Are you not entertained? The XVIII best films about the Romans – ranked!

View image in fullscreenXVIII. Caesar and Cleopatra (1945)In this heavy-going British Technicolor adaptation of George Bernard Shaw’s play, Claude Rains’s oddly relaxed Julius Caesar plays father figure to Vivien Leigh’s implausibly girlish Cleopatra, schooling her in the art of power with just a hint of May to December flirtation. The two leads are just about charismatic enough to compel interest despite Shaw’s ponderous dialogue.View image in fullscreenXVII. A Funny Thing Happened on the Way to the Forum (1966)Stephen Sondheim’s hit Broadway show based on the comedies of Plautus gets a big-screen transfer boasting the talents of Zero Mostel, Phil Silvers, Michael Hordern, the young Michael Crawford – and Buster Keaton in his last film. It should be a riot, but it misfires: director Richard Lester drives the farce so hard it’s almost impossible to follow and inexplicably uses just five of Sondheim’s songs.View image in fullscreenXVI. The Fall of the Roman Empire (1964)This lugubrious box-office bomb, which killed off the Roman epic for decades, charts the transition from poisoned philosopher emperor Marcus Aurelius – Alec Guinness, phoning in the gravitas – to wayward son Commodus. Marches, processions and battles win out over narrative coherence, Sophia Loren and Stephen Boyd bring glamour without chemistry, while Christopher Plummer’s startling performance as the increasingly deranged Commodus gets lost in the mix.View image in fullscreenXV. Asterix & Obelix: Mission Cleopatra (2002)The best of the five Asterix & Obelix live-action films (OK, not a high bar) sees the two moustachioed Gauls (played by Christian Clavier and Gérard Depardieu) help architect Edifis (Jamel Debbouze) build a palace for Cleopatra (Monica Bellucci). It’s amusing enough, but would doubtless be funnier if you can understand the wordplay in the original French. The only film here with a bespoke Snoop Dogg track over the end credits.View image in fullscreenXIV. Sebastiane (1976)Derek Jarman’s first feature (co-directed with Paul Humfress) follows Sebastian, former favourite of the emperor Diocletian and a devout Christian, on his exile to a military outpost seething with sexual tensions. A low-budget landmark of queer cinema, it also wins laurels for authenticity, being scripted entirely in Latin (the title is in the vocative case, in case you were wondering).View image in fullscreenXIII. The Eagle (2011)Roman officer Marcus (Channing Tatum) and British slave Esca (Jamie Bell) head north of Hadrian’s Wall to find the golden standard that was lost when Marcus’s father’s legion went missing 20 years earlier. All that stands in their way is a formidable tribe of Gaelic-speaking, blue-faced “Seal People”. Kevin Macdonald directs this somewhat predictable Romano-British western with a sure touch.XII. Carry On Cleo (1964)View image in fullscreenEveryone knows the “Infamy! Infamy!” line, but there’s a deeper reason why this outing of the Carry On franchise – filmed on sets originally made for Cleopatra – is probably the most fondly remembered: the cast, led by Kenneth Williams as a hapless, henpecked Caesar, are all fizzing at the top of their game, making it churlish to quibble about the uneven gag quality and a plot as flimsy as Amanda Barrie’s costumes.View image in fullscreenXI. Julius Caesar (1953)Roman and biblical films took off in the 1950s as colour spectaculars with huge sets, but this black-and-white Shakespeare adaptation from MGM keeps it relatively simple, majoring on its superb cast: a red-hot Marlon Brando as Mark Antony, James Mason on strong form as Brutus, and a particularly lean and hungry John Gielgud as Cassius. Joseph L Mankiewicz directs, a decade before he took on Cleopatra.View image in fullscreenX. Fellini Satyricon (1969)Federico Fellini’s loose interpretation of Petronius’s Satyricon – a picaresque novel that survives only in fragments – is disjointed and bewildering, a visually astounding fever dream of ancient Rome. A film more to be admired than enjoyed, it reaches back across two millennia to present lurid, arresting snapshots of a strange pagan culture.IX. Cleopatra (1934)Claudette Colbert is kittenish and steely in Cecil B DeMille’s brisk run-through of the Cleopatra legend, from arrival by carpet to death by asp. Released just after Hollywood self-censorship came into force, the film still has a pre-Hays Code feel to it: the skimpy outfits, the on-barge party that breaks out after Cleopatra’s seduction of Mark Antony, and the sense that no one is taking it that seriously.View image in fullscreenVIII. Monty Python’s Life of Brian (1979)Among its many virtues, Life of Brian is a splendid parody of a Roman epic, from Terry Gilliam’s bombastic opening titles to the unheroic chorus of “I’m Brian!” spoofing Spartacus. And you don’t have to have studied Latin to enjoy the names – “He has a wife, you know … she’s called Incontinentia, Incontinentia Buttocks” – or the “Romanes eunt domus” grammar lesson.View image in fullscreenVII. The