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Cleopatra (Full Movie)

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    Welcome to Alexandria, Caesar
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    King Ptolemy awaits you
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    How old are you?
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    How old are you?
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    Old enough to rule, Caesar
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    Twelve
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    Twelve
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    I am old enough to rule
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    And you are?
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    I am Arsinoe, Queen of Egypt
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    Not according to your father
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    My father's dead
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    But he paid his debts to Rome, Arsinoe
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    Caesar, if I may explain
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    Who is this man?
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    Pothinus
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    The king's prime minister
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    Later
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    Where is your eldest sister?
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    Cleopatra has left the country
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    Yes
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    Do you have our money?
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    Cleopatra's scheming has brought
    our country to its knees
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    Under the present circumstances
    unfortunately,
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    we are unable to pay our debt to Rome
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    That is no problem, I'll simply take it
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    Great Caesar
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    Go on
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    If you were to support Arsinoe
    as Queen...
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    I will ensure the peace and prosperity
    of this nation
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    Caesar
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    Where is your army?
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    Pelusium
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    Oh... defending Egypt from Cleopatra?
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    She must be very dangerous to you
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    I'd like to meet this girl
    who calls herself a goddess
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    Come with me
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    Who are you?
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    I'm Olympos, the Queen's physician
    Quickly!
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    Olympos, this woman, she's a whore!
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    So I'm told, Mardian
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    Come
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    What is your name?
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    Jehosheba, Your Majesty
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    I'm told you're the most accomplished
    courtesan of Ashkelon
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    I want a man to fall in love with me
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    I see...
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    but there is so much to tell...
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    Is there an art to it?
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    To making love?
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    Oh yes
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    Men like to be touched
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    But every man is different
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    This man is a conqueror
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    Such a man is easy to take to bed
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    but it is harder to hold his interest
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    You must always make him believe
    no matter how much you've given him
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    there is still more to conquer
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    Remarkable, isn't it?
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    It is, indeed
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    They say you can see
    the beam thirty miles out to see
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    What news on Ptolemy's army?
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    They haven't moved, still at the border,
    guarding against Cleopatra
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    How many men?
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    Twenty thousand
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    If they turn on us, we'll be outnumbered
    five to one
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    Hail Caesar
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    Ahenobarbus
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    We've loaded six ships with grain
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    Good, that'll be enough to cover
    Ptolemy's debt to us for the moment
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    We don't want the people to starve
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    Most of the grain has been taken
    by the Royal Army...
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    for its war against Cleopatra
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    What's left is being plundered
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    Bring me the Royal Storemaster
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    Mighty Caesar, you must believe me!
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    I had no part in stealing that grain!
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    Execute him
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    No, no please! I can return it!
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    It was Pothinus! It was Pothinus!
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    Pothinus! He's probably selling it
    to our enemies in the East
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    Pity one cannot castrate a eunuch
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    What is going on out there?
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    I'm sorry, Imperator,
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    but this man says he has a gift for you
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    A beautiful rug, Sire!
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    From Queen Cleopatra
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    From Cleopatra?
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    Leave it there
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    But you haven't examined it yet!
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    Tomorrow
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    But your Majesty... I mean, Sire!
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    Queen Cleopatra insisted
    I unroll it in your presence! At once!
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    Then do so
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    How many men do we have
    guarding the harbor?
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    Two centuries
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    Triple them
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    We musn't lose control of the port
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    Position them,
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    here, and here
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    If they attack,
    the harbor is the only way out
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    You're very young to be a goddess
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    I am the daughter of Isis
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    Cleopatra
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    Caesar
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    And what brings you to Caesar?
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    My father was a loyal ally to Rome,
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    and it was me he crowned
    before he died
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    I am the true ruler of Egypt
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    Your sister thinks differently
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    Arsinoe is a liar
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    And young Ptolemy?
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    A witless boy who's being manipulated
    by a deceitful regent
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    It's in your interest to set things right
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    And why should I choose you over them?
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    I am my father's successor
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    The people know this,
    they will support me
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    The people! The people
    would be quite happy to see you...
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    and every last member of this dynasty
    fed to the crocodiles of the Nile
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    I'm tired, I'm sure you must be too
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    You should go to bed now
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    Where?
