• Newly Released
  • Popular
  • Actors
MySite
  • Newly Released
  • Popular
  • Actors
My Favorites ❤️

Services
BrandingDesignMarketingAdvertisement
Company
About usContactJobsPress kit
Social
Movie 1

Sword of the Empire

1964-10-20
99 minutes
Adventure
5

Rome, under Commodus: intrigue, fight for power, gladiators, senators, Christians, Barbarians, slaves, Pretorians, battles, wrestles, swords and muscles in by-the-numbers Italian epic.

Country : unknownLanguage : it

Cast:

Movie 1

Lang Jeffries

Marco

Movie 1

José Greci

Nissia

Movie 1

Ignazio Leone

Tigerio

Movie 1

Giuseppe Addobbati

Cleandro

Movie 1

Similer Movies:

Movie 1
Family
Adventure
Comedy
Fantasy

Asterix and Obelix vs. Caesar

Movie 1
Drama
Adventure
History

The Fight for Rome II - The Betrayal

Movie 1
Family
Animation
Adventure
Comedy

Asterix Conquers America

Movie 1

Ennio Antonelli

Roman Christian

Movie 1

Giulio Tomei

Cleandro

Movie 1

Domenico Maggio

Movie 1

Piero Pastore

Ottavio

Movie 1

Pasquale Basile

Orazio

Movie 1

Paola Di Mario

Lucilla

Family
Animation
Comedy
Adventure

The Twelve Tasks of Asterix

Movie 1
History
War
Drama
Adventure

Spartacus

Movie 1
Comedy
War
Adventure

Plebs: Soldiers of Rome

TMDP Top Reviews:

CinemaSerf

Historically, this is all over the place. It's a sort of "Decline and Fall..." (also 1964) meets "Quo Vadis" (1951) with the handsome, but really hammy, Lang Jeffries in the lead role of "Quintus" trying to hold together a really weakly scripted and directed muddle. To be fair, the production looks quite good and there is plenty of swordplay and colourful action, it's just that acting is as stiff as a board. The supposedly megalomanic emperor "Commodus" (Enzo Tarascio" has nothing whatsoever by way of menace and the love interest from the glamorous but totally out of her depth José Greci as the slave girl "Nissia" really don't do anything at all to enliven this join-the-dots sword and sandals effort. I like this genre and they are usually quite watchable, but this is more of a chore than most. Perhaps Lionel would have been a better choice?