Caligula: 1400 Days of Terror

2012 "Caligula was insane. Or was he...?"
6.7| 1h28m| NR| en| More Info
Released: 22 November 2012 Released
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Official Website: http://hft.history.com/videos/caligula-1400-days-of-terror-special#caligula-1400-days-of-terror-special
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This two-hour History Channel special examines controversial new theories about the man who ruled the world's mightiest Empire with sadistic brutality. His reign of terror lasted just 1,400 days. Yet even today everyone knows his name. Most have said he was crazy. But was he? This is the story few know behind one of the most infamous figures of the Ancient World--Caligula.

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Caligula: 1400 Days of Terror Audience Reviews

Micransix Crappy film
SpunkySelfTwitter It’s an especially fun movie from a director and cast who are clearly having a good time allowing themselves to let loose.
ThedevilChoose When a movie has you begging for it to end not even half way through it's pure crap. We've all seen this movie and this characters millions of times, nothing new in it. Don't waste your time.
Jonah Abbott There's no way I can possibly love it entirely but I just think its ridiculously bad, but enjoyable at the same time.
Robert J. Maxwell Caligula, the Roman emperor who was a notorious nut, ruled for a few years in the first century AD. At the time, the Roman empire dominated about 4 million square miles around the Mediterranean Sea. All of its residents lived under Roman law and the law was set by only one man, Caligula, who was twenty-four when he took the throne. He inherited a rich empire and used the money to win popularity and power. He doubled the salary of the Praetorian Guard -- his personal army, something like Hitler's SS -- then abolished all trials for treason in the Senate.Finally, from the top of a three-story building, he took handfuls of gold coins and flung them out into the crowd below, who crushed each other in trying to collect them. Thus he's won over the Guard, the Senate, and the people of Rome. That was in the good old days when money meant power, not like today when a shoeless beggar's vote has the same power as a billionaire's. (That's meant to be ironic.) I don't want to get into the weeds here but Caligula was both popular and powerful, but when he fell ill for several weeks of an unknown illness, the master of the Praetorian Guard began grooming Caligula's successor, his cousin Glamelus, for the throne. The emperor recovered and was not pleased. He had Glamelus killed. The illness seemed to be some kind of turning point for Caligula because it didn't stop there.Maybe I ought to note that Caligula at the time was only in his twenties and that's a bad age bracket for certain kinds of schizophrenia. And some of his acts seem to lack all reason. When the emperor was ill, a nobleman claimed that he would give his life if the emperor recovered. The emperor DID recover, had the nobleman dragged through the streets and thrown into the Tiber, where he drowned.Caligula then starts boffing his youngest sister and turning the arenas' blood sports into blood baths. If gladiators had been matched with weapons before, Caligula unmatched them -- sword and shield against trident and net, just like Spartacus. Exotic animals are slaughtered for the public's pleasure and prisoners are fed to predatory cats like lions and tigers. Anybody in the stands who happens to jeer the emperor immediately joins the victims in the arena. He gives lots of parties. He attends plays and sometimes jumps on the stage to play all the parts. Who's to stop him? When his lover, his sister, dies, he has her made a goddess, the first time it's ever happened, and all this erratic behavior annoys the Senate. The guy is hanging around with all these lowlifes and acting more like a king. In return Caligula humiliates the Senate and drains it of power.When emperors died they were deified. He went one step further and declared himself a God while still in mortal form. He had a temple built to himself, complete with virgins, sacrifices, and other rituals. By the time Caligula declared he would move the capital of the Roman Empire from Rome to Egypt, a move that would devastate the city and everyone in it, the Praetorian Guard and the Senate had had enough and Caligula was stabbed to death. There's a moral lesson in all this. Try not to get too big for your britches.One reviewer seems to interpret this documentary as a descent into the vulgate; lots of blood and sensationalism. It's also seen as a kind of apology for Caligula, who may not have been such a bad guy after all and who had his wits about him. I suppose there is an element of sensationalism but I don't know how it could have been avoided without turning the narrative into a dry spell of dates and figures. One of the talking heads is from Cambridge, the others from lesser venues, but I don't care about that. If they know whereof they speak it seems good enough for a popular audience.
calvinnme This documentary tries to tie in Caligula the child watching his family being slaughtered by the emperor Tiberius because of Tiberius' jealousy of his father's popularity and then being called to Tiberius' side at age 17 and being forced to watch and join in with all of the debauchery at Tiberius' court as educating Caligula on the importance of eradicating rivals and the politics of power as well as giving him a taste for pleasure and power himself.I saw a different documentary 25 years ago on Caligula of about the same length as this one that spent much more time on the illness that Caligula had six months into his reign. Up to that point Caligula had been a sly leader, rewarding key constituencies to solidify power, but he was not bloodthirsty. It was after the illness that the reign of terror began.This documentary does not even mention that maybe the high fevers that Caligula endured during his illness might have induced brain damage that caused his behavior to so radically change. Much of this documentary seems focused on being a Caligula "sanity apologist" on showing how what he did that seemed cruel and insane actually had a point about retaining power and I just disagree. Making your favorite racehorse head of the Roman senate and ordering your troops to attack the ocean is just full scale goofiness.One interesting point that this documentary brought out that I had not heard before? The tall obelisk that Caligula had brought from Egypt still remains and stands intact...in front of the Vatican...with a cross on top. An interesting mixture of cultures and religions, is it not?This is probably worth watching, but even though the historians seem credible I think the production shows that even documentaries meant to inform have become somewhat infected with the sensationalism of reality TV.
Good-Will I don't know who this is meant to appeal to but I watched it in the hope that it might cast some light on Caligula the person. Sadly though, the editing is appalling, the voice-over is annoying, the talking heads are seemingly picked at random (Some guy at a university in Tasmania?) and the budget limitations clearly show through. Why bother to make something so pathetic about a man who has gone down in history as being a pervert and a maniac? Maybe there were some details later on but after 30 minutes of this then I'd had enough. I'd recommend the Malcolm McDowell portrayal over this piece of (I can't swear here but I wish I could) ineptitude. And that film was pretty bad unless you are watching it for tits and bums. After having watched Vikings then I thought that the History channel may have upped their game, but this documentary is about as bad as it gets. I gave it two stars out of ten because I think that there may be a worse documentary out there somewhere, although I haven't seen it.