington who's also not playing by the rules and he's rather keen on ruling the whole ruddy edifice and he doesn't care whose carcass he needs to climb over to achieve it. Then add to that melting pot the following: occassional stabby stabby in the arena, poe faced English actors machinating politically, earnest looking gladiators waiting to die for your pleasure, and loads of hilarious historically anachronistic moments including Romans reading newspapers while drinking coffees, playing football with goal posts, and using mobile phones to book Ubers.
I've been looking forward to this and was getting very excited, it's not often the most expensive film ever made (up to this point) arrives at the box office and I was eager to see it. This film cost $310 million to make and that's a conservative estimate. 'They' say that with promotion, and marketing you can double the budget, so that $310 now becomes $620 and 'They' also say that for a film to make a profit it needs to double that number, so Glad He Ate her Too will need to make $1.4 billion just to break even. Good luck.
It's a spectacularly mounted film, as ever expertly directed by Ridley 'I'm 86' Scott, and looking glorious thanks to fantastic life-size sets and CGI, the cast mostly excel with Denzel and Pedro taking the joint crown for MVP, while some feel tragically wasted (Derek Jacobi) others shine in small roles (Matt Lucas). Scott yet again shepherds the epic scope with consummate skill, and it's not really his fault that this film just doesn't quite fly, sure it gets up to take off speed, and once or twice the wheels momentarily leave the ground but then the sheer weight of the whole thing causes this massive beast to bounce back to the ground, and the sad fact is that Paul Mescal just does not have the same power or presence as Crowe to make this film soar like the original, and despite the added bulk, he looks more like a slightly petulant school boy, rather than a battle-hardened Roman general of Crowe and his motivation for revenge - his wife is killed in combat in front of him, doesn't carry the same seeds of revenge as Maximus Meridius watching the burned corpses of this beloved wife and son hanging from the gutted ruins of his estate having been murdered on the orders of a ruthless emperor.
Similarly call me old-fashioned but when a film comes along called Gladiator II I kinda want to see some spectacular arena action, you know like what was hinted at in the trailer, and not when you finally get to one of three scenes of action discover it's all over before you have time to wedge a single fist-full of popcorn in to your gapping maw. Cos it's time for more political machinations and intrigue.
It's a cruel twist of fate that the most interesting character in this whole thing, Pedro Pascal, doesn't get more screen time, cos he's fantastic. And Denzel who chews up the scenery like a pro brings some great menace and intrigue to the role, while Tim McInnerny delivers another perfectly slimly character in the guise of Senator Thraex.
This is by no means a bad film, it just felt a little un-engaging, it never grips like the original, the political intrigue feels shoe-horned in, it doesn't feel as epic, sure there's spectacle but I wanted more action, or at least I wanted the action hinted at to be longer. This is a fantastically good-looking film, made more so by the fact Ridley directed this whole thing in 52 days!
I wanted to love this, I really did, but sadly it fizzled rather than banged and by the end, when it finally rolls to a stop, I found myself somewhat bored and a little deflated. And unlike the first, I was not entirely entertained.
7/10