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    Once it's known I'm in the palace,
    my family will have me killed
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    There is only one bed that's safe for me
    yours
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    I don't think that would be prudent
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    Caesar is not known for his prudence,
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    but for his boldness
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    This is not necessary
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    It will not affect my power of decision
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    I never touch a woman
    who doesn't wish me to
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    Nor will you tonight
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    You're trembling
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    Are you afraid of me?
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    No, I fear no one
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    You've never done this before,
    have you?
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    Who are you, Cleopatra?
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    Are you someone I can trust?
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    I am Egypt
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    And Egypt is yours,
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    for one night only
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    We must take immediate steps...
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    to restore the peoples' confidence
    in their leaders
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    Or Egypt will plunge into anarchy
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    Agreed?
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    Certainly
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    And what better way to achieve
    this stability
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    than for Caesar to proclaim
    Arsinoe and Ptolemy...
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    What is she doing here?
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    She came in to see me last night
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    We had an interesting... conversation
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    I'm surprised that Great Caesar would
    discuss anything with Egypt's enemy!
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    He was eager to learn the truth
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    how you and Pothinus conspired
    to get rid of me,
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    how you poisoned our brother's thoughts
    against me!
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    Poisoned his thoughts?
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    There was no need for that
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    Even a mere boy can see
    what a treacherous, scheming...
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    You were the one that had betrayed...
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    Silence!
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    Both of you!
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    You have two very high spirited sisters
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    Caesar, if you will allow me...
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    Young Ptolemy,
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    so long as your late father continued to
    pay his debts to Rome
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    Rome always respected
    Egypt's sovereignty
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    You will continue to rule as king,
    with your sister...
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    ...Cleopatra as queen
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    This is outrageous!
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    Furthermore, I have decided that
    you and Cleopatra will marry
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    Never!
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    I will not marry a child!
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    You're an Egyptian princess
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    According to ancient Egyptian tradition,
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    royal incest between brother and sister
    is quite acceptable
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    however distasteful inbreeding
    may seem to others
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    In this case it will serve its purpose
    and preserve the unity of Egypt
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    Don't pretend you care about Egypt
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    I care very much about Egypt,
    Egypt is a source of great wealth
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    I will not have you to bankrupt
    the country in a civil war
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    What about me?
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    You can have Cyprus
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    I'll restore it to the House of Ptolemy
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    Cyprus? It's not enough!
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    Caesar, may I ask if...
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    Pothinus... your services to the king
    will be rewarded, that will be all
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    Queen Cleopatra, you may stay
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    How could you do that?
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    I just made you the Queen of Egypt
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    Am I supposed to thank you?
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    Understand
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    I didn't do this out of courtesy,
    and certainly not out of infatuation
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    I expect you to bring order to
    this country, and pay your debts to Rome
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    I am simply ensuring the future of
    my investment
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    The sooner I am out of this viper's nest,
    the better
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    Viper's nest?
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    You made it so!
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    I made it so?
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    Yes, you with your Roman greed
    and arrogance!
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    Blackmailing my father year after year,
    forcing him to buy peace with Rome!
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    If I would have been ruler,
    you would have had war instead!
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    And you would have lost everything!
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    Learn to be a queen
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    I am a queen!
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    No you are not, not yet
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    You must learn to think like a queen
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    Strategically
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    Now you start by accepting
    a joint monarchy with Ptolemy,
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    so we can demobilize his army
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    My friends,
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    let us all wear the garlands of gladness
    and celebration
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    Today King Ptolemy and
    Queen Cleopatra have consented to
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    live in harmony as man and wife,
    and rule as one
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    With peace and friendship now restored
    amongst the royal household,
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    there is no longer need for show of arms
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    It gives me great pleasure to honor and
    entrust our most respected friend...
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    Pothinus the task of carrying this
    great news most urgently to Pelusium,
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    there to disband the royal army,
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    and bring the soldiers home in peace
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    Caesar's personal escort awaits you
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    Pothinus cannot be trusted
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    If you send him to Pelusium,
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    he'll take control of the army
    for his own purposes
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    Walk with me
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    Sometimes it is necessary to strike first,
    Cleopatra
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    It's well you did so
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    You're not shocked?
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    Shocked?
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    Such things as this are not strange
    to me
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    Open negotiations
    with the Egyptian generals
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    Send them his head
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    Your Majesty?
    I wasn't expecting to see you...
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    You idiot!
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    Why did you let Cleopatra get past you?
