MovieChat Forums > Gladiator II (2024) Discussion > Gladiator 2 woke, prominent role for bla...

Gladiator 2 woke, prominent role for black


Don’t get me wrong here, I love Denzel. I’m a black man myself. But, Denzel in ancient Rome, playing a rich aristocrat?!? How historically accurate is that? Most blacks at the time didn’t have prominent positions. This smacks of woke propaganda and pandering to minorities and even I can recognize it.

reply

I asked chatGPT: "Is Macrinus racially black?"

The AI answer is: "No, Macrinus was not racially black. He was of Syrian descent and served as the Roman Emperor from 217 to 218 AD."

reply

I love Denzel but based on history no emperor would be black.

reply

If only it was sarcasm. But look at it — besides the usual preaching to its own up on this place, it is rewriting both film and real world history. Such an original and o real post, ey?

But yes, broflakkke. It’s the WOKEY BOOGEYMAN agenda that inconveniences thy bigot chuds. The caucasity! And guess what? You can’t do nothing about it! Lol. Cuz even in this new (but not-so-new) era that has no shortage of fascistic fReE ThInKerRs, clearly wokey dokey Hollywood isn’t gonna appease yer klan. Cry more

reply

Don't worry, fascism is coming. We’ll do to the Wokes in Hollywood what we did to the communists in the '50s. Trump was just the beginning — he’s not even a real fascist. The real purge will begin once we establish congressional hearings and committees on 'un-American activities.' That's when the reckoning will start.

The purge has already begun in government; the next phase is the workplace, followed by academia, and then Hollywood. The Wokes will have nowhere to hide. They will be hunted down wherever they go. There will be no sanctuary, no escape. If they're lucky, they’ll be forced to live in the shadows, like the rats they’ve become, cut off from all influence and power. And that's only if they’re lucky.

reply

Of course CNN and MSNBC will say all of that is bad(Whie they are still operational). Send Joe and Mika to the Gulag. Rachel Madcow can just be "disappeared".

reply

holy based

reply

As I understand it, Romans just saw Romans as Romans, and there's evidence of black people in every level of society - slaves, officers, magistrates, artisans, and merchants. Could be wrong.

reply

Romans were quite liberal, even by today's standard, at least according to this article: https://imperiumromanum.pl/en/article/black-people-in-ancient-rome/

At least 2 Roman emperors were of African origin, Septimius Severus and Macrinus in this movie, though neither was actually black.

reply

though neither was actually black.


That's right.

There was a recent meltdown on social media when they did computer generated recreations of all the main Roman Emperors which showed them with blonde hair, red hair, blue eyes etc. ie the whitest of the white. People actually think the Romans were multicultural and it's not true.

reply

I think Romans were multicultural, they had to be due to the vastness of the Roman empire.

But the key to Roman status was not related to race, was actually its citizenship structure, which is very similar to what was in the movie "Starship Troopers".

There was Roman citizenship, or full citizenship, only they have the right to vote (yes, Romans have elections) and hold political office.

There were women, freemen and conquered client state citizenship, they have the right to marry, hold property, right to trade with Roman citizens, right to migrate, etc.

Then there were slaves.

They all have the right to progress to Roman citizenship by serving the Roman empire, mostly through military services, etc. Like a gladiator was actually a slave, they can be granted freemen status if they were exceptional, and as freemen they can be granted Roman citizenship if they were deemed to have served exceptionally towards the interests of Roman empire.

The hierarchy was kind of fascinating.

Though if your parents were Roman citizens, you were automatically a Roman citizen. In "Starship Troopers" everyone was born civilian, citizenship has to be earned.

I heard in the recent US election they were people pushing unconscious relatives to voting booth, and voted on their behalves. I kind of feel there was something wrong about that. I mean even people in vegetative state are allowed to vote.

reply

I think Romans were multicultural, they had to be due to the vastness of the Roman empire.


It's one thing for relatively dark skinned immigrants to have been accepted as citizens, but as candidates for emperor? They would've bumped their heads on a very low glass ceiling.

reply

Well, at least 2 of Roman emperors were Africans, they were not black, but they were not white either, mostly likely they were middle-easterners.

reply

why would romans be whitest of the white? even italians today have many people with black hair and dark skin. italians arent anglo saxons.

reply

why would romans be whitest of the white?


That's what they look in these recreations of their statues (also using historical descriptions of their appearance):

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=RAuYw1jpL_U

https://youtu.be/gfqy7ipjDWI?feature=shared&t=27

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=fBu2XpZALE0

italians arent anglo saxons.