Sign of the Cross (1932)Claudette Colbert bathing in donkey milk, an attempted lesbian seduction dance, a gorilla approaching a semi-naked woman tied to a post … it’s all there in Cecil B DeMille’s scandalous pre-Code romp about the crackdown ordered by Nero (the wonderful Charles Laughton) after the fire of Rome. Marcus Superbus (Fredric March) should be rounding up Christians but falls for one of them instead.View image in fullscreenVI. Quo Vadis (1951)Launching the postwar boom in Roman epics, director Mervyn LeRoy serves up a full-colour, cast-of-thousands spectacle made at Cinecittà studios. The plot is similar to The Sign of the Cross: Robert Taylor’s army officer is wooing Deborah Kerr’s clandestine Christian, while Nero (Peter Ustinov) warbles and dreams of burning Rome. There is memorable support from Patricia Laffan, exuding lizard-eyed menace as Nero’s wife Poppaea, and Leo Genn as the world-weary Petronius.View image in fullscreenV. Caligula: the Ultimate Cut (2023)Decried as a “moral holocaust” on its original release in 1979, Caligula emerges as a compelling portrait of unfettered power in this revelatory new cut, endorsed by star Malcolm McDowell. Stripped of the porn spliced in by producer Bob Guccione, but still bursting with nudity, depravity and gruesome violence, it now makes far more sense and allows extra screen time for Helen Mirren as the emperor’s wife, Caesonia. McDowell gives an electrifying performance to complete an unholy trinity with his roles in If … and A Clockwork Orange, while Peter O’Toole is convincingly repellent as the degenerate Tiberius. Influenced by Fellini Satyricon – designer Danilo Donati worked on both films – this disturbing film dares to show aspects of ancient Rome untouched by the classic-era epics.View image in fullscreenIV. Cleopatra (1963)Monumentally expensive and beset with production problems, this four-hour marathon became a symbol of epic bloat while entering legend for bringing Elizabeth Taylor and Richard Burton together. But viewed today with the benefit of a pause button, it’s a superbly enjoyable spectacle with intelligent dialogue that has plenty to say about the 18 momentous years of ancient history it covers. Rex Harrison’s thoughtful portrayal of Julius Caesar dominates the first half, while the second traces the sad descent of Mark Antony (Burton) into self-destructive passion and self-pity as he loses his power struggle with Octavian (Roddy McDowall). As Cleopatra, Taylor radiates megawatt star power throughout, right to the stunning final shot of her dead body laid out in gold.View image in fullscreenIII. Ben-Hur (1959)The colossus that marked the apogee of epic – shot in widescreen and unfolding over three and a half hours – and won a record 11 Oscars (since matched but not beaten). To modern eyes, the overlap with the story of Jesus gets in the way of what should be the film’s essential storyline: the broken friendship and subsequent animosity between the Jewish patriot Judah Ben-Hur (Charlton Heston) and ruthlessly ambitious Roman commander Messala (Stephen Boyd), which comes to a head in the still-stunning chariot race. Haya Harareet as Judah’s beloved Esther and Jack Hawkins as the consul Arrius (“Battle speed … attack speed … ramming speed!”) offer terrific support. The gargantuan scale is really the point of it all – sit back and enjoy those grand sets and the ravishing Miklós Rózsa score.View image in fullscreenII. Gladiator (2000)Taking the basic scenario of The Fall of the Roman Empire and adding ingredients from other classics (the great man reduced to slavery of Ben-Hur; the fight school sequences of Spartacus; the arena scenes from Quo Vadis), director Ridley Scott resuscitated the long-dead Roman epic with this powerfully straightforward tale of betrayal and revenge. Russell Crowe is career-definingly immense as Maximus, fighting his way towards Joaquin Phoenix’s deliciously creepy Emperor Commodus. An excellent supporting cast – including Oliver Reed, who died during the shoot – adds to the film’s lustre. It may not have had much new to say about the grandeur that was Rome, but were we not entertained?View image in fullscreenI. Spartacus (1960)After failing to land the lead in Ben-Hur, Kirk Douglas became the star producer of his own Roman epic, hiring the young Stanley Kubrick to direct. It’s not quite a masterpiece: Douglas is a little one-note as the eponymous leader of a slave revolt that is both underexplained and sentimentalised. But unlike many epics, the film proceeds with a sense of purpose, is packed with memorable scenes, and deserves credit for breaking free of the Christian sermonising that had marked Roman films of the 1950s. Nor does the thinly veiled modern political subtext in Dalton Trumbo’s script detract from this earnest portrait of a significant episode in Roman history. Laurence Olivier is magnificent as the brutal, haunted Crassus and Charles Laughton even better as his wily senatorial rival, Gracchus; Peter Ustinov picked up an Oscar for his turn as the slippery slave master, Batiatus.

