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Rome (TV series)

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Rome
File:Rome title.png
Rome title design.
Created byJohn Milius
William J. MacDonald
and Bruno Heller
StarringKevin McKidd
Ray Stevenson
Polly Walker
Kenneth Cranham
Max Pirkis
Indira Varma
Kerry Condon
Lindsay Duncan
James Purefoy
and Ciarán Hinds
Country of originUSA / UK
No. of episodes12
Production
Running time0:50 min
Original release
NetworkHBO / BBC
ReleaseAugust 28, 2005 –
present

Rome is a critically acclaimed historical drama, produced for television by HBO and the BBC. The show's first season originally aired on HBO between August 28th and November 20th, 2005, and subsequently broadcast on BBC Two in the UK between November 2nd, 2005 and January 4th, 2006.

For the status of Rome on other networks see Broadcasting.

HBO has announced plans to produce a second season for release in early 2007. [1]

Series overview

Template:Spoiler

The series is a historical drama depicting the period of history surrounding the violent transformation of the Roman Republic into the Roman Empire; a change driven by the class struggle between Patrician and Plebeian (in Latin the patricii and the plebeii), the decay of political institutions, and the actions of ambitious men.

While showing the lives of the rich, powerful, and "historically significant", the show's perspective is centered around the lives, fortunes, families, and acquaintances of two Roman soldiers: Lucius Vorenus and Titus Pullo, the only two "regular soldiers" mentioned in Caesar's Commentarii de Bello Gallico.

The first season depicts Caesar's civil war and Julius Caesar's rise to absolute dictatorship over Rome, and his subsequent fall, between the end of his Gallic Wars (52 BC or 701 ab urbe condita) and his assassination on March 15, 44 BC (the infamous Ides of March). Against the backdrop of these cataclysmic events, we are also shown the young Octavian, growing up as the young man who is destined to become the first Emperor of Rome: Caesar Augustus.

While unsubstantiated by an official press release, Bruno Heller remarked in an interview that he would prefer the second season to concern the power struggle between Octavian and Mark Antony following Caesar's assassination. [2]

Series history

Ray Stevenson as Titus Pullo (left) and Kevin McKidd as Lucius Vorenus (right), seen in the episode "Pharsalus".

Production

In 2002, HBO and the BBC agreed to co-produce a new series based on the events of the "Roman Revolution": Rome. Towards that end, the two networks committed a $100 million USD budget to the production of twelve 1-hour episodes, with HBO contributing $85 million USD, and the BBC contributing an additional $15 million USD. [3]

Between March 2004 and May 2005, Rome was filmed in the Italian countryside, on six sound stages at Rome's legendary Cinecitta Studios, and in a collection of massive sets in Cinecitta Studios' back lots: 5 acres of outdoor sets which comprised an elaborate "period reconstruction" of sections of ancient Rome. It was a massive undertaking, with an international crew of 350, and more than 50 local Italian interns.

First season

The series was launched in the United States on August 24, 2005, at Wadsworth Theater in Hollywood. HBO broadcast the series pilot ("The Stolen Eagle") four days later on August 28. The first episode attracted more than 8.9 million viewers over eleven broadcasts, and achieved a 9.1 household rating for Sunday primetime (See: Nielsen Ratings). BBC Two premiered Rome in the United Kingdom on November 2, 2005, attracting 6.6 million viewers (27%). The season has also gone into international syndication, being broadcast in many countries around the globe, in several languages (see Broadcasting).

The series' first season also garnered critical acclaim, with Golden Globe nominations for Best Series and Best Performance by an Actress in a Television Series – Drama for Polly Walker's portrayal of Atia of the Julii. Fans of the series have praised it for well written episodes, strong cast, and interesting characters. Rome is also noted for a more historically accurate portrayal of Roman society, as opposed to traditional Hollywood depictions like those found in such movies as Ridley Scott's Gladiator.

Second season

On September 13 2005, after the broadcast of only three episodes, HBO announced plans to produce a second season of Rome in 2006 for release in March 2007 [4]. Bruno Heller, one of the series creators, has also alluded to the possibility of a third season based solely on the span of history that he would like to portray in the series[5]. However, comments by HBO chairman, Chris Albrecht, raised possible doubts about the return of the series [6], due to the series' high production costs, and concerns that an 18-month delay between seasons may cause Rome's current audience to lose interest.

