"I don't have the stats but it's likely that slaves outnumbered citizens, at least in some areas"
I don't think so, no. Slaves were about a third of the population of Italy, most likely less in the provinces. The importance of slavery wasn't so much in the size of the slave population (which was massive, but never a majority), but in the fact that slavery was the biggest source from which the Roman elite drew their surplus, the immense wealth they amassed.
I don't believe slavery was ever ESSENTIAL to Rome, but it was certainly enormously profitable. Though this profitability eventually declined after the empire ceased to expand and the supply of new slaves largely dried up, raising the cost of slaves. Slaves also had less incentive to work hard than free farmers and workers. Because of these factors, slavery began to decline in the later empire period. But that was much later than the time period this movie is set in.
Also, while slavery was important to the RICH, to the big landowners, the owners of farms and mines and other means of production, it was actually devastating to the non-wealthy citizens of Rome. Slave labor devastated the Italian economy because freeholding peasants could never compete with the big latifundia and their armies of slave workers. This resulted in a collapse of the smallholding economy that had originally made Rome rich and powerful. The latifundia gobbled up all the small farms, and the dispossessed peasants flocked to the cities in search of whatever work they could get. Unemployment, inequality, poverty and crime were horrendous. This resulted in massive discontent which gave rise to fierce class struggle in the late republican period, expressed in the conflict between the populares and optimates, which began with the rise of the Gracchi brothers and their campaign for land redistribution, and ended with the final collapse of the republic and the rise of the principate which suppressed the contradictions of Roman society by force.
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