Spartacus: Blood and Sand

:frowning: :frowning:

That blows. Hard. Keep fighting, Andy.

duality72
diagnosed ALL 1998

That sucks. Hopefully everything works out for him.

I started watching this series on Netflix this past Friday night because my girlfriend was out of town and I was bored. I started off slow, like others in this thread have said and I couldn’t figure out why everyone said the series was so great (other than the copious amounts of nudity :D).

The series certainly grows on you, though, and fast. I found myself using every possible free moment this weekend to watch another episode. I’m on episode 8 next.

I think John Hannah steals the show as Batiatus. Very cleverly acted, he has the ability to make you love his character one moment and revile him the next. You wonder why he puts up with so much of Spartacus’ shit, then you find out. “Jupiter’s cock! When will the gods cease to bend me over and fuck me?” :smiley:

My other favorite character is Crixus. He starts off as the high school quarterback type of arrogant bully but his softer side is soon revealed. I felt really bad for him when:

He is talking to the slave girl about him possibly being sold to a ludus in Damascus. He tells her, “I’ve never been to Damascus. Do you think I’d like it there?” :frowning:

Every character has a very detailed back-story and motivations. There are simply no throwaway characters in this series, but that doesn’t stop them from killing them off. :smiley: Spartacus’ character, in comparison, actually seems to be the weakest one.

I also wish they’d take out the 300-like animations and gratuitous blood spatter. I find that to be the only weak point of the show.

A great show. I’m loving every minute of it.

What language are the two or three Gladiators speaking-- the ones that get the subtitles? I can’t place it. Sounds vaguely Germanic, but maybe Celtic? Is it supposed to be an accurate representation of what the language would have been like 2000 years ago?

I think they’re supposed to be Syrian, although I have no idea what language they’re meant to be speaking.

The closed captioning says that it’s Aramaic. Whether it really is or not I dunno.

OK. That sort of makes sense. Aramaic would have been spoken in parts of Syria (as I believe it still is today).