
Geronimo1967
This reminded me a little of Sir Ian McKellens 1995 reimagining of Richard III as Ralph Fiennes turns his hand to directing this Shakespeare story of power-lust and betrayal. Its maybe not the most famous of the bards works, nor for my money is it one of his most original. The story itself has shades of Julius Caesar too it as it depicts the rise and fall of the eponymous dictator (Fiennes). It all starts when the grain-deprived masses of the city take to the streets and their leader, who holds most of these plebs in utter contempt, finds himself unexpectedly deposed by the council - upon which sits his own mother (Vanessa Redgrave) - and shown the Appian Way. Disillusioned and furious, he enters into his own equivalent of a Faustian pact a...