Russell Crowe has stated that the Gladiator sequel failed because it lacked a "moral core" and that the studio behind it "didn't understand why [the original movie] was successful."
Crowe's Remarks at Taormina Film Festival
Speaking at the Taormina film festival, Crowe outlined why he believes the first Gladiator, released in 2000 to acclaim and box office success, succeeded, and where its 2024 sequel struggled. His comments were reported by Variety.
The Original's Emotional Core
Crowe explained that his refusal to shoot a sex scene with Connie Nielsen, who played his former lover Lucilla, gave the first Gladiator its "emotional core." He said, "When we were shooting that film, there was a lot of pressure. The studio, the producers [thought] there should be sex between Maximus and the female characters. I kept pushing back. This is the story of a man avenging the death of his wife and his child. There cannot be a moment in that journey where he stops and has sex with somebody. It doesn't make any sense because that destroys the journey."
Crowe added that director Ridley Scott eventually agreed with him. "Luckily for me, Ridley, even though he'd love a sex scene between me and Connie Nielsen, agreed with me back then that that was the emotional core of the film."
Why Gladiator II Failed
In Crowe's view, Gladiator II failed to heed the lessons of the first film's success. He noted that women were a key audience for the original. "[The studio] failed because they didn't understand why [the original movie] was successful – it had a moral core."
He elaborated, "That's the thing a lot of people don't realise: from the second week of release globally, there were always more women in the theatres than men. You think that on the surface Gladiator is a movie for men, but if it was a movie for men, it would be about revenge, but it's not about revenge. It is a movie for women because it is about vengeance."



