Rome Streaming Hd

Rome Streaming Hd




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Rome Streaming Hd
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Directed by Tim Van PattenWritten by Bruno Heller

Moments after Caesar's murder, Mark Antony emerges from the Senate in a state of shock, only to face Quintus Pompey and his thugs, who immediately set off after him. Brutus returns home shaking, his mother already plotting for him to fill Caesar's shoes. "Our name is redeemed," she tells him. "The Republic is saved." Back inside the Senate, Posca weeps over Caesar's body.In the courtyard just below their apartment, Vorenus cries over the limp body of Niobe. When young Lucius approaches, he lurches for the boy, just as his two daughters return with their aunt Lyde and catch sight of their ashen mother. "Whose child is this?!" Vorenus demands, hoisting the boy in the air as if ready to hurl him over the gates. As Vorena the Elder reaches for the boy, he smacks her to the ground, then lets the boy go, redirecting his anger. "I curse you!" he says, pointing a crooked hand at his kids before stumbling out of the courtyard, leaving them to weep over their mother's corpse.Having just heard the news about Caesar, Atia collapses in grief, as Octavia festers with fury, realizing Servilia used what she shared about Vorenus's wife to leave Caesar defenseless. Octavian instructs his sister to never speak of it again. Atia begins plotting to flee the city, convinced Mark Antony must be dead since he hasn't come for her. Octavian argues against it, insisting it's what Servilia wants. They are interrupted by Antony himself, still out of breath from Quintus Pompey's chase, but Atia's relief soon turns to anger; he talks of heading north and raising "an army of monsters" to avenge Caesar's death...all without her. Eventually he gives in and invites Atia to join him.In a meadow in the Roman countryside, Pullo proposes marriage to Eirene, both of them oblivious to the chaos unfolding in the city. When he explains that she is no longer a slave and can say no to his proposal, Eirene accepts, and Pullo smears wet dirt on their faces to make it official.At Caesar's villa, his long-forgotten widow Calpurnia presides over her husband's body as formal mourning rites begin. Mark Antony, Atia and her children arrive to pay their respects - and they are the only ones to do so. Calpurnia rejects Mark Antony's offer to escape the city under his protection; she is happy to die in Rome. She insists that Posca read Caesar's will, which stipulates that every citizen receive 75 denarii, and every soldier and veteran 100. Atia scoffs at "the waste."None are prepared for what's next. All of Caesar's property and remaining money, as well as the legal obligations and benefits of his estate, are left solely to one person: Octavian, whom Caesar has designated sole heir and his lawful son. Atia can hardly believe her luck; Antony can't conceal his wounds. But he quickly recovers, explaining that Brutus and his men are now the law, and Caesar's money and land will go to them. "They will declare his death a rightful tyrannicide," Posca concedes, "and his will and all his acts become null and void."While Antony plows ahead with plans to head north, Octavian announces he must stay in Rome. "I am Caesar's son. I must defend my status and rights." He insists his mother stay too, so that the family appears united. Antony laughs at the boy, but Octavian explains his logic: Brutus will have to declare Caesar a tyrant to justify his killing, but all the acts of a tyrant are unlawful, including those that put Brutus and Cassius in power. Antony continues to dismiss him, but Atia is coming around, realizing she could still be the mother of the richest man in Rome.Lyde leads the children in preparing Niobe for her journey to the afterlife, when their ritual is interrupted by Erastes Fulmen and his men, who have come in search of Vorenus, realizing he's no longer protected by Caesar.At Servilia's villa, Cicero arrives to applaud Cassius, Quintus and the others - he wished he wielded the knife himself, he says to derisive stares. Brutus assures him that the city is secured with 2,000 armed men, and that Caesar's people have all fled. Still, Cicero is disappointed to learn they left Mark Antony standing, and suggests they take care of the matter. Making a hasty exit, he comes face to face with the man himself. "Friend Cicero," Antony says with casual confidence, "Why so pale?"As Mark Antony takes a seat at Servilia's table, Cicero insists he knew nothing of the plot to kill Caesar. Antony explains he's come alone, in good faith, to help them out of the "wolfpit" they've created. To their scoffs he responds that despite the man's tyrannical tendencies, "a great many people will worship Caesar until they die... and those people are mine now." They don't need such people, Cassius