Films in English from Friday, October 18 across Mallorca

These are the films showing in English at the movie theatres across Mallorca for Friday, October 18 to Thursday, October 24. The new films this week are: The Room Next Door, a 2024 Spanish drama film written and directed by Pedro Almodóvar in his English-language full-length debut, based on the novel What Are You Going Through by Sigrid Nunez. Tilda Swinton and Julianne Moore star, with John Turturro and Alessandro Nivola in supporting roles. Also Smile 2, sequel to the hit horror film Smile, which follows a music star (Naomi Scott) whose glamorous world is about to be dragged into hell. Still showing this week is the satirical body horror film The Substance starring Demi Moore and Dennis Quaid, the animated film The Wild Robot and the docudrama The Apprentice about Donald Trump. Continuing for another week is Joker: Folie à Deux starring Joaquin Phoenix and Lady Gaga.
For updates or to purchase tickets on line click here: Ocimax Aficine, Augusta Aficine, Cinesa Festival Park, Ocine Premium Porto Pi, Artesiete Fan and CineCiutat.

The Room Next Door (2024)
Starring Julianne Moore, Tilda Swinton and John Turturro. Director Pedro Almodóvar. Plot Ingrid and Martha were close friends in their youth, when they worked together at the same magazine. After years of being out of touch, they meet again in an extreme but strangely sweet situation. Rated PG-13. 1h 47m.

Showtimes at Augusta Aficine in Palma: 4.50pm, 7pm & 9.10pm (Wed, Thu, Fri, Sat & Sun)
Showtimes at Ocine Premium in Porto Pi: 8.20pm & 10.30pm (daily)
Showtimes at Artesiete in Fan Shopping Centre: 5pm (Tue)
Showtimes at CineCiutat in Palma: 5pm (Thu), 5.05pm (Sat, Sun, Mon, Tue & Wed), 6.10pm (Fri), 7.10pm (Sat, Mon, Tue & Wed), 7.15pm (Sun & Thu), 8.15pm (Fri), 8.40pm (Sat), 9.15pm (Mon, Tue & Wed)

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Smile 2 (2024)
Starring Naomi Scott, Kyle Gallnerand Drew Barrymore. Director Parker Finn. Plot About to embark on a world tour, global pop sensation Skye Riley begins experiencing increasingly terrifying and inexplicable events. Overwhelmed by the escalating horrors and the pressures of fame, Skye is forced to face her past. Rated R. 2h 7m.

