I disagree with the camerawork, which shows lots of memorable images (like the funeral sequence). I suppose the film's real problem is that Stephen Boyd and Sophia Loren- although capable actors in other films- failed to make their leading characters more impressionable. One wonders if original Livius choice Charlton Heston would have been successful if he had decided to swallow his pride and work with Loren again.
The film flopped for several reasons. Biographer Mel Martin gives that the film's downbeat ending was too much for American audiences still going through a lost of innocence when Kennedy was killed. Another reason is that by 1964 the attraction to Ancient Epic spectacles had waned, and audiences had had enough of the genre. They had already suffered fatigue from the CLEOPATRA hoopla the previous year, and the next year people stayed away from George Stevens' THE GREATEST STORY EVER TOLD.
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