insists; they've secured the city, the Senate and the knights and the Pontiffs are with them. "Best wait 'til after the elections," Antony responds, before offering up Octavian's logic: all of "the tyrant's" acts and appointments will be nullified, and "messy" elections will have to be held for them to reclaim their powerful posts.Realizing he has a point, Brutus and the others hear him out. Their strengths are balanced, Antony claims, and neither can win without terrible bloodshed. "I want peace and stability," he tells them. His proposal is for a general amnesty: Caesar will not be declared a tyrant, and they will not be killers. His death will be a natural death, and all his acts and his will shall stand - allowing all of them to keep their positions. And for a show of unity, they will hold a public funeral for the fallen leader.And after that? Antony assures them he will serve out his term and retire to the provinces, to "plough my fields and f**k my slaves like old Cincinnatus." Skeptical, they ask him to leave and debate his offer. Brutus is furious that his co-conspirators tried to kill Antony as well, setting him up to be dishonored twice. While conceding Antony is "a vulgar beast," he insists the man has broken no capital law, and should not be killed. Alas, Brutus convinces no one, not even his mother. But when he meets Mark Antony outside, he accepts his offer of "friendship." On his way home, a smug Antony turns to Quintus and slashes his throat.Pullo and Eirene return to Vorenus's villa to find him holding Niobe's limp hand. "I cursed my own children," he says through a fog of remorse. "It wasn't their fault." Pullo assures him they'll be back and he can lift the curse, especially since he didn't kill any animals on it.Pullo pays a visit to Octavian, who tells him how Vorenus was lured away...ultimately admitting it was he who passed on the detail Pullo shared about Niobe's son. Octavian apologizes and asks him not to mention it to anyone. When Pullo learns Octavian has been named Caesar's heir, he offers to help exact vengeance.As Niobe's body is carried out to the countryside in a handcart, Caesar's body is carried on an elaborate litter, lined by regal magistrates and mourners carrying candles that light the masks of his ancestors. Mark Antony, Atia and her family take their place on one side of the litter, Brutus and the conspirators line the other. As the doors of Caesar's villa open, a massive crowd roars at the sight of their ruler's body.By the time Vorenus, Pullo and Eirene make their way back towards the city from Niobe's funeral pyre, Caesar's body is engulfed in a large plume of smoke, set atop a sprawling bonfire, an unruly mob of rioters unleashed throughout the city. By the time Brutus and Cassius arrive at Servilia's, they are greeted by Mark Antony, who has a new proposal: they are all to leave town, save for Servilia. He will offer Brutus a grain monitor post "to leave the city in dignity." Furious by what has transpired, they steadfastly refuse, insisting they still have "the men of quality" behind them. "And I have an angry mob," Antony fires back, "and they will roast and eat your men of quality in the ashes of the Senate house."Returning to the apartment, Vorenus, Pullo and Eirene catch Clarissa rummaging through their cupboards, though she insists she's only taking back what she loaned Niobe. They demand to know where the kids are. "Erastes Fulmen took them," she says hesitantly.At the Aventine tavern, Erastes holds court before a tableful of hard-faced gamblers and gangsters. One of his men reports on Caesar's funeral: Brutus carried on monotonously about the Republic and its laws. Then Antony got up, gave Brutus a hug, and pulled out Caesar's bloody toga. He paced the stage lamenting the loss of the great man, stirring the crowd to tears before he tossed the toga into the crowd. That's when they turned into an angry mob. Disgusted with Antony and the lack of respect shown at Caesar's funeral, Erastes warns his tavern men to stay away from the "disgraceful" rioting, or risk being "disjointed." He heads to the tavern's steam room, and just as he lies down, he's startled by the wraith-like appearance of a bloodied Vorenus - sword in hand - demanding to know where his children are. Erastes manages to escape past him back into the tavern, where he finds Pullo standing over the bodies of all his men. Resigned to what's next, he tells Vorenus he took his kids as payment for his many slights. "I f**ked them. Then I killed them. Then I threw them in the river." With barely a pause, Vorenus swings his sword at the man, killing him with a single blow.Just outside the city's walls, Brutus and Cassius escape on horseback, a large retinue and a baggage train in tow. Back in the city, a blood-streaked Vorenus walks through the streets carrying Erastes Fulmen's head, lost in a furious haze, Pullo following along behind him.