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    Alert your warships to set sail
    for Alexandria
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    We march at first light, c'mon
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    Caesar! Caesar! Caesar!
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    What is it?
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    Forgive me, Imperator
    Arsinoe is gone
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    Ptolemy too
    They've both vanished from the city
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    They've gone to Pelusium
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    To Ptolemy's army
    To drive us both out of Alexandria
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    Assemble my staff at once
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    We must defend here, here and here
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    I'll need more men
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    Reinforcements are days away
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    We must hold the harbour
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    Otherwise the enemy will smash
    our fleet
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    Caesar, the Egyptians are on the march
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    They will attack by land and sea
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    The enemy numbers are too great
    We cannot hold
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    we will lose all
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    Abandon the harbour
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    We let them into the city!
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    But there is no way out
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    If we lose, you lose your empire
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    This battle does not have to be fought
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    Return to Rome
    Caesar, you have no choice
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    No! Caesar is right!
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    If we fight within the walls of the city,
    we can trap them
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    All streets lead to the palace square
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    Destroy them there Caesar
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    You read my mind, Cleopatra
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    There is always choice, Rufio
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    We will fight them in the streets
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    and when victory is
    within the palms of their hands,
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    we strike with all our might
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    My countrymen, you and I
    have risked all before
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    and won, now we raise the stakes
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    The prize is Egypt
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    Cornelius
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    Let them in
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    Let them in!
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    Let them into the city!
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    Charge!
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    Stop those horses!
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    Rufio, Rufio, those flames!
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    That's my library burning!
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    I have to do something!
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    No, Your majesty, it's too dangerous
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    The rebel horsemen
    have broken through!
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    We must find somewhere safe
    Your Majesty!
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    Your Majesty!
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    Your Majesty! Your Majesty!
    Are you hurt?
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    Forgive me, Your Majesty
    I can't let you leave the palace!
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    You must help me, Rufio!
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    Our greatest treasure is burning!
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    Forward!
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    Go back! Go back!
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    Fight for your Queen!
    Fight for your Queen!
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    Victory!
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    Where is she?
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    Caesar
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    There...
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    I'm sorry about your library
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    Half of it is gone
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    Half of the world's knowledge
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    You'll have a scar here
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    It's nothing
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    I lost seven hundred men today
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    but won my greatest victory
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    What about Arsinoe and Ptolemy?
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    They haven't found them yet
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    They won't get far
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    Then it's not over yet
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    Faster!
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    Go!
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    Go!
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    Surrender!
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    No!
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    Ptolemy is dead!
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    You are now the sole ruler of Egypt
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    What do you intend to do?
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    I will unite this land and bring prosperity
    back to my country
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    Egypt's debt to Caesar will be paid
    Abundantly
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    Where is Arsinoe?
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    We've taken her prisoner
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    And?
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    You've had my brother killed
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    why haven't you killed her?
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    You are going to keep her, aren't you?
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    And use her against me?
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    Arsinoe is valuable to me
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    She's mine
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    No
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    Your Majesty? Your Majesty
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    Where is she?
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    I'm sorry, Your Majesty
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    My orders are to allow no visitors
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    I'm the queen of Egypt, and you are
    in my palace, step aside
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    Are you going to kill me now?
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    Not just yet
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    Tell me, Arsinoe
    do you grieve for our poor brother?
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    Do you? He was your enemy, as I am
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    You made him so
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    I was only trying to protect him from you
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    you who would do anything to
    guarantee your power
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    Even turn yourself into Caesar's whore
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    I'm not his whore, I'm his conqueror!
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    You've given away our kingdom!
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    You killed our father!
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    That's a lie!
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    You tried to poison his mind,
    turn him against me
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    And when he wouldn't listen,
    you poisoned his body!
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    You murdered him!
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    It's not true! I loved father!
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    You don't know what love is
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    You with all your jealousy and greed,
    your lust for power
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    you sicken me!
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    But it will end tonight
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    If you kill me,
    Caesar will turn against you!
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    He'll see you for what you really are!
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    A snake and a whore!
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    Do you think Caesar will still want you
    on the throne of Egypt,
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    after he grows tired of you in his bed?
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    Do you, Caesar's whore? Do you?
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    You went against me... why?
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    I had to
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    It's in your blood
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    Sisters killing sisters,
    fathers killing daughters
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    Is Rome so different?
