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Le dernier des Romains

Original title: Kampf um Rom I
  • 1968
  • Not Rated
  • 1h 43m
IMDb RATING
6.0/10
467
YOUR RATING
Orson Welles, Honor Blackman, Laurence Harvey, Harriet Andersson, Robert Hoffmann, and Sylva Koscina in Le dernier des Romains (1968)
AdventureDramaHistoryWar

Cethegus, leader of the Roman nobility, travels to Bizantium and its leader Justinian, in an attempt to raise an army to march on the Goths under Narses. Cethegus would like to set the two s... Read allCethegus, leader of the Roman nobility, travels to Bizantium and its leader Justinian, in an attempt to raise an army to march on the Goths under Narses. Cethegus would like to set the two sides to war against each other, that his own forces might take control at the outcome.Cethegus, leader of the Roman nobility, travels to Bizantium and its leader Justinian, in an attempt to raise an army to march on the Goths under Narses. Cethegus would like to set the two sides to war against each other, that his own forces might take control at the outcome.

  • Directors
    • Robert Siodmak
    • Andrew Marton
    • Sergiu Nicolaescu
  • Writers
    • David Ambrose
    • Felix Dahn
    • Ladislas Fodor
  • Stars
    • Laurence Harvey
    • Orson Welles
    • Sylva Koscina
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    6.0/10
    467
    YOUR RATING
    • Directors
      • Robert Siodmak
      • Andrew Marton
      • Sergiu Nicolaescu
    • Writers
      • David Ambrose
      • Felix Dahn
      • Ladislas Fodor
    • Stars
      • Laurence Harvey
      • Orson Welles
      • Sylva Koscina
    • 7User reviews
    • 2Critic reviews
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • Photos28

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    Top cast20

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    Laurence Harvey
    Laurence Harvey
    • Cethegus
    Orson Welles
    Orson Welles
    • Emperor Justinian
    Sylva Koscina
    Sylva Koscina
    • Empress Theodora
    Honor Blackman
    Honor Blackman
    • Amalaswintha
    Robert Hoffmann
    Robert Hoffmann
    • Totila
    Michael Dunn
    Michael Dunn
    • Narses
    Ingrid Boulting
    Ingrid Boulting
    • Julia
    • (as Ingrid Brett)
    Lang Jeffries
    Lang Jeffries
    • Belisarius
    Florin Piersic
    Florin Piersic
    • Witichis
    Emanoil Petrut
    • Teja
    Friedrich von Ledebur
    Friedrich von Ledebur
    • Hildebrand
    Dieter Eppler
    Dieter Eppler
    • Thorismund
    Ewa Strömberg
    Ewa Strömberg
    • Rauthgundis
    Adela Marculescu
    • Aspa
    Ion Dichiseanu
    Ion Dichiseanu
    • Furius
    Fory Etterle
    Mircea Anghelescu
    • Aligern
    Harriet Andersson
    Harriet Andersson
    • Mathaswintha
    • Directors
      • Robert Siodmak
      • Andrew Marton
      • Sergiu Nicolaescu
    • Writers
      • David Ambrose
      • Felix Dahn
      • Ladislas Fodor
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews7

    6.0467
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    Featured reviews

    8mvescovi

    A great, underrated historical epic: not a gladiator movie

    Around 500 A.D., after Rome has fallen, a Roman politician,Cethegus, played by Laurence Harvey, tries to return Rome to greatness. He plays the Goth leaders, who really ruled Italy at this time, against each other. The surviving leader attacks Rome at which point Cethegus gets military help from the Emperor Justinian (Orson Wells), while he keeps his army in reserve to take on whoever is left. Events don't quite go as he planned

    This is a complex, well plotted film. It is no Ben Hur, but the characters are engaging, the political intrigue is very well developed, the acting quite good (Laurence Harvey's final scene is great) and the battle scenes truly epic. In an unusual bit a casting, Michale Dunn plays Justinian's general Narses and, in great performance,steals almost every scene he is in. This is a quite good unjustly neglected epic well worth tracking down and seeing. It was released on video tape in the late 1970's but not in wide screen which this film really needs, and Honour Blackman's topless scene was, alas,cropped to just a closeup from the neck up.
    6rjobrien_1943

    Comments on German DVD release

    'Kampf um Rom' appears to be an above average epic, but the version I saw is severely compromised. The recent German DVD release crops the original Techniscope image (2.35:1) to TV dimensions (1.33:1), then masks off the top and bottom of the picture to create an ersatz 1.66:1 ratio. I'm guessing their master copy was a print prepared for television. The faded colours, specks and scratches suggest it was done many years ago. While part one appears to be intact - I'm not sure - part two is obviously edited, with clumsy jump cuts where violence has been trimmed. Judging from the widescreen trailer - included on the DVD - an entire scene was removed, where a servant becomes an unwilling participant in an orgy. The DVD distributor, Universum Film, is usually meticulous with its releases. Presumably, the negative for 'Kampf um Rom' is lost and there were no usable inter-positives or even theatrical prints. Given this major problem, I'm surprised they went ahead with the release. Under the circumstances, the lack of an English option - either soundtrack or subtitles - hardly matters.
    6ulicknormanowen

    A past master's swansong.

    Robert Siodmak is a legend ! A career which spanned almost half a century , began in the silent age ("Menschen am Sonntag" ) ,continued in France after he was driven away from his land by the Nazis ("pièges" "Mollenard ,capitaine corsaire) reached peaks of film noir in America ("the killers" " the dark mirror" "the spiral staircase " "cry of the city" ,to name but four) ;back in Germany ,he was to produce more great works such as "die Ratten " or " Nachts,wenn der Teufel kam".

