Spartacus 3.8 Review, "Separate Paths"
rating: 5
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I did not sign up for this when I started watching Spartacus. Like no other episode this series, this weeks felt very much like a movie. Separate Paths was a spectacle that few shows and not even Spartacus itself could hope to match. It was an episodeS so testosterone fuelled that I developed a six pack just watching it but it was also an episode so sad that I cried myself into dehydration. There seems to be an unspecified time lapse between last episode and this one as it is no longer winter in Rome. The rebels and the Romans pursuing them have traveled far through Rome, presumably stopping every few days to fight each other. Unhappy with the tactic of constantly running away, Crixus disbands from Spartacus and takes like-minded individuals with him in an all out attack on Rome while Spartacus takes the other rebels who cannot or do not want to fight to a place where they will hopefully be safe from the Roman threat. I was very pleased that Crixus and Spartacus parted on friendly terms. Their dynamic this episode was brilliant and their scenes together were absolutely fabulous without fault. The split between Crixus and Spartacus was also an absolutely amazing plot device for other truly emotional scenes and heavy decisions such as Gannicus choosing to follow Spartacus and thus, not fight against Rome and Agron parting ways with Nasir. On the subject of Agron and Nasir, that was the only criticism I have with rebel storyline. Both the Agron, Nasir and Castus love triangle and the Gannicus, Saxa and Sibyl love triangle are boring and only feel half-hearted. The rest of the writing is so brilliant but these pedestrian love plots feel out of place and a bit boring compared to the rest of the show. In the Roman camp, Crassus is under great pressure to stop the rebellion and Tiberius and Caesar are at each others throats even more than usual. This animosity culminating in a shocking scene in which Tiberius rapes Caesar proving that Tiberius can be an even more vile, dislikable character than he already was. This episode is not about the Romans. They have little presence this week beyond being that of a threat to the rebels and that is good. The small amount of time that was dedicated to the Roman story line was used brilliantly and while the rebel story line was clearly more exciting, the Roman story kept up with the intensity of the rebel plot making for a small but worthy distraction from the major Crixus-centric story.