

Spartacus
1926 Directed by Muhsin ErtuğrulThe owner of the gladiator school buys two slaves, the Thracian Spartacus and the Gaul Artorix. During the first fight in the arena, Spartacus wins over the Colloseum audience and his freedom. When freed from gladiator slavery, Spartacus calls slaves and Rome plebs for a rebel. The dictator Sulla dies. Spartacus and rebellious slaves lay out a camp near Vesuvius. The Roman commander Crassus is unable to take Spartacus’s camp by storm, so he lays siege to it. Spartacus is betrayed; he dies with his friend Artorix in a battle. The film is based on Raffaello Giovagnoli’s novel of the same name.

Mykola Deinar
....................................................Spartacus

Matviy Lyarov
....................................................Sulla, a Roman dictator
Brodskaya
....................................................Valeria, Sulla's wife

Ivan Kononenko-Kozelskyi
....................................................Oktomanus, a gladiator
Osyp Merlatti
....................................................Meneniy, gladiator

Serhii Minin
....................................................Artorix, a gladiator

Vasyl Liudvynskyi
....................................................Spartacus’s brother
Director
...........................................................Muhsin Ertuğrul
Writer
...........................................................Geo Shkurupii
Mykhailo Halperin
Original Music Composer
...........................................................Aram Khachaturyan
Novel
...........................................................Raffaello Giovagnoli
Director of Photography
...........................................................Marius Holdt
Production Design
...........................................................Heinrich Beisenherz
Production Companies
...................................................VUFKU
Production Countries
........................................................Soviet Union
Spoken Languages
....................................................Genres
....................................................Drama
History
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