Showtimes at Ocine Premium in Porto Pi: 4pm (Thu), 4.30pm (daily except Thu)

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The Substance (2024)
Starring Demi Moore, Dennis Quaid and Margaret Qualley. Director Todd Phillips. Plot A fading celebrity takes a black-market drug: a cell-replicating substance that temporarily creates a younger, better version of herself. Rated R. 2h 21 m.

Showtimes at Augusta Aficine in Palma: 5pm & 7.45pm (Wed, Thu, Fri, Sat & Sun)
Showtimes at CineCiutat in Palma: 11.15am (Sat & Tue: has Catalan subtitles), 5.10pm (Mon & Wed), 6.55pm (Sun), 7.30pm (Thu), 7.45pm (Fri), 8.55pm (Tue), 9.40pm (Sat)

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The Wild Robot (2024)
Starring Lupita Nyong’o, Pedro Pascal and Kit Connor. Director Chris Sanders. Plot After a shipwreck, an intelligent robot called Roz is stranded on an uninhabited island. To survive the harsh environment, Roz bonds with the island’s animals and cares for an orphaned baby goose. Rated PG. 1h 42m.

Showtimes at Ocimax Aficine in Palma: 12.15pm (Sat & Sun), 4pm (daily)
Showtimes at Ocine Premium in Porto Pi: 7pm (daily)

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The Apprentice (2024)
Starring Sebastian Stan, Jeremy Strong and Maria Bakalova. Director Ali Abbasi. Plot The story of how a young Donald Trump started his real-estate business in 1970s and ‘80s New York with the helping hand of infamous lawyer Roy Cohn. Rated 16. 2h.

Showtimes at CineCiutat in Palma: 5.10pm (Thu), 7pm (Sun), 7.50pm (Mon & Wed), 8.10pm (Fri), 9.20pm (Sat, Mon & Wed), 10pm (Tue)

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Joker: Folie à Deux (2024)
Starring Zazie Beetz, Joaquin Phoenix and Lady Gaga. Director Todd Phillips. Plot Failed comedian Arthur Fleck meets the love of his life, Harley Quinn, while in Arkham State Hospital. Upon release, the pair embark on a doomed romantic misadventure. Rated R. 2h18 m.

Showtimes at Augusta Aficine in Palma: 5.15pm (Wed, Thu, Fri, Sat & Sun)

* Showtimes at Cinesa Festival Park have yet to be released. Watch this space for updates.
12 hours of Horror films

Ocimax Palma Aficine brings back the 12 hours of Horror to celebrate Halloween on October 31. Six horror films, including IT (2017), A Nightmare on Elm Street (1984), REC, The Conjuring, Evil Dead (2023), and a SURPRISE! Films will be in Spanish. Starts at 8pm. Anticipated ticket 25 euros. Click here.

Desperate Mattel is chucking a View-Master movie at theaters

Look, we’re just going to go ahead and blame Greta Gerwig for this one.
After all, the Barbie director taught the fine folks at toy company Mattel that there was clearly a billion-plus dollar box office demand for its various chunks of consumer-grade plastic. And all it took to extract said cash from an eager movie-going public was a genuinely funny script with a gently satirical point of view written by two highly decorated screenwriters, a host of incredibly talented performers, several extremely elaborate musical numbers, a decent percentage of the world’s supply of bright pink paint, and a brand so instantly recognizable that pretty much every person on the planet had been exposed to it before the film came out. Why shouldn’t a View-Master movie do just as well?

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This is per Variety, reporting that Mattel has now entered into agreements with Sony and Escape Artists for a film built around the 3D picture-viewing toys, which were first introduced to the market in 1939. No actual human creatives have been attached yet, of course, but the press statement did announce that the movie will be a “four-quadrant family adventure,” so, good news on that front, four-quad fams!