Directed by Allen CoulterWritten by Bruno HellerWith Erastes Fulmen gone, the Aventine is up for grabs, and rival gangs have taken to the streets in a struggle for control, stabbing each other in the open markets.Having surrendered to his grief, Vorenus refuses to leave his bed, staring catatonically at the head of Erastes Fulmen, still rotting in a corner. Pullo tries to talk Vorenus into a new start, noting the mourning period has ended, but Vorenus won't hear of it.Now Consul of Rome, Mark Antony is preparing for the arrival of Cleopatra, Queen of Egypt, which has Atia up in arms. To assuage her jealousy, Antony describes the woman as a "dark, skinny little thing who talks too much." Octavian interrupts to press him about the money Caesar left him, but Antony puts him off with talk of paperwork and lawyering.Cleopatra is far more subdued than she was four years earlier, which puzzles Mark Antony, whom she doesn't recall meeting. She's in mourning over Caesar, she tells him, as he was "like a husband to me." Antony scoffs. "Roman Consul, Egyptian wife? Wouldn't do."The Queen's counsel, Charmian, interrupts to begin negotiations: the Consul of Rome will guarantee armies to protect her throne in exchange for the value of her grain shipments. Posca ups the price, and they settle on an amount. But the Queen has one more issue to put on the table: her four-year-old son, Caesarion. Soon she must tell him that his father's people do not accept him as a true legal son. She wants a public declaration of the boy's paternity, "simply for his happiness." With a lecherous grin, Antony attempts to privately negotiate something in return, earning himself a fierce slap. "Nice manners for a whore," he tells her. "If I must prostitute myself for the good of my country and my family, I will," she fires back. "But the customer pays first does he not?" "Your son will eat sh** and die before I make him legal," he replies.At the Basilica, an irritated Antony receives petitioners. A representative of the merchants complains about the violence in the Aventine killing commerce, "the root of civic virtue." Cicero jumps in, warning that whoever controls the Aventine controls the docks and the grain supply. And if the violence spreads, the whole city will descend into chaos and famine, "and you will be blamed, I'm afraid." Antony growls before presenting Cicero with a list of candidates for next year's elections, claiming Posca found them among Caesar's papers. "Ah. Another lucky find," Cicero smirks, claiming the list contains every scoundrel in the city who paid off Posca. After a threat from Antony, Cicero agrees to endorse them, but only if they cross off the worst of the lot.At a loss with Vorenus, Pullo seeks out the new Consul of Rome. Mark Antony accompanies him back to the cursed villa, jarring his former soldier out of his funk. He reprimands Vorenus harshly, accusing him of letting "our great father die" and starting a war in the Aventine by killing Erastes. Vorenus insists he would kill himself, but "Dis" is his master; he's at the mercy of the God to end his life. "Dis is not your master. I am your master," Antony responds, and despite Vorenus's protests, he insists that no man is beyond redemption, "not even you."As Atia prepares to host a party for the Egyptians, Octavian spots Timon and his henchmen, armed for battle, and confronts his mother about her latest plot, which as he suspects involves killing Servilia. "There is a truce, ratified by priests," he tells his mother. "The political situation is extremely delicate. Her death would throw the Republic into an uproar." When he threatens to go to Mark Antony, Atia stops him, then sends Timon and his men away, furious with her impudent son.A retinue of exotically dressed servants and courtiers arrive with the wide-eyed four-year-old in tow, his hair done up like Caesar's. Not far behind is the stunning Queen - dressed to kill, and high on opium. She takes Mark Antony's hand affectionately and, ignoring Atia, captivates the room.Timon returns home to find a surprise visitor - his older brother, Levi, an observant Jew from Jerusalem, resurfacing after nine years. Levi claims he's come to expand his business where the money is - he's in the spice, cloth and oil trade. "You hate Romans," Timon challenges him. "Vile oppressors. Babylonian whores." Levi finally concedes that he was forced to leave his homeland, as he spoke too freely about the "so-called leaders licking the boots of Roman soldiers." Timon reproaches his brother. "I've got a