Julius Caesar
Cameron Mitchell
Julius Caesar

“Julius Caesar leads the Roman army to battle against rebels in Gaul.”
In 54 B.C. Julius Caesar seeks to solidify his position in Rome by putting down a rebellion in Gaul led by a tribal chieftain named Vercingetorix. Vercingetorix has rallied many tribes to his cause, including one led by the beautiful Queen Asterid and others who'd once pledged allegiance to Rome.
Caesar the Conqueror 00 00 00 00 01 00
Julius Caesar
Cameron Mitchell
Julius Caesar
Vercingetorix
Rik Battaglia
Vercingetorix
Queen Astrid
Dominique Wilms
Queen Astrid
Claudius Valerian
Ivica Pajer
Claudius Valerian
Publia
Raffaella Carrà
Publia
Calpurnia
Carla Calò
Calpurnia
Clelia
Lucia Randi
Clelia
Pompey
Carlo Tamberlani
Pompey
Caius Opio
Cesare Fantoni
Caius Opio
Eporidorige
Giulio Donnini
Eporidorige
Cicero
Nerio Bernardi
Cicero
Quintus Sabino
Piero Palermini
Quintus Sabino
If Julius Caesar were to have had a publicist back in the day, he could have done worse than have had this created as an example of his military prowess. Cameron Mitchell plays the eponymous Roman autocrat who must rally his troops in the face of an open rebellion at the hands of Gaulish tribal leader Vercingetorix (Rik Battaglia). The story is a bit wobbly - there are some rather unnecessary romantic elements centring around his ward "Publia" (Raffaella Carrà) and the Queen of the Gauls "Astrid" (Dominique Wilms) which offers up a bit of feminine rivalry that doesn't work at all well, but the battle scenes are authentic enough and unlike so many films set around this time, the sets and look of the film come across as more genuine too. Buildings made of brick rather than marble, and the fight scenes more randomly staged (less choreographed) which all helps keep this flowing quite well. Sadly, the dubbing is largely out of synch, the editing seems more as if it had been hacked rather than cut and the budget doesn't quite facilitate the ambitions of director Nino Scolaro. Still, I didn't hate it and fans of the genre ought to get enough from the slightly overlong 1¾ hours to keep it interesting.
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