And, look: We can express some serious skepticism about how much thought went into all this—Mattel is also developing movies based around American Girl, Barney, Rock ‘Em Sock ‘Em Robots, and fucking Uno, so it’s hard not to hold a mote of cynicism about their current, uh, “efforts”—but there’s nothing that automatically guarantees a View-Master movie would have to be bad. That was one of the big takeaways from Barbie, after all: Even IP-based films are ultimately efforts of human artistry, and they soar or sink based on how much care and thought goes into them. Hell, it’s possible a View-Master movie would look cool as hell—a film that tried to match the Stereoscopic diorama look of the old-school discs would be genuinely fascinating. It’s also possible it’ll be total garbage, rushed into theaters as part of a desperate effort to tickle some cash out of the nostalgia brains of aging millennials. Either way, we’re blaming Gerwig.

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Arabic Movies and Series ‘Breaking From Tradition, Exploring Fresh, Often Edgier Themes,’ Report Finds

Family secrets, misadventures, hidden pasts and personal growth were the fastest-growing themes and topics in Arabic movies and series this year, according to an AI-powered report released ahead of TV market Mipcom by Rise Studios, which is based in Dubai.
The popularity of these themes and topics reflects the Middle East and North Africa region’s “evolving societal dynamics where traditional values are often challenged by modern realities,” Rise Studios said in a statement.

On Monday, Amanda Turnbull, CEO and founder of Rise Studios, will be a panelist at Mipcom in a session about drama series that travel across borders. Turnbull was formerly managing director for Middle East, Africa and Turkey at Warner Bros. Discovery.

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The report, titled “Exploring Emerging Themes and Topics in MENA’s Streaming Landscape,” looks at the trends shaping contemporary content across 12 streaming platforms in the Arabic region, and examines how these have evolved over the past 12 months.

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The report reveals that the historically dominant themes in Arabic scripted content, including secrets, betrayal, relationships and mystery have plateaued or declined, making way for “more complex and resonant narratives,” Rise Studios said.

Content reflecting hidden pasts saw the largest growth year-on-year (73%), followed by family secrets (68%), misadventures (68%), and personal growth (67%).

Examples of shows that deal with hidden pasts, family secrets and misadventures include Egyptian thriller “All But Divorced,” one of Rise Studios’ shows. It centers on Yara, a chemistry teacher, who suspects her freelance writer husband of cheating. Discovering the truth puts their lives in danger.

Themes of personal growth, twists and hidden truths can be seen in the movie “From the Ashes,” a Saudi drama-thriller inspired by a real-life tragedy about the chaos and emotional turmoil that unfolds when a fire breaks out in an all-girls’ school. It was released as a Netflix Original in January.

Saudi Arabia is emerging as a powerhouse for production in the region. Recent movies explore themes such as friendship, culture clash, survival and suspense against the backdrop of social and cultural tensions of modern Saudi youth, such as Netflix’s “Naga.” In the film, a young woman is stranded in the desert after a secret party. She must get past a vindictive camel — and worse — to make it home before curfew.

Turnbull commented: “The stalling of previously popular themes can partly be attributed to the law of diminishing returns. However, a more compelling factor is the surge in investment over the past three years, alongside the influx of young, up-and-coming creatives across the MENA region.

“These new voices are eager to break from tradition, exploring fresh, often edgier themes that resonate with younger audiences, allowing viewers to engage with stories that mirror their own experiences of cultural shifts, identity and transformation.”

The research was conducted in partnership with Vynd – a company that provides AI enhanced intelligence for the entertainment industry.

Commenting on the report, Maarten Kranendonk, Vynd co-founder and CEO, said: “With the rapid advances in technologies such as AI and large language models, we can dive deeper into the core of the content and draw out valuable data and insight. This supports companies like Rise Studios – who rely on data to give audiences what they want – to shape the future of content in the region.”