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    It's over now
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    I'm putting an end to it
    before my children are born
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    Never cross me again
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    I feel like I'm in paradise
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    Thank you for bringing me here
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    Why did you resist me?
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    Because I'm Roman
  • 39:58 - 40:01
    Because I hate idleness
  • 40:03 - 40:06
    Because... erotic sensuality...
  • 40:08 - 40:09
    is a kind of treason
  • 40:13 - 40:16
    Then Egypt is conquering Rome,
    my lord
  • 40:16 - 40:17
    I don't care!
  • 40:21 - 40:22
    Do I make you happy?
  • 40:23 - 40:24
    Yes
  • 40:43 - 40:46
    Look, Egypt's wealth
  • 40:47 - 40:48
    Your prize
  • 40:53 - 40:55
    With Egypt's bounty
    you can conquer the East
  • 40:55 - 40:57
    The whole world
  • 41:00 - 41:02
    You forget, I read your mind
  • 41:06 - 41:11
    Do it, together, Egypt and Rome
  • 41:11 - 41:14
    The greatest empire the world
    has ever known
  • 41:14 - 41:15
    Caesar and Cleopatra
  • 41:15 - 41:16
    A new dynasty
  • 41:19 - 41:24
    I'm pleased to see your ambitions are of
    such manageable proportions my queen
  • 41:25 - 41:26
    Your queen?
  • 41:28 - 41:30
    And your Roman wife?
  • 41:30 - 41:31
    What of her?
  • 41:31 - 41:33
    I haven't seen her for years
  • 41:36 - 41:38
    Has she given you any children?
  • 41:40 - 41:41
    I had a daughter
  • 41:42 - 41:43
    Julia
  • 41:46 - 41:47
    she died
  • 42:02 - 42:03
    Look
  • 42:22 - 42:24
    She's glorious
  • 42:28 - 42:31
    No one knows who made her, or why
  • 42:33 - 42:40
    She's a mystery, just like you
  • 42:44 - 42:46
    She guards the tombs of the dead kings
  • 42:48 - 42:49
    The pyramids
  • 42:51 - 42:53
    Forgotten kings whose
    only enduring memory...
  • 42:53 - 42:57
    are their tombs and this stone god...
  • 42:58 - 43:01
    crumbling and wasting into desert sand
  • 43:07 - 43:08
    How futile
  • 43:13 - 43:14
    A city of the dead
  • 43:22 - 43:24
    Only gods live forever
  • 43:27 - 43:28
    I must return to Rome
  • 43:29 - 43:30
    No, stay with me here in Egypt
  • 43:31 - 43:33
    When I am with you, I lose myself
  • 43:38 - 43:40
    You have enchanted me, Cleopatra
  • 43:42 - 43:44
    I must return
  • 43:44 - 43:47
    No, no
  • 43:47 - 43:50
    I am determined to conquer
    and rule this world
  • 43:52 - 43:53
    I will not leave crumbling stone behind,
  • 43:53 - 43:58
    but a new world order that
    will change the present
  • 44:00 - 44:02
    and shape the lives of history to come
  • 44:06 - 44:08
    King Pharnaces has overrun
    our province in Pontus
  • 44:08 - 44:11
    All the Roman citizens there
    have been killed or castrated
  • 44:11 - 44:12
    What else?
  • 44:12 - 44:14
    Marc Antony sent an urgent dispatch
    from Rome
  • 44:14 - 44:16
    Your enemies are stirring up the Senate
    against you,
  • 44:17 - 44:18
    Brutus in particular
  • 44:18 - 44:19
    What's he saying now?
  • 44:20 - 44:21
    That you've lost interest
    in the affairs of the Republic,
  • 44:21 - 44:23
    preferring a life of luxury in Egypt
  • 44:23 - 44:24
    Luxury?
  • 44:34 - 44:35
    He's right
  • 44:39 - 44:40
    Well?
  • 44:43 - 44:44
    You're pregnant
  • 44:45 - 44:47
    I knew it!
  • 44:50 - 44:52
    I thought I gave you something to
    prevent this from happening
  • 44:53 - 44:54
    Perhaps I wanted this child
  • 44:55 - 44:55
    Why?
  • 44:56 - 44:58
    Oh, because it will be Caesar's
  • 44:58 - 45:01
    He'll protect his child,
    and Egypt along with it
  • 45:01 - 45:04
    But he'll never be allowed to
    claim the child
  • 45:05 - 45:08
    Rome won't tolerate the mixing of
    Caesar's blood...
