"Ancient Rome: The Rise and Fall of an Empire" Nero (TV Episode 2006) Poster

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7/10
Good for Crazy, Bad for Drama
ArchStanton18625 April 2011
This episode starts with a bang, obviously intentionally. It's a lowlife part of Rome with a bunch of people walking around and a street corner musician making fun of the emperor. Then one of the men pulls his hood off and it's Nero himself (identified by text), in a really cheap looking wig. For shock value it works quite well. The only problem is that it never shows up again later. Why was he out trolling around the city in that getup? Why did he start a fight? Why was he laughing maniacally while getting beat up? These are all questions that you should be asking yourself after seeing this clip, and they'll never be answered. Unless you consider 'he's nuts' to be an answer. Essentially the most interesting scene in the movie comes in the beginning and it's never explained or alluded to later.

This episode follows the whole 'Nero was nuts' theory. It's been done to death and it would be nice to see them give a different take on the man, but as it goes it is a fun story. It is also the perfect opportunity for an actor to ham it up. They got Martin Sheen for Nero, probably the best actor in this and just before his career really took off. If you're looking for a subtle and restrained performance, then this isn't your day. But be honest, who'd want to see a subtle and restrained Nero? The man embodied excess in all its forms. And Sheen goes for it putting all his crazy on display. That said, this does take a more nuanced view of Nero than a lot of other fictional takes. Nero is vindicated of the accusations of fiddling while Rome burned. He's shown to be desperate to help and willing to use his own houses to help. In fact, that's the beginning of his madness. He goes so overboard trying to rebuild Rome that he convinces himself he's a god.

This episode would seem to be the signature one of the series. They put more obvious money into it than the others with a few nice vistas of Nero's building projects and an entirely pointless gladiatorial bout. I'm not kidding when I say it's pointless. It's a dialogue scene and anything that they had to say there could have been said in a room somewhere without it making a damn bit of difference. It is a fun episode, though again it suffers from the cheesy and oversimplified situations of the last one. Subtlety is not the strength of this show. Nero would seem to fit perfectly. There are a few pacing issues, and the supporting characters aren't great (again to insert my historical prejudice, I hate Seneca. The guy was even more of a hypocrite than most philosophers, yet he comes off as a wise old man. Probably won't bother anyone else) except for Tigellinus. I like how they make the man seem almost noble as he goes around killing people for their money. After all, he is loyal to his emperor until even he can see that the man is utterly off his nut. So overall, an OK episode. It would have been far less interesting if it wasn't for Michael Sheen's manic performance, and frankly it could have used a bit more of that.
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9/10
Realistic, almost a documentary, and so sad.
nzpedals21 October 2015
In the common view, all we know of Nero is that he fiddled while Rome burned. This stunning episode in the series tells a different story, that it was Nero that rebuilt Rome after a horrendous fire.

There is a voice-over that fills in some of the details, but we can follow what is happening as Michael Sheen portrays Nero, at first in full control and so imaginative and far-seeing. Then later, the descent into "madder than a meat-axe". James Wilby is Tigellinus, the chief of security, and does a fine job.

Catherine McCormack is the unfortunate wife, Poppaea. Wonderfully costumed and groomed and almost unrecognisable.

The story is told clearly as the rebuilding bankrupts the Emperor and he goes to extraordinary lengths to get more money and so upsets the Senators that they eventually decide to change their Emperor. There are gruesome events.

Superbly produced, directed and acted, so it's almost a 10.
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7
georgioskarpouzas29 April 2007
Emperor Nero is one of the Roman emperors with a "mad" reputation not the only one with such a reputation in Julio-Claudian line. This episode which decides to begin the series with his life-story instead of linear sequence of events, is interesting and in the beginning paints a sympathetic picture of the Emperor which starts darkening mainly after he bloodily wreaks vengeance to a group of wealthy senators who attempted to overthrow and assassinate him. Then the Emperor becomes a caricature something between a super-gangster and a sexual pervert. Difficult to believe that such men existed but having in mind movies made about modern equivalents such as Idi Amin for example one may believe that such things happened- after all the series is based on ancient sources -I imagine Souetonius in the present case.I am an agnostic as far as the possibility for us moderns to recreate the Roman past based on ancient sources and I have stated my belief in a message in the I Claudius debating space. People that accuse the series for inaccuracy about the lives of personalities dead two thousand years ago are overestimating their knowledge since facts can not be established about periods much closer to our own.I found the combination of documentary narration and fiction very attractive and could not overlook the hint about the deviousness of the senators which is a recurrent theme in the series.
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portrait of loneliness
Kirpianuscus5 August 2020
The first virtue of the episode is the fine balance. Nero of Michael Sheen is different by the ordinary portrait from novels, schoolbooks, movies. The second is the admirable construction of story. A story of deep loneliness more than a madness one. Its origin - the encouragement word of Seneca, the small critic of Popea , the fear and the refuge in own world. Portrait of a fall and precise image of power. Short, just a lovely surprise. Because, more than the realistic and precise image of a Roman emperor, it is the inspired definition of the crisis, more than financial one, growing up in the womb of Rome.
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