wife and children to think of. Keep that cac to yourself."After torturing Atia with her beauty and overt affections toward Mark Antony, Cleopatra makes a scene as she leaves, telling the Consul she shall weep 'til she sees him again. Turning to Atia, she demands a kiss. "Die screaming you pigspawn trollop," Atia whispers into the monarch's ear. Antony is in for a rough night.As the gang wars escalate in the Aventine, the Priests of Concord call a summit. Six roughhewn captains of the underworld, each with their own band of henchmen, gather before the priests and their statue of Concordia, goddess of harmony. An alliance has formed between the two biggest gangs, the Caelians, led by Memmio, and the Quirinali, under Hannibal Cotta. Across from them, a quartet of smaller gangs stand in equal numbers, including the Oppians, led by Acerbo. Pullo and Vorenus make a dramatic entrance.Vorenus announces that he speaks under the authority of Mark Antony, Consul of Rome, who declares their battle to control the Aventine finished. "All violence will cease." The men look amused. "As killer of Erastes Fulmen, I claim his Captaincy of the Aventine...as my rightful spoils." Acerbo points out that he has no men; they're all dead or run away. "I will find men. Rome has no shortage of criminal scum. Maybe I'll take some of yours."As the men stir in protest, Memmio reminds them the Goddess is present. When order is restored, Vorenus explains they'll receive a monthly stipend of 5,000 denarii from Mark Antony - under Vorenus's supervision. In return, they will limit themselves to their "traditional liberties and malpractices...nothing that will disrupt trade or politics." Acerbo objects. "Why would sane and respectable men like ourselves do business with a poor curse-hounded beast like you?"With this, Vorenus pushes aside the priests and grabs the Goddess, then smashes the statue repeatedly against a pillar until it shatters into shards. The captains and horrified priests look on in astonishment. "I'm a son of Hades," Vorenus announces. "I f**k Concord in her arse. The truce is raised." Pullo panics, but Acerbo quickly agrees to do business, as Memmio and Cotta stare at the remains of the statue, speechless.Outside Atia's villa, a young boy is beaten by a pack of larger ones, until Castor intervenes. The grateful boy, Duro, kisses Castor's feet and begs him for work, offering to do anything, including sexual favors. Castor seems to consider the offer.Octavian seeks out Mark Antony one more time to remind him about his inheritance - he intends to give the plebs the money Caesar promised them. "You are a fool then," Antony tells the boy. "Once they have their money and spend it, they will only want more." Octavian explains he's enlisted a lawyer to help Posca transfer the money without further delay. This infuriates Antony, who tells him he's getting none of it. Atia tries to placate him, then scolds her son after he leaves. "Don't you see we're dependent on Antony now? Who will protect us if you drive him away from me?!"When Octavia confronts her brother about his insolence, Octavian shares his secret plans with her. As he sees it, the Republic is on the brink of collapse, with a weak and cowardly Senate and angry, starving plebs. And Antony is nothing but "a destructive brute." So he plans to assume a leadership role and offer new initiatives. Octavia bursts out laughing at her little brother, until she realizes he's dead serious.In the forum, a newsreader announces a pledge from "Gaius Octavian Caesar, the lawful son of Gaius Julius Caesar," who plans to personally fulfill the terms of his beloved father's bequest to the people, delivering the money they are due. "Let it be known that Caesar's son has sold away all his own property to honour his father's wishes," he adds. Hearing the news, Mark Antony enters the boy's bedroom in a fit of rage.Octavian tries to assure him the offering was not meant as a direct challenge to his authority, claiming he wants to make a public display of unity. His name - Caesar's name - can offer Antony protection from his enemies in the Senate. This only infuriates Antony more, and when he learns that Octavian was able to borrow against the money given his legal claim, he attacks the boy. When Atia hears how much he's given away (three million Sestertii), she jumps in, too.Watching Antony unleash all his fury at the small boy, Atia finally tries to stop him. "Forget about him. Let's go," she says to her lover, tu
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