  • 45:08 - 45:09
    with that of an eastern queen
  • 45:10 - 45:12
    He has already shaken Rome
    to its foundations
  • 45:12 - 45:13
    He can do anything he wants
  • 45:13 - 45:15
    He is a god!
  • 45:20 - 45:22
    I've known you since childhood
  • 45:23 - 45:24
    Tell me the truth
  • 45:25 - 45:29
    are you plotting strategy,
    or have you fallen in love?
  • 45:31 - 45:33
    Perhaps there is no difference
  • 45:35 - 45:36
    When will you tell him?
  • 45:45 - 45:46
    I'm leaving you three legions
  • 45:47 - 45:49
    That'll be enough to keep the peace
  • 45:50 - 45:52
    Guard Cleopatra with your life,
  • 45:52 - 45:54
    let no harm come to her
  • 45:55 - 45:56
    Make sure she does no harm to Rome
  • 45:59 - 46:00
    What are you doing?
  • 46:00 - 46:02
    Leaving my Life of luxury.
  • 46:03 - 46:04
    Now?
  • 46:04 - 46:06
    How long do you suggest I wait?
  • 46:06 - 46:07
    I have a war to fight
  • 46:07 - 46:11
    and I have to remind the Roman Senate
    who's in charge
  • 46:13 - 46:15
    I have to tell you something
  • 46:17 - 46:18
    Well, what is it?
  • 46:25 - 46:26
    I need you here
  • 46:27 - 46:28
    Egypt needs you
  • 46:29 - 46:31
    Egypt will have to wait
  • 46:31 - 46:33
    Well, don't you want to
    protect your investment?
  • 46:33 - 46:36
    I am facing famine, revolts, riots, you...
  • 46:36 - 46:39
    You are the Queen of Egypt
    I leave that to you
  • 46:47 - 46:51
    If you leave me now,
    you will lose your greatest province
  • 46:52 - 46:53
    You'll lose me!
  • 46:55 - 47:00
    Cleopatra! I will come back!
  • 47:00 - 47:02
    The gods are not that cruel
  • 47:02 - 47:05
    But these things must be done
  • 47:07 - 47:11
    For a brief moment,
    you and I were alone in the world
  • 47:13 - 47:15
    Now that moment is over
  • 47:19 - 47:21
    Rome must be avenged,
  • 47:22 - 47:24
    and my power restored
  • 47:37 - 47:39
    May Isis protect you
  • 48:10 - 48:14
    Now we all know what happened
    in Pontus
  • 48:15 - 48:18
    Roman territories invaded,
  • 48:19 - 48:22
    Roman legions wiped out!
  • 48:22 - 48:26
    Silence! Let Brutus speak!
  • 48:26 - 48:29
    Roman women and children
    slaughtered!
  • 48:30 - 48:33
    And where is mighty Caesar?
  • 48:34 - 48:38
    Dallying in Egypt, with his foreign queen!
  • 48:38 - 48:41
    His absence is an outrage!
  • 48:41 - 48:44
    I object! I object!
  • 48:45 - 48:49
    Your disrespect for Caesar is as vile as
    your seditious chatter!
  • 48:50 - 48:53
    How dare you accuse the man
    who conquered Gaul,
  • 48:53 - 48:55
    who extended the reach of Rome
    beyond our dreams!
  • 48:56 - 49:00
    Marc Antony, I would never show
    disrespect for Caesar's ambition
  • 49:00 - 49:04
    But you have never credited
    his character or his compassion
  • 49:05 - 49:08
    Octavius, you love your uncle
  • 49:08 - 49:10
    I love Caesar,
  • 49:10 - 49:13
    but he's neglecting Rome
  • 49:14 - 49:19
    He is wasting his time
    in a useless desert province
  • 49:19 - 49:21
    I wouldn't call Egypt Useless
  • 49:22 - 49:24
    It's essential to the Roman Empire
  • 49:25 - 49:29
    Caesar has shamed Rome
    by his adulterous behavior!
  • 49:29 - 49:31
    Lies, lies!
  • 49:31 - 49:34
    Whatever Caesar does,
    he does for a reason
  • 49:34 - 49:36
    He does for Rome!
  • 49:36 - 49:39
    But Antony, can you ignore
    his indifference...
