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Duel of the Titans

1961 [ITALIAN]

Action / Adventure / Drama / History / War

Plot summary


Uploaded by: FREEMAN

Top cast

Virna Lisi Photo
Virna Lisi as Julia
Steve Reeves Photo
Steve Reeves as Romulus
720p.BLU 1080p.BLU
998.36 MB
1280*544
English 2.0
NR
23.976 fps
1 hr 48 min
P/S ...
1.81 GB
1920*816
English 2.0
NR
23.976 fps
1 hr 48 min
P/S 1 / 4

Movie Reviews

Reviewed by mark.waltz5 / 10

A hunk o hunk of heroes.

The teaming of Steve Reeves and Gordon Scott in this historical epic about the days of Romulus and Remus is an above-average peplum film about the days of pre-ancient Rome and how the twin brothers rebelled against ruthless rulers to establish law and order and eliminate corruption. This film shows their mother taking the babies to the river, only for them to be rescued by a mother wolf, and suckled. Later after killing the wolf, a sheep farmer takes them in and that leads to their heroic deeds as they age and realize how horrible their rulers are. Plenty of romance with some very beautiful women, spectacle and action, lots of extras leads to an exciting if not perfect film.

I'm taking the story with a grain of salt past the legends that I know about Romulus and Remus, and I guess the camera couldn't fit into the wolf's den to show them being suckled. Reeves and Scott are definite eye candy, and outside of a few flirtatious scenes with a character named Julia, they really don't say all that much so they're acting is minimal outside of being directed in fight scenes. A prequel of sorts to the same year's "Duel of Champions" which was set centuries later in the days before the Roman Empire and made several mentions of Romulus and Remus. Enjoyable for its big scope and rousing score oh, it's obvious that they put a bit more money into this sword and sandal epic than most of the other output of that genre. A great sequence involving a volcano is another highlight with terrific special effects of people falling in.

Reviewed by gridoon20216 / 10

Better-than-average peplum

This is the only film encounter of musclebound screen legends Steve Reeves and Gordon Scott; they are both marvellous to look at, as are Virna Lisi and José Greci, for that matter. Reeves is rather stolid as the noble brother, but Scott shows a villainous side that I have never seen from him before. Thematically, the film has strong shades of "Spartacus"; obviously it is not as good, but it's well-produced (in addition to the climactic battle, there is a volcanic eruption) and, although it was written by 6 (!) different people, the story hangs together pretty well. **1/2 out of 4.

Reviewed by Squonkamatic7 / 10

Non-Campy Peplum From The Director Of "Django"

Pretty good historical Peplum effort here by Sergio Corbucci, the Italian exploitation director best known for his trend setting spaghetti western classic DJANGO. It's easy to dismiss Italian sword & sandal spectacles from the early 1960s: they are universally low budgeted, take shortcuts that their Americanized counterparts wouldn't dream of (BEN HUR, THE 10 COMMANDMENTS, SPARTACUS) and borrow liberally from them as well, sometimes to the point of plagiarism. Not that there is anything automatically wrong with that, artists steal good ideas from each other all the time, and there's only so much you can do with a bunch of guys running around in tunics with swords.

This one tells of the founding of Rome by the twin brothers of legend, Romulus and Remus, wonderfully personified by Steve Reeves (HERCULES, HERCULES UNCHAINED) and particularly Gordon Scott (TARZAN'S GREATEST ADVENTURE, SAMSON AND THE 7 MIRACLES) in his first Peplum outing after ditching the Tarzan loincloth. Reeves plays the noble, stoic Romulus, destined to be the first king of Rome whether he likes it or not, and Gordon Scott plays Remus as you have never seen Gordon Scott before -- Wild, erratic, envious, prone to violence, distrustful of anyone who does not blindly follow his leadership, and ultimately flawed enough to come across as very human rather than the son of a Roman god.

Legend has it that Reeves refused an offer to play a dual role as both brothers and insisted the producers bring in his friend Gordon Scott instead, and it is a testament to Reeves' humbleness as a performer that he ceded the meatier role to his friend; Reeves is great as Romulus, but Scott is excellent as Remus, and the performance opened the door for Scott to appear in several more Pepla before the fad wore itself out. This one proves that he was capable of acting in addition to throwing large boulders at people, and the brothers' final showdown is indeed the stuff of tragedy and legend.

There's actually some high powered talent behind this effort. In addition to the A list manbeef and director Corbucci, spaghetti western specialists Duccio Tessari and Sergio Leone both played a role in scripting the non-hammy, non-campy screenplay, with cinematography by Enzo Barboni of TRINITY era fame, sets by the always brilliant Carlo Simi, and a sweeping, robust musical score by Piero Piccioni that is quite fittingly epic in nature. Supporting cast stalwarts Piero Lulli, Franco Volpi, José Greci, Laura Solari, and Jacques Sernas as the scurrilous Curzio bring a breadth to the production that makes many other examples of the genre seem silly by comparison.

Here is a thinking man's Peplum, eschewing the traditional gladiator bouts and he-man physical strength displays for a tightly woven story with a convincingly realistic tone. I would rank this movie up there with Gordon Mitchell's FURY OF ACHILLIES as amongst the best that the Italians were able to muster to cash in on the fad. Both films deal with historical legends and both maintain a somewhat serious tone throughout, and you can tell with this one that the Italian filmmakers were endowed with a sense of pride in telling their own pre-history for a change instead of just another potboiler script. Even with all the chest oil there's a tone of dignity to the film that is atypical of what the Peplum genre usually has to offer.

If I were to have a genuine criticism about the film it would be in regards to the barbaric horse race through a gauntlet of fire that the producers saw fit to include during the opening movements. It doesn't look like it was very safe for man or beast, and I can only hope that they asked the horses' permission first before running them through the very real pre-CGI obstacle course of burning rubbish and trip wires just for the benefit of the cameras. You have to wonder about the Italians sometimes -- couldn't they have just had a nice harmless javelin throwing contest?

7/10

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