Since then there has been evidence in the press indicating that the rumors of a second season cancellation may not be true. Tvguide.com's weekly columunst Michael Ausiello (in his December 14 2005 column) has stated: "you'll be pleased to hear that rumors that HBO was thinking of rescinding the show's Season 2 order are apparently not true. I hear the new season is moving full steam ahead." [7] Additionally, actor Ray Stevenson (Titus Pullo) has made comments in an interview [8] that he has been signed to a five year contract for the project.

After the final episode that went out on BBC Two on January 4 2006, the continuity announcer stated that Rome would return for a new series "next year".

Production credits

Name (alphabetically) Role Credits for Rome Other Known Work
Apted, Michael Director The Stolen Eagle
How Titus Pullo Brought Down the Republic
An Owl in a Thornbush
Coal Miner's Daughter
Gorky Park
The World Is Not Enough
Bennett, Joseph Set designer N/A N/A
Coulter, Allen Director The Ram Has Touched the Wall The Sopranos
Cunningham, Alexandra Writer Utica Desperate Housewives
Doelger, Frank Executive producer None N/A
Dyer, Jim Executive producer None N/A
Farino, Julian Director Stealing from Saturn Entourage
Ferry, April Costume designer N/A N/A
Frankel, David Writer Pharsalus Sex and the City
Heller, Bruno Series Creator
Writer
Executive producer
The Stolen Eagle
How Titus Pullo Brought Down the Republic
An Owl in a Thornbush
Stealing from Saturn
The Ram Has Touched the Wall
Egeria (Writer with John Milius)
The Spoils
Kalends of February
The Huntress
Hodges, Adrian Writer Triumph Lorna Doone
Kelly, Eugene Executive producer None N/A
MacDonald, William J. Series Creator
Writer
Executive producer
Caesarion Witchblade
Milius, John Series Creator
Writer
Executive producer
Egeria (Writer, with Bruno Heller)
Apocalypse Now
The Hunt for Red October
Big Wednesday
Thomopoulos, Anne Executive producer None N/A
Poul, Alan Director Egeria Six Feet Under (Executive producer)
Podeswa,Jeremy Director Utica Six Feet Under
Carnivale
Salomon, Mikael Director The Spoils Band of Brothers
Shill, Steve Director Caesarion Deadwood
The Wire
Taylor, Alan Director Triumph
Kalends of February
The Sopranos
Deadwood
Van Patten, Tim Director Pharsulus The Sopranos
Deadwood

Characters and cast

See also: minor characters of Rome, character appearances in Rome

Additional, episode specific, or very minor characters may be listed on the specific episode page.

Character Historical Figure Actor/Actress Tenure
Lucius Vorenus Lucius Vorenus As portrayed here, entirely fictionalised, but appears in historical Commentarii de Bello Gallico. Kevin McKidd Season 1+
Titus Pullo Titus Pullo As portrayed here, entirely fictionalised, but appears in historical Commentarii de Bello Gallico. Ray Stevenson Season 1+
Gaius Julius Caesar Gaius Julius Caesar Ciarán Hinds Season 1
Pompey the Great Gnaeus Pompeius Magnus Kenneth Cranham Season 1
Mark Antony Marcus Antonius James Purefoy Season 1+
Atia of the Julii Atia Balba Caesonia Polly Walker Season 1+
Servilia of the Junii Servilia Caepionis Lindsay Duncan Season 1+
Octavia of the Julii Octavia Thurina Minor Kerry Condon Season 1+
Niobe of the Voreni None (fictional - in Greek myth, Niobe is the name of Tantalus' daughter, mother of the Niobids, and mocker of Leto, Apollo's and Artemis' mother. Greek name used here spuriously to allow the inclusion of a British-Asian actor, who would otherwise have appeared out of place in 1st c BC Rome!) Indira Varma Season 1
Marcus Junius Brutus Marcus Junius Brutus Tobias Menzies Season 1+
Marcus Tullius Cicero Marcus Tullius Cicero David Bamber Season 1+
Octavian Gaius Octavius Thurinus Max Pirkis Season 1+
Quintus Valerius Pompey Uncertain: Sextus and/or Gnaeus Pompeius Rick Warden Season 1+
Cato the Younger Marcus Porcius Cato Uticencis Karl Johnson Season 1
Timon None (fictional - an attested Greek and Jewish male name) Lee Boardman Season 1+
Erastes Fulmen None (fictional - erastes is the Ancient Greek term for the dominant, penetrating, adult male in a homosexual act, fulmen is Latin for thunderbolt - both appropriate to the character) Lorcan Cranitch Season 1+
Cassius Gaius Cassius Longinus Guy Henry Season 1+
Posca None (fictional, although Posca is an attested Latin name, including a 2nd c BC praetor, and as a noun means vinegar-wine-dregs, as administered at Jesus' crucifixion) Nicholas Woodeson Season 1+
Scipio Metellus Scipio Paul Jesson Season 1