  • 49:39 - 49:43
    while his fellow countrymen,
    his fellow Romans are being butchered?
  • 49:43 - 49:45
    Who will put down this insurrection
    in Pontus?
  • 49:46 - 49:47
    Who will avenge Rome?
  • 49:47 - 49:50
    It will not be you and your rhetoric, Brutus
  • 49:50 - 49:51
    It will be Caesar!
  • 49:52 - 49:56
    That's very good, Antony
    If we can find him!
  • 49:57 - 49:59
    You have found him
  • 50:12 - 50:13
    You were saying, Brutus?
  • 50:14 - 50:15
    Senate!
  • 50:19 - 50:22
    Welcome home, Imperator
  • 50:31 - 50:34
    This man slit his brother's throat
    over a gambling debt
  • 50:35 - 50:37
    Execute him
  • 50:37 - 50:44
    This man was drunk and, uh,
    drowned his four young children
  • 50:45 - 50:46
    His own children?
  • 50:48 - 50:50
    Execution
  • 50:52 - 50:55
    Greetings, exalted queen
  • 50:55 - 50:57
    I have news for you
  • 50:58 - 51:01
    Charmian, Iras, quickly! Your hands...
  • 51:05 - 51:07
    He's already got Caesar's strength
  • 51:12 - 51:15
    Rufio, I hope you've kept your promise
  • 51:15 - 51:19
    It would displease me greatly
    if word of this reached Rome
  • 51:19 - 51:22
    Your secret is safe with me,
    Your Majesty
  • 51:22 - 51:25
    I have news from Caesar
  • 51:29 - 51:31
    It's a copy of his Senate report
  • 51:32 - 51:35
    Mardian, he has conquered Pontus!
  • 51:38 - 51:39
    Is that one from Caesar?
  • 51:41 - 51:45
    It's an invitation for you,
    to visit him in Rome
  • 51:47 - 51:50
    It's not even signed by him
    It's from one of his aides!
  • 51:50 - 51:53
    It's more like a summons
  • 51:53 - 51:56
    He wants me in attendance
    when he celebrates his victory
  • 51:59 - 52:01
    Why hasn't he written to me himself?
  • 52:02 - 52:05
    Well... he does have the whole world
    on his mind, Your Majesty
  • 52:06 - 52:07
    Perhaps it was not convenient for him
    to write...
  • 52:07 - 52:09
    Not convenient?
  • 52:11 - 52:15
    Perhaps it's not convenient for me
    to leave Egypt
  • 52:22 - 52:28
    Tell his aide I've declined his invitation
  • 52:31 - 52:32
    I beg your pardon?
  • 52:34 - 52:35
    I am the queen of Egypt!
  • 52:36 - 52:40
    I only go where I want,
    and when it pleases me to do so
  • 52:41 - 52:43
    You may be excused, Rufio
  • 52:47 - 52:48
    Next case
  • 52:50 - 52:54
    This man assaulted a Roman officer while breaking into a granary
  • 52:54 - 52:55
    Oh, execute...
  • 52:57 - 52:59
    Did you say he attacked
    a Roman officer?
  • 52:59 - 53:00
    Yes
  • 53:11 - 53:12
    What is your name?
  • 53:12 - 53:14
    Guevarius
  • 53:15 - 53:17
    Why did you steal my grain?
  • 53:18 - 53:21
    Have you failed to notice that
    your people are starving?
  • 53:21 - 53:22
    Are you blind?
  • 53:27 - 53:29
    No wonder the people hate you
  • 53:30 - 53:32
    they're your children,
    but you care nothing for them
  • 53:33 - 53:34
    You give them nothing but fear
  • 53:34 - 53:38
    But I'm not afraid of you,
    Queen Cleopatra...
  • 53:39 - 53:40
    Set him free
  • 53:41 - 53:43
    Pardon my intrusion, Your Majesty
  • 53:45 - 53:46
    This man assaulted a Roman soldier
  • 53:46 - 53:48
    It's therefore a Roman matter
  • 53:49 - 53:53
    Then why was his death warrant
    brought to me for my approval?
  • 53:54 - 53:56
    That was a courtesy
  • 53:58 - 53:59
    Nevertheless, he had cause
  • 54:04 - 54:05
    Release him at once!
  • 54:18 - 54:20
    The granary is full, is it not?