UF Health scientists receive major grant to combat antibiotic-resistant bacteria

University of Florida Health scientists exploring how combinations of antibiotics can fight resistant bacteria have been awarded an $11.8 million grant for work that could help save the tens of thousands of lives lost yearly to infections that are increasingly plaguing humanity.

The National Institutes of Health, or NIH, grant to the UF College of Medicine and the UF College of Pharmacy will support scientists working to uncover the mechanics of how bacteria and antibiotics interact, down to the molecular level.

That mechanistic knowledge has become crucial as bacteria become ever-more resistant to antibiotics. Few pharmaceutical companies are developing new antibiotics, leaving scientists to find novel methods to make older drugs more effective when used in combination.

Accordingly, the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases, under the NIH, solicited competitive proposals in a “call to arms” to address the crisis, UF Health researchers said.

It’s very clear on these serious infections with antibiotic-resistant bacteria that monotherapy cannot work. Using one antibiotic at a time, you cannot win. You must tag-team with more than one drug to have any chance against serious infections.”

Jürgen Bulitta, Ph.D., co-principal investigator on the project at the UF Research and Academic Center at Lake Nona, Orlando

The hope is to “dial in” these antibiotics using newfound insight from the laboratory. It’s like understanding an enemy’s weaknesses to form a battle plan that takes advantage of those chinks in the armor. What receptors on bacteria are best targeted by antibiotics? What precise dosages in a drug cocktail will kill a bacterial population without resistant stragglers surviving to multiply?

Bulitta and UF Health researcher and co-principal investigator George L. Drusano, M.D., a professor and director of the UF College of Medicine’s Institute of Therapeutic Innovation, will examine two of the deadliest resistant bacteria, Acinetobacter baumannii and Klebsiella pneumoniae.

The bacteria, sometimes called “superbugs,” are often found in hospitals, usually infecting patients with weakened immune systems. They are adept at finding genetic adaptations to elude the drugs hunting them.

Airtel Business & Vonage partner to launch cutting-edge business communications application

Kolkata: Airtel Business, the B2B arm of Bharti Airtel, and Vonage, a global leader in cloud communication, have partnered to launch Airtel IQ Business Connect, a device-agnostic, unified business communications application that will help enterprises in India to simplify their customer engagement.Airtel IQ Business Connect is a customised multi-channel unified communications application that will enable businesses to enrich their customer experiences by maintaining consistent, long-lasting customer engagement while also overcoming challenges of data loss that can arise during employee transitions or attrition, according to a media statement here on Thursday.With the new application, new employees will be equipped to seamlessly maintain continuity in customer communications across a range of devices including mobile phones, tablets and laptops, through a single interface, ensuring strong customer loyalty and stickiness. Enterprises can effortlessly adopt the application without the need for any additional hardware investments.Abhishek Biswal, Chief Business Officer – Digital Products & Services, Airtel Business, said, “We are delighted to partner with Vonage and launch ‘Airtel IQ Business Connect’ – a next-gen technology application. Businesses today are looking for a compliance-adhering, unified communications application to ensure smooth customer communications. Airtel IQ Business Connect will fill this gap by offering enterprises a device-agnostic, real-time monitoring application that can host multiple channels to drive improved business communication and productivity.”Reggie Scales, Head of Applications at Vonage, commented, “We are excited to announce our strategic partnership with Airtel Business to power new unified communications capabilities for enterprises in India, a key strategic growth market for Vonage. In today’s dynamic business environment, effective communication and collaboration are essential. With the power of Vonage’s Unified Communications as a Service capabilities, coupled with Airtel’s secure and reliable network, businesses in India will be able to enjoy a multi-channel approach to communications that combines voice and messaging, enabling consumers to connect and collaborate with brands from anywhere and across any channel.”Airtel IQ Business Connect, powered by Vonage, is a part of Airtel Business’s cloud communications offering – Airtel IQ. The application will enable enterprises in India to empower all their employees, including their hybrid workforce, as well as personnel such as relationship managers, field force and others, to seamlessly communicate with their stakeholders 24X7, thereby enabling enhanced customer engagement.