    In the sixties he was doing movies which were not really personal (with the exception of "tunnel 28" ,about the wall of Berlin) ,potboilers , but not uninteresting ("der Schut " is a fine adventures yarn )

    The peplum (sword and sandals ) genre was a bit obsolete in the late sixties,whereas it was a dominant one earlier ; this one has an international cast ,with big names,which was not often the case in early Italian peplums ;no muscle man but a bevy of famous stars even Orson Welles-who really seemed to consider Siodmak's film a potboiler and quickly quit the screen after two scenes (the first one ending with a nonchalant "let's pray".)

    Forget history and you almost have a pilot for an imaginary miniseries (although there's a second episode , there are so many subplots you can't count them all ); the Honor Blackman/Bergmanian Harriet Anderson feud, the Roman girl in love with a Goth count , their king forced to marry a princess and to -reluctantly- renege on his peasant wife (in the meantime ,their beloved son has been taken hostage )...history is only a vague background ,very storylike .

    Siodmak nevertheless showed he had not lost his flair for film noir : Blackman's deadly bath is worthy of his scary movies ; the film abruptly ends ,to make the audience come back and see the second installment .

    Of course it does not compare favorably with most of the director's works, but it's entertaining stuff and ,athough not the epitaph the director deserved, you can save it (them,do not forget the second episode) for a rainy day.
    6Bunuel1976

    THE LAST ROMAN (Robert Siodmak, 1968-9) **1/2

    In view of its imposing credentials, I had been looking forward to watching this one for some time; though I only managed to catch the condensed version of the two-part epic - shown on Italian TV as part of an Orson Welles marathon on Easter Sunday - it's still a worthwhile and enjoyable film of its type: choppily edited and disjointed in narrative, to be sure, but hardly incoherent. Incidentally, Welles participated in two other butchered spectacles around this time - THE BATTLE OF NERETVA (1969) and WATERLOO (1970); thanks to his larger-than-life persona, the heavy-set thespian was a regular feature of historical epics during the genre's heyday.

    THE LAST ROMAN proved to be celebrated director Siodmak's final film: perhaps not the ideal swan-song for him as, apart from Honor Blackman's nasty bath-tub murder, there's little evidence of (or opportunity for) his trademark stylistics. In fact, I'd say that the film bears more the imprint of its producer Arthur Brauner - an expert in exotic exploitation (witness the very discreet, but entirely gratuitous, use of nudity) who had also been the force behind Fritz Lang's last films and would soon collaborate on a number of Jess Franco pictures. Nevertheless, this particular effort abounds in battle sequences that are moderately well-staged - and the plot is so replete with double-crosses, murders and switched allegiances that the viewer's full attention is required throughout; another typical asset of such films is the score and Riz Ortolani provides a serviceable one here.

    Apart from the aforementioned Orson Welles and Honor Blackman, the cast is an eccentric mix of international and "Euro-Cult" stars - Laurence Harvey, Sylva Koscina, Michael Dunn, Harriet Andersson, Robert Hoffmann, Ingrid Boulting, Ewa Stroemberg, Lang Jeffries and Friedrich Ledebur; though mostly working below-par, none are especially demeaned by their role in the film (excepting Harvey's embarrassing hairstyle).

    In the end, I'd love to check out the full-length version of STRUGGLE FOR ROME (as the original title of this German/Italian/Romanian co-production translates to) someday - but the possibility seems very remote at this stage...
    10tamikoestomo

    The story itself is one of the best I've ever read!

    I've read "Ein Kampf Um Rom"/ "A Struggle for Rome' and it Dutch version "Een Strijd Om Rome" (three books) ever since I was 9 years old (!!) and the story itself is absolutely wonderful. Definitely, more people need to read it. I DO wish someone would translate it in English --and, better yet, make a complete unabridged movie out of it. [ I myself am a translator, and would love to translate the book! :-)]. "A Struggle for Rome" introduces us to a great number of very interesting characters: Witichis the honest and brave king; Totila, whom everyone loved; Teja the somber warrior; Mataswintha, a princess who, when disappointed in love, destroyed the man she loved; Amalaswintha, who tried to save her people but failed; Narses the genius, who was even a better general than Belisarius was; Justinianus the ambitious. My favorite character is, and always has been, Cethegus, The Last Roman. Of course! With all his good and all his bad points, Cethegus was, and is, outstanding! I do wish we had people like him in my country now! Greetings from Indonesia!

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    Storyline

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    Did you know

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    • Alternate versions
      In Italy, the two parts of "Kampf um Rom" were edited in one movie entitled "La calata dei barbari".
    • Connections
      Featured in Sous la chaleur du soleil (1994)

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    Details

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    • Release date
      • December 22, 1969 (Romania)
    • Countries of origin
      • Italy
      • West Germany
      • Romania
    • Language
      • English
    • Also known as
      • The Last Roman
    • Filming locations
      • Buftea Studios, Bucharest, Romania
    • Production companies
      • CCC Filmkunst
      • Documento Film
      • Studioul Cinematografic Bucuresti
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Tech specs

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    • Runtime
      1 hour 43 minutes
    • Sound mix
      • Mono
    • Aspect ratio
      • 2.35 : 1

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    Orson Welles, Honor Blackman, Laurence Harvey, Harriet Andersson, Robert Hoffmann, and Sylva Koscina in Le dernier des Romains (1968)
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