  • 54:20 - 54:22
    To the brim, Your Majesty
  • 54:23 - 54:25
    It's full, and the people are starving
  • 54:25 - 54:28
    It's been reserved for export to Rome,
    Your Majesty
  • 54:30 - 54:32
    My father's eternal debt to Caesar
  • 54:37 - 54:38
    It's time to put a stop to it...
  • 54:39 - 54:40
    No, Your Majesty! No!
  • 54:44 - 54:47
    Your Majesty, come away from here!
  • 54:47 - 54:49
    Return to the palace and wait there...
  • 54:50 - 54:51
    I'll handle this
  • 54:51 - 54:54
    Wait for what? Another civil war?
  • 54:54 - 54:56
    I can't protect you here!
  • 55:09 - 55:10
    Open it
  • 55:16 - 55:19
    My grain is the people's grain,
    not the Roman's
  • 55:20 - 55:22
    Come! Take it!
  • 55:23 - 55:25
    If we take it, they'll kill us
  • 55:26 - 55:29
    In the name of my unborn child,
  • 55:29 - 55:34
    no Roman shall touch a single grain
    until the people of Egypt are fed!
  • 55:34 - 55:37
    Commander, withdraw your men
  • 55:55 - 55:56
    Take it!
  • 55:57 - 55:58
    It's yours!
  • 56:01 - 56:03
    Trust me, I am not your enemy
  • 56:04 - 56:05
    Take it!
  • 56:39 - 56:40
    Cleopatra!
  • 56:41 - 56:43
    Send for the midwives
  • 56:46 - 56:47
    Oh Isis
  • 56:53 - 56:56
    There, breathe deeply
  • 57:12 - 57:14
    Push! Push!
  • 57:34 - 57:35
    Where is he?
  • 57:39 - 57:40
    Bring him to me
  • 57:51 - 57:53
    He's small, but strong
  • 57:56 - 57:57
    What will you call him?
  • 58:02 - 58:03
    Ptolemy Caesar
  • 58:04 - 58:06
    What? You can't call him that!
  • 58:06 - 58:08
    Not without Caesar's permission!
  • 58:09 - 58:11
    I'll name him whatever I choose
  • 58:12 - 58:13
    That's a dangerous fantasy
  • 58:14 - 58:16
    Caesar can't even acknowledge him
    as his own son,
  • 58:17 - 58:18
    much less proclaim him his heir!
  • 58:19 - 58:20
    My dearest queen
  • 58:20 - 58:23
    You're forcing the hand of
    the most powerful man in the world
  • 58:27 - 58:28
    Are there many people out there?
  • 58:29 - 58:30
    All of Egypt.
  • 58:33 - 58:34
    What're you doing?
  • 58:35 - 58:37
    You've just given birth!
  • 58:37 - 58:40
    My people need to see me
  • 59:01 - 59:05
    Here is the prince of Egypt!
  • 59:07 - 59:14
    Here is the son of Caesar!
    Ptolemy Caesar!
  • 59:17 - 59:20
    l shall present him to his father
  • 59:20 - 59:23
    l shall go to Rome!
  • 59:49 - 59:50
    lt's Caesar!
  • 60:03 - 60:04
    Queen Cleopatra
  • 60:07 - 60:08
    Your Highness?
  • 60:14 - 60:15
    Hello?
  • 60:20 - 60:21
    Who are you?
  • 60:22 - 60:23
    l'm Marc Antony,
  • 60:24 - 60:26
    the lmperator's Master of the horse
  • 60:27 - 60:30
    l apologize for Caesar not being able to
    greet you personally,
  • 60:31 - 60:33
    but there's delicate business in Rome
    that he must attend to
  • 60:34 - 60:36
    He begged me to reassure you of
    his esteem...
  • 60:37 - 60:38
    and affection for your royal person
  • 60:39 - 60:40
    Especially the affection
  • 60:44 - 60:47
    Wait for me outside... horsemaster...
  • 61:01 - 61:02
    Put the baby in a separate litter
  • 61:03 - 61:05
    Keep him well out of sight, go!
  • 61:12 - 61:13
    How do you like our fine country?
  • 61:16 - 61:18
    Of course, it must be hard to see
    from inside there
  • 61:20 - 61:21
    Do you smell that pine in the air?
  • 61:22 - 61:23
    lt's invigorating, isn't it?
