IMDb RATING
4.4/10
279
YOUR RATING
Spartacus And The 10 GladiatorsSpartacus And The 10 GladiatorsSpartacus And The 10 Gladiators
Giovanni Di Benedetto
- Spartacus
- (as John Heston)
Giovanni Vari
- Tipho, Smith
- (as John Warrell)
Giuliano Dell'Ovo
- Mature Gladiator
- (as Julian Dower)
Enzo Fiermonte
- Gladiator Rizio
- (as William Bird)
Vassili Karis
- Young Gladiator
- (as Marco Vassilli)
Emilio Messina
- Gladiator Lepto
- (as Don Emil Messina)
Romano Giomini
- Gladiator
- (as Gordon Steve)
Aldo Canti
- Gladiator
- (as Alan Lancaster)
Pietro Torrisi
- Gladiator
- (as Fred Hudson)
Artemio Antonini
- Member of Spartacus Camp
- (uncredited)
Fortunato Arena
- Prison Warden
- (uncredited)
- Director
- Writers
- All cast & crew
- Production, box office & more at IMDbPro
Featured review
This was the second of three "Ten Gladiators" films made during the '60s, each starring Dan Vadis.
Like the first film, "The Ten Gladiators," this one is based on characters from history, freely adapting a fictional story within the historical setting. Consequently, the plot reflects the oppression and brutality of Antiquity, albeit with an occasional sprinkling of humor to lighten things up.
Director Nick Nostro keeps the pace going fast and furious, and the film does cover a lot of ground in 90 minutes. The characters are likable; the ten gladiators are handsome and appealing; the locations and sets are impressive; the score is excellent. It should be noted that one must see "Spartacus and the Ten Gladiators" in its native CinemaScope format to appreciate how dynamic and well produced it really is. Those blurry, faded 4:3 16mm TV prints don't do it justice.
Leading man Dan Vadis was never more handsome than he was in this and its follow-up "Triumph of the Ten Gladiators." The same can be said for the other nine warriors, whose physiques provide ample eye candy during the movie's slower passages.
Like all pre-21st century films, the viewer must have a normal human attention span to enjoy this motion picture. Consequently, contemporary audiences, unable to stop texting or smoking pot while "watching," will likely be too preoccupied expressing their usual disdain and condescension to enjoy it...
Choose not to make that mistake yourself.
Like the first film, "The Ten Gladiators," this one is based on characters from history, freely adapting a fictional story within the historical setting. Consequently, the plot reflects the oppression and brutality of Antiquity, albeit with an occasional sprinkling of humor to lighten things up.
Director Nick Nostro keeps the pace going fast and furious, and the film does cover a lot of ground in 90 minutes. The characters are likable; the ten gladiators are handsome and appealing; the locations and sets are impressive; the score is excellent. It should be noted that one must see "Spartacus and the Ten Gladiators" in its native CinemaScope format to appreciate how dynamic and well produced it really is. Those blurry, faded 4:3 16mm TV prints don't do it justice.
Leading man Dan Vadis was never more handsome than he was in this and its follow-up "Triumph of the Ten Gladiators." The same can be said for the other nine warriors, whose physiques provide ample eye candy during the movie's slower passages.
Like all pre-21st century films, the viewer must have a normal human attention span to enjoy this motion picture. Consequently, contemporary audiences, unable to stop texting or smoking pot while "watching," will likely be too preoccupied expressing their usual disdain and condescension to enjoy it...
Choose not to make that mistake yourself.
- michigindie
- Jun 22, 2021
- Permalink
Storyline
Did you know
- TriviaDan Vadis was successful in the Peplum sword and sandals genre despite beginning his film career in the waning days of that genre. He later transitioned to westerns and made a number of Hollywood films including "'High Plains Drifter,' 'Broncho Billy,' "The Gauntlet' and 'Every Which Way You Can," all starring Clint Eastwood.
- Quotes
Senator Varro: If you fail me once again, you'll return to being a slave. Even worse, I'll have your tongue cut out. I'll tear out your eyes. And I will send you into the mines where you'll be whipped, and I will have your wounds, all of them, rubbed with salt.
- ConnectionsFeatured in Désaccord parfait (2006)
Details
- Release date
- Countries of origin
- Language
- Also known as
- Spartacus and the Ten Gladiators
- Filming locations
- Production companies
- See more company credits at IMDbPro
- Runtime1 hour 28 minutes
- Sound mix
- Aspect ratio
- 2.35 : 1
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Top Gap
By what name was Spartacus et les dix gladiateurs (1964) officially released in India in English?
Answer