The Romans existed long before certain regions of southern Europe were repeatedly ravaged by arab muslim invaders (today, many northern Italians look like Anglo-Saxons while the southern ones and Sicilians don't precisely for this reason).

It's the same reason why you get retards trying to claim Jesus isn't white because he lived in what is now Israel, with said retards thinking he's middle eastern in appearance like Osama Bin Laden. Well, 2000 years ago the people in that region looked a lot different to today. Things change over that period of time, and you did get whites in that region who looked exactly like the way Jesus is depicted in western culture.

And since this is the festive season, you'll soon get even bigger retards trying to claim Santa Claus isn't white because St. Nicholas was Greek.

reply

Africa is a very big place and those from Northern Africa aren't "black" how we typically think of it. They are a much lighter shade than say blacks from the sub-Saharan region.

reply

By ‘black’ you actually mean negroid. Yes, North Africans, are certainly dark skinned but they are not negroid.

reply

No, I meant black. Negroid is a more archaic term that is not in modern use, at least in America.

reply

Negroid, Caucasoid, Mongoloid, Australoid.

Those are the basic races. Not sorry if this information hurts feelings.

reply

blacks are holding onto "egyptians were black" for dear life just because egypt is on the same continent and is the only african civilization in world history that was not a shit hole. hahahahah. like they TRULY believe it's true too. i've met black people in real life who told me. i had a close friend in high school who was black and told me that. back then i didnt know shit about black people and all this racist shit.

reply

we wuz romans

reply

romans were liberal? youre talking about the most brutal militiraized sociaty that ever existed. they litterly crucify you for saying anything they dident liked. and also they were very patriarchal. not liberal in the slightest

reply

Their emperors were elected, annually.

They were not racists, Macrinus in this movie was not black, but I don't think he was white either, most likely he was middle eastern since he was Syrian descent and was born in north Africa. There were at least 2 Roman emperors were Africans, can you say that about US?

Today US is also a quite militarised society (Go and try insulting military in US, I dare you), US soldiers killed hundreds of thousands of civilians in middle east, even mainstream media admitted that.

Remember Julian Assange, yeah, he was the guy let us know hundreds of thousands of civilians were killed in middle east by US government's own estimate.

And Edward Snowden, they were both brutally prosecuted and had to seek refuge in foreign countries.

Romans were of course patriarchal, but even without voting rights women were allowed to trade and hold property, there were female entrepreneurs. Considering the time period I think they did pretty well in that department too.

reply

bla bla bla talking about modern politics like it has anything to do with rome

no, the romans WERE NOT LIBERAL. they owned slaves, they were VERY RACIST basically hated anyone who isnt like them and worship their gods. they oppressed many people across the world, each settelment that was roman owned the citizens had to pay huge amount of taxes and they would crucify anyone who even did the slightest thing.

only roman citizens had rights. you are clearly trying to twist history to serve your political ideas. romans were liberal... lol. yeah right. no idea where you heard that. romans were the exact opposite of liberals. they were like china if china ruled the entire world

reply

You are clearly not intelligent enough to join a grown up debate, so I will leave you here.

reply

its on YOU to back up your claims that romans were liberal. not me.

reply

"Their emperors were elected, annually."

No, they weren't and certainly by the time of Caracalla and Geta, the Senate played virtually no role in proclaiming the emperor. Their Punic father was never popular with the Senate and seized power only thanks to the army. Caracalla and Geta were named co-rulers by their father and the legitimacy of their title was due to the support they received from the troops.

reply

I think that is the background of this movie, Caracalla was the incumbent emperor, he was gone only by assassination, his successor was Macrinus (Denzel Washington), and only served one term.

So I think election resumed.

reply

Macrinus belonged to an influential local Berber family who was granted equestrian status, which allowed him to elevate his status in Roman society.

He had Caracalla murdered and proclaimed himself emperor with the backing of the army. Two reasons why the Senate felt no choice but to accept his proclamation (I don't think any emperor was ever "elected" or served "terms".) However, the Senate always had an issue with his mere equestrian background.

reply

Well, he was accepted by the senate.

But I guess elections at that time were heavily influenced by power brokers, kind of like Harris and Biden today, though power transfers today were not as bloody as the ancient Rome.

reply

He was accepted with a lot of reluctance. The fact that he lasted only a year before being executed kind of says enough.

reply

At the time the loyalty of military played a big role, just like today US presidents need the loyalty of military industrial complex.

reply

But today there's a democratic process to elect the president. No emperor elections in those days.

reply

I thought the Roman emperors still needed to be elected by the senate, at least in the early days of the Roman empire.

reply

No, they were not "elected" as such, all that was really needed was for the Senate to just accept the proclamation, which, as far as I know, they always did, even if reluctantly.

