Spartacus 3.6 Review, "Spoils of War"
rating: 4.5
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When your TV series is named Spartacus, it is a bold move to have the character named as such used in less than ten minutes of the episode. Spartacus has always been a very bold show and this episode did exactly that. After this weeks very grim, almost Spartacus-free episode, Im left with only one question- Can we just call the series Gannicus and have him as the main character? This episode picks up immediately after last weeks with the Romans storming the gates to the slave city. Spartacus and many of his people flee including other major characters such as Naevia, Crixus and Agron leaving Gannicus behind on a seemingly suicide mission to provide distraction. After Spartacus and most of the rebels escape, they are not present for most of the episode until the last five minutes and instead, instead focus is given to those remaining in the city such as Gannicus and the Romans including Caesar, Marcus Crassus, Laetia, Tiberius and Kore. Trapped in the city, Gannicus finds Sibyl and endeavors to keep her alive and get her to safety. The Romans, meanwhile are making this difficult for them as they are capturing or killing any rebels they find including the recurring German character, Donar, who is not taken into protection by Gannicus and does not fare as well. Crassus has taken the city effortlessly. Caesar is hailed for his helpful actions in toppling the city. The pirates who betrayed Spartacus appear too, demanding possession of Laetia as form of payment, which Crassus gives without second thought. Tiberius spends the whole episode not doing much except being absolutely awful. He threatens Kore about telling Crassus that he raped her, saying it is his word against hers and generally terrorizes her. He continues to antagonize Caesar, which will probably not go well for him ultimately, as one of them ends up ruling Rome and its not him. His final plan of releasing one of the captured slaves to kill Caesar is poorly executed but the thought and words behind it prove that Tiberius is intelligent and cruel enough to be truly dangerous. Caesars rivalry with Tiberius is the only thing saving him from being an ultimately forgettable character. As a character, Caesar should be more than he is- more engaging, more threatening and he should command more of a presence. So far he has not. His scenes with Tiberius, however, are absolutely fascinating. The dislike they have of each other is palpable and fascinating to watch, and the fact that both of them switch between almost childish antagonization and what is essentially war tactics to best the other a brilliant dynamic. Both of them provide a brilliant challenge and foil for the other one which both the characters benefit from. Caesar is a character who needs an enemy to be great and as Crassus has claim over Spartacus, Caesar often is overshadowed by him, only to emerge when he gets to have a very face-to-face confrontation with his own enemy.