Episodes

Specials

Title Episode Director Writer Airdate(s)
Making Rome Promotional Special Unknown Unknown August 11, 2005 (HBO)

Season 1 (2005)

Title Episode Screenshot Director Writer Airdate(s)
The Stolen Eagle #1, 1-1 File:Ep01.jpg Michael Apted Bruno Heller August 28, 2005 (HBO)
November 2, 2005 (BBC)
How Titus Pullo Brought Down the Republic #2, 1-2 File:Ep02rome.jpg Michael Apted Bruno Heller September 4, 2005 (HBO)
November 2 & 9, 2005 (BBC)
An Owl in a Thornbush #3, 1-3 File:Ep03.jpg Michael Apted Bruno Heller September 11, 2005 (HBO)
November 9, 2005 (BBC)
Stealing from Saturn #4, 1-4 File:Ep04.jpg Julian Farino Bruno Heller September 18, 2005 (HBO)
November 16, 2005 (BBC)
The Ram Has Touched the Wall #5, 1-5 File:Ep05.jpg Allen Coulter Bruno Heller September 25, 2005 (HBO)
November 23, 2005 (BBC)
Egeria #6, 1-6 File:Ep06.jpg Alan Poul John Milius and Bruno Heller October 2, 2005 (HBO)
November 30, 2005 (BBC)
Pharsalus #7, 1-7 File:Ep07.jpg Tim Van Patten David Frankel October 9, 2005 (HBO)
December 7, 2005 (BBC)
Caesarion #8, 1-8 File:Ep08.jpg Steve Shill William J. MacDonald October 16, 2005 (HBO)
December 14, 2005 (BBC)
Utica #9, 1-9 File:Ep09.jpg Jeremy Podeswa Alexandra Cunningham October 30, 2005 (HBO)
December 21, 2005 (BBC)
Triumph #10, 1-10 File:Ep10.jpg Alan Taylor Adrian Hodges November 6, 2005 (HBO)
December 28, 2005 (BBC)
The Spoils #11, 1-11 †† File:Ep11.jpg Mikael Salomon Bruno Heller November 13, 2005 (HBO)
January 4, 2006†† (BBC)
Kalends of February #12, 1-12 †† File:Ep12.jpg Alan Taylor Bruno Heller November 20, 2005 (HBO)
January 4, 2006†† (BBC)

Note: Episodes #1–3 were re-edited into 2 episodes for their BBC broadcast. See The BBC editing controversy.

†† Note: Episodes #11 and 12 were shown as one feature-length (1:30) episode from 21:00 to 22:30 PM on January 4th, 2006 during its original BBC broadcast.

Season 2 (2007)

While no details have yet been released, HBO has announced plans for a second season. Principal photography shooting is scheduled to begin in 2006, and the second season is slated to air in 2007. (See Series overview and Series history).

The BBC editing controversy

Some scenes in episodes of the series have been edited for airing on the BBC in order to remove some of the stronger language which is deemed unacceptable for prime-time viewing on terrestrial British television (specifically the use of the word "cunt"). This has been criticised by many, who point to the fact that other HBO programs such as The Sopranos and Oz have been broadcast uncut on British network television. However, Rome is broadcast at an earlier time than the other two programmes and the BBC was aiming at a more general audience than Channel 4 was with The Sopranos and Oz.

In a separate move the BBC also decided to re-edit the first three episodes (all directed by Michael Apted) into two episodes. The BBC claimed that this was because the British audience were more familiar with the history of Rome than their American counterparts and so much of the backstory was unnecessary. However, Apted claims that the purpose was to boost the ratings by increasing the prominence of the scenes of sex and violence. In an interview with The Times [9], Apted said:

I'm really pissed off with the BBC for bringing down my first three episodes to two and, in doing so, taking out much of the vital politics. What also makes me very grumpy is that I was told that the cuts had been introduced by the BBC because they thought British viewers already knew the historical background. But all that's happened as far as the viewer is concerned is that it has made Rome hard to follow.

Apted also said that he only found out about the cuts by accident claiming:

I only found out by chance a couple of weeks ago when one of the actors told me.

