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Laila 2022-02-19 08:02:03
Did Nero really set the city of Rome on fire?
The movie once again told me that history is written by victors.
The film is based on the long historical novel "Where Are You Going" published in 1896 by the Polish writer Shankowitz. Poland is a country deeply influenced by Catholicism. Writers who grew up in such an environment will naturally...
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Verda 2022-02-19 08:02:03
Records of the Burning City of the Tyrant-"Faith is Built on the Foundation of Love"
In the first century AD, under the preaching of Paul, Peter and others, more and more poor people from the lower class believed in Christianity and were brutally persecuted. A young Roman aristocratic officer and a hostage were treated as a daughter by the guardian. The beautiful girl has...

Alfredo Rizzo
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Norval 2022-03-25 09:01:19
6/10. I have seen a post discussing why many villains want the world to be reborn from destruction. The reason is that they think that this place is full of filth, and it is idle anyway. It is better to satisfy the selfish desires and make some trouble for the justice group, just like Nero. Typical heroic historical spectacle films, goddesses, Hercules bullfighting, dense crowds, special-colored matte painting scenes and broad character sidelines, this method of piling up scenes and love gradually becomes outdated as the audience's taste improves.
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Toby 2022-02-19 08:02:03
The people are the most vulnerable to deception and the easiest to please. When the tyrant ordered the burning of Rome in order to write poetry, and the angry people were about to enter the palace, the tyrant only needed an decree declaring that the city of Burning was vicious by Christians, and the people cheered for the abuse of Christians in the arena. This film is a gospel film under the cloak of a historical film. At the end, the belief in Christians is inevitably glorified, but the newly ushered Emperor Gabor in history is not much better than Nero. Rome was destroyed by corrupt senate, rotten monarchs, and arrogant and ignorant people. Instead, the barbarians who were conquered by Rome had noble spirits and firm beliefs.
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Emperor Nero: Is it not disgusting when common bovine solicitude... replaces the fire in a woman's body? Ah, but what pulsating purity there is in fire. My new Rome shall spring from the loins of fire... a twisting, writhing, breathing flame.
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Poppaea: It is foolish to kill those you hate, because once dead they are beyond pain.