I mean, Didius Julianus, the successor of Commodus, bought the title in a freaking auction held by the Praetorian Guard.

reply

I guess elections ended with the Roman republic, I did not know that.

Thanks for pointing that out.

reply

There is still a bit of details in wikipedia:

The reign of Caesar Augustus saw the final decline of democratic elections in Rome. Augustus undermined and lessened the significance of the election results, eventually eliminating elections entirely. He also diminished the importance of the offices themselves. He could nominate senators freely and essentially controlled all membership of the senate, so the senate was full of his supporters and candidacy was based on flattery and not merit. Augustus had extensive influence over the magistrates as well; he was given the power to grant commendation to candidates for office, which became a guarantee of winning the election.

I guess the elections were still there in the early days of the Roman empire, it just did not mean that much anymore.

reply

Yes, that is true. The Senate's power kept being hollowed out more and more.

The emperor Nerva (who ruled between two more famous emperors Domitian and Trajan) was the first, and one of just a few, to be personally selected by the Senate due to cicrumstances.

reply

According to my readings the Roman senate in the beginning had almost infinite power, but that power gradually declined, became insignificant after emperor Justinian abolished almost all senatorial offices in Italy.

Justinian was the Roman emperor from 527 to 565 AD, so at the time of this movie, around 217 AD, I think the senate was still somewhat powerful.

reply

Officially they still had influence, but it had declined a lot, ever since the fall of the Republic.

These emperors ruled in a period where they heavily relied on the support of the army. I don't think the Senate ever rejected a proclamation of an emperor who was backed by the army.

reply

julian assange was a russian puppet. russian state hackers needed an outlet for their stolen intel and assange was it. anyone who believes he did it for america or did it due to some moral stance is a fucking retard and all his opinions are to not be trusted. he's either stupid or a russian asset himself. either way, fuck off.

reply

It is easy to make statements, but without something to back it up, it is just nonsense.

Actually saying that about Edward Snowden would be more believable since he went to Russia, and now a Russian citizen.

See, you don't even know how to make shit up.

reply

Yes, you are wrong.

reply

It's done purely for $$$. They can attract more diverse audiences if they cast a name like Denzel while at the same time meeting their obligatory diversity quotas thus killing two birds with one stone.

The original Gladiator is a more accurate depiction of what the Roman Empire would've looked like than this sequel, which is clearly hamstrung by woke ideologies that demand diversity even in historical times when there was none. It's just a sign of the times.

reply

Yep, totally agree, as a black man I have no problem with blacks being depicted as slaves for the sake of historical accuracy.

reply

"as a black man"

Sure buddy. And the more you say it every other post, the more totally convincing it sounds😂

reply

At least in Gladiator, Djimon Honsou’s character was a historically accurate slave

reply

Its always embarrassing when someone claims to be a certain race so that it is okay for them to mock, deride or somehow demean that race.

Anytime someone starts off telling everyone that they are black, gay, Mexican, a woman etc. I brace myself for stupidity. This didn't disappoint, I especially liked the condescending "even I can recognize it." at the end as though he's less intelligent because he's a minority.

reply

The stereotypical "black sounding" username is already an instant giveaway that you're likely dealing with a racist, stormf*g troll account. Indeed, OP did not disappoint.

reply

I’m not for or against the OP post. I had people not believe me that I am who I am. Because I may have opposing views that doesn’t align typically with my demographic.

OP may be a black person.

reply

why is that suprise you? even in pre civil war there were black people who reached high positions. denzel suppose to be the exception. a charming guy who reached the top regardless. that happend many times in history. see no problem with that. and back then many tribes were nomadic so i see no problem with a nubian from north africa controlled rome settelment being in rome.

reply

I haven't looked too far into it, but does Denzel play the part of the Magical Negro in this?

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Magical_Negro

reply

Kind of. He is the most prominent character in the movie according to various reviews, and featured heavily in the trailers, and wasn't even in the top billings (IMDB listed stars as Connie Nielsen, Paul Mescal, Pedro Pascal).

Even the gladiator on the poster was not the top billing (he is the second).

reply

what they're doing now is they want to shoehorn woke shit but is afraid of backlash so they hide it. they'll get you if you pay for it though. they want you to think a black emperor in ancient rome wasnt gonna be in most of the scenes in the movie.

reply