Rome trivia

  • Rome is the first English-language series to be shot entirely in a non-English-speaking country.
  • Battle scenes in Rome depict authentic Roman infantry fighting techniques including the tightly-packed "Roman Wall" of shields, gladius thrusting techniques above and below the "shield wall", and the rotation of troops on the front lines every 30–45 seconds.
  • Prior to filming, Kevin McKidd and Ray Stevenson trained for over a month, learning authentic Roman fighting techniques from swordmaster Giorgio Antonioni.
  • Rome's five acres of outdoor "period" sets comprise the largest standing set in the world to date.
  • The series used 250 chain mail tunics (each weighing 36 pounds) — as well as 40 leather cuirasses for legionary officers.
  • Rome's armor, helmets, and other metal costume elements were handcrafted by metal designer Luca Giampaoli. He hand-made all metal costume elements for the principal actors, although "mass-produced" items (such legionary armor) was replicated by metalwork companies in India.
  • The series required over 4,000 items of wardrobe — designed by Oscar-nominated costume designer April Ferry.
  • The Stolen Eagle and How Titus Pullo Brought Down the Republic used 2,500 items of wardrobe due to the large crowd scenes.
  • Approximately 1,250 pairs of period shoes and sandals were made in Bulgaria.
  • Leatherwork for the principal actors was done on set by Augusto and Giampaolo Grassi, using the traditional techniques used by their father to create the leatherwork for such classic films as Cleopatra.
  • The series is developed by a mostly British cast and crew.
  • The actors' regional British accents were used with effect to enhance the portrayal of the social distinctions of ancient Roman society; however after initial previews, some of the stronger accents were re-dubbed and toned down for American audiences.
  • The recreation of the Forum set is about 60% of the size of the original.
  • The olive trees in the Sacred Grove of the Forum set are over 200 years old.
  • References were taken directly from the ruins of Pompeii, Herculaneum and Ostia Antica to determine the proper colors of the temples, statues, streets, as well as graffiti and street signage.
  • Authentic period fabrics — wool, linen, cotton and silk — were imported from Prato, as well as India, Tunisia and Morocco. Fabrics were purchased in a "raw" state and dyed at the production site.
  • As many as 40 horses at one time were used in a scene.
  • 750 actors and extras were used for Caesar's "Triumph" scene.
  • 55 local extras were cast as "Roman Legionaries" and sent to a two-week boot camp, living in tents, to train as Roman soldiers. "Boot Camp" included military discipline (up at 5am, bed by 9pm), marching, swordsmanship, camp building and dismantling, group training and maneuvers (day and night-time training), and bathing restricted to the local lake without soap at night. 43 of the 55 completed "Boot Camp".

Broadcasting

As of 16/01/2006

Country/Region
alphabetically
Network Starting Date
of episode debuts
Ending Date
of episode debuts
Current Status
Language(s)
Asia HBO Asia November 27, 2005 N/A First run episodes English
Chinese
Korean
Japanese
(Thai subtitles)
Belgium CANVAS October 31, 2005 January 23, 2006 Concluded English
(Dutch subtitles)
Brazil HBO October 9, 2005 December 18, 2005 Reruns English
(Portuguese subtitles)
Canada (English) The Movie Network August 28, 2005 November 20, 2005 Reruns English
Canada (French) Super Écran February 6, 2006 N/A First run episodes French
Czech Republic HBO March 3, 2006 N/A First run episodes Czech
Germany Premiere 1/2 January 15, 2006 N/A First run episodes German
English
Iceland Stöð 2 22 January, 2006 N/A First run episodes English
(Icelandic subtitles)
India HBO February 20, 2006 N/A First run episodes English
Israel Xtra HOT January 1, 2006 N/A First run episodes English
(Hebrew subtitles)
Italy RAI March 17, 2006 N/A First run episodes Italian
Poland HBO March 3,2006 N/A First run episodes Polish
Portugal RTP2 January 30, 2006 N/A First run episodes English
Romania HBO March 3, 2006 N/A First run episodes English
(Romanian subtitles)
The Netherlands SBS6 January 1, 2006 March 11, 2006 Concluded English
(Dutch subtitles)
Norway Canal Plus January 18, 2006 N/A First run episodes English
(Norwegian subtitles)
Turkey CNBC-e January 1, 2006 March 19, 2006 Concluded English
(Turkish subtitles)
Saudi Arabia America Plus January 6, 2005 N/A First run episodes English
South Africa M-Net May 7, 2006 July 30, 2006 To be debuted English
Spain Cuatro December 13, 2005 January 17, 2006 Concluded Spanish
Sweden Canal Plus January 18, 2006 N/A First run episodes English
(Swedish subtitles)
United Kingdom BBC November 2, 2005 January 4, 2006 Concluded English
United States HBO August 28, 2005 November 20, 2005 Reruns English

† Broadcast edited or censored episodes.