Sound & Vision

SPARTACUS

THE TIMELESS

- CHRIS CHIARELLA

ULTRA HD BLU-RAY

overclass/underclass struggle was never more memorably explored than in Spartacus, a film adapted from Howard Fast’s fact-based, heavily dramatized book. Directed by young up-and-comer Stanley Kubrick and starring old-school movie idol Kirk Douglas in the title role, it’s the sort of epic spectacle often aspired to but seldom achieved. (Its influence on Mel Gibson’s Braveheart is undeniable.) Born into slavery, later sold into the arena to fight and die, Spartacus was pushed too far and came to lead a revolt, first alongside his fellow gladiators and later liberating thousands of slaves of the Roman Republic. Humiliated, Rome dispatched a mighty army not only to defeat these troublemak­ers but to send a brutal message that would prevent future uprisings. Now 60 years old, the movie is compromise­d by a few dated foibles, largely sonic. But in the end, the great elements of Spartacus— its heart, ambition, power, and beauty— continue to enthrall.

This 4K disc release is the culminatio­n of both the 1991 reconstruc­tion of the movie to its 197-minute glory and a 2015 digital restoratio­n of the picture and sound. Spartacus was shot in Super Technirama

70, a process that exposed two times as much film surface area as standard 35mm for a sharper, less grainy image optimized for largeforma­t 70mm exhibition. The film elements here were scanned at 6K, and the extensive work was ultimately output at true 4K. The depth of focus in the many wide shots is simply breathtaki­ng, all the more so for the precise orchestrat­ion of thousands of extras in certain scenes. Closeups can be crystal-clear, although appreciabl­y softer on co-star Jean Simmons, with ample, welcome film grain. Dolby

Vision HDR reveals a warm, nuanced palette, with a more naturalist­ic balance of light and shadow than in previous versions.

The Spartacus soundtrack excites in its own way, notably through a

Alex North score that’s mixed big with outstandin­g fidelity across all speakers. The overture hooks us from the beginning, and in one early scene we can hear picks and shovels all around working a vast outdoor mine.

The fine complement of extras— some recent, none new—dates all the way back to the original publicity for the film. One true gem: an aged

Douglas recounting how he and

Spartacus broke the notorious Hollywood blacklist.

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