  • 61:26 - 61:27
    You know, l used to hunt here as a boy
  • 61:27 - 61:30
    What exactly does it mean to be...
    Master of the Horse?
  • 61:32 - 61:33
    lt means that l serve Caesar
  • 61:33 - 61:36
    That l have his trust, and his friendship
  • 61:40 - 61:41
    Then you're his servant?
  • 61:41 - 61:45
    No, l'm a commander in his army
  • 62:03 - 62:06
    Caesar's villa is yours to use
    for as long as you like
  • 62:07 - 62:09
    Where does he live with his wife?
  • 62:10 - 62:14
    Their principle house in the city,
    near the Temple of Vesta in the Forum
  • 62:15 - 62:16
    But this is the house he prefers
  • 62:17 - 62:19
    Understandably, because it has this..
  • 62:20 - 62:21
    A view
  • 62:32 - 62:34
    lt looks so peaceful
  • 62:36 - 62:38
    Peaceful as a sleeping wolf
  • 62:39 - 62:42
    lt's a dangerous place right now,
    especially for Caesar
  • 62:42 - 62:43
    What do you mean?
  • 62:44 - 62:47
    The more powerful he grows,
    the more vulnerable he becomes
  • 62:49 - 62:52
    Romans tend to distrust a man
    that sets himself above them
  • 62:52 - 62:53
    And you?
  • 62:54 - 62:56
    Do you distrust him?
  • 62:56 - 62:58
    Me? No, l love him
  • 62:59 - 63:01
    He is greatness itself
  • 63:06 - 63:07
    Well! l must be going
  • 63:08 - 63:11
    Please communicate anything
    you should require
  • 63:12 - 63:14
    When will Caesar come to me?
  • 63:15 - 63:18
    He has arranged a welcome reception
    for you tomorrow at his house...
  • 63:18 - 63:19
    before the Triumph parade
  • 63:21 - 63:23
    Until then, Majesty
  • 64:06 - 64:08
    How dare you send me no letters!
  • 64:08 - 64:10
    How dare you send me Horsemaster!
  • 64:19 - 64:20
    What's that?
  • 64:22 - 64:25
    There's someone l want to introduce
    to you
  • 64:39 - 64:40
    Come here, come here, my love
  • 64:44 - 64:44
    Whose is it?
  • 64:46 - 64:48
    His name is Ptolemy Caesar,
  • 64:49 - 64:52
    but l've taken to calling him Caesarian
  • 64:53 - 64:55
    He's mine?
  • 65:03 - 65:05
    You had a child...and you didn't tell me?
  • 65:19 - 65:21
    l never thought l'd have a son
  • 65:24 - 65:27
    He... l can see myself
  • 65:29 - 65:31
    Will you tell that to Rome?
  • 65:32 - 65:35
    l cannot claim this child as my own!
  • 65:36 - 65:38
    But he is yours
  • 65:39 - 65:43
    This will do me great harm in Rome
    He must remain a secret between us
  • 65:44 - 65:45
    Promise me...
  • 65:48 - 65:51
    Cleopatra, you must promise me...
  • 65:51 - 65:52
    for now
  • 65:56 - 65:58
    The Queen of Egypt!
  • 66:11 - 66:15
    Welcome to Rome, Your Highness,
    and to my home
  • 66:15 - 66:17
    We have all been most anxious
    to see you
  • 66:19 - 66:21
    My wife, Calpurnia
  • 66:23 - 66:25
    l'm honored to meet the wife
    of the great Caesar
  • 66:25 - 66:26
    The honor belongs to me, Your Majesty
  • 66:28 - 66:33
    Since my husband thinks of you
    so fondly, how can l not feel the same?
  • 66:36 - 66:40
    My nephew, Gaius Octavius
    And his sister, Octavia
  • 66:40 - 66:43
    You should get to know Octavius
    He is the future of Rome
  • 66:44 - 66:46
    ls that true, Octavius?
  • 66:46 - 66:48
    lt's Caesar's legacy that will be
    the future of Rome
  • 66:49 - 66:50
    Or its ruin
  • 66:52 - 66:57
    My harshest critic and dearest friend,
    Marcus Brutus
  • 66:57 - 67:01
    You express yourself with
    remarkable freedom, Marcus Brutus
  • 67:02 - 67:05
    ln Egypt, you would be strangled
    on the spot
  • 67:05 - 67:06
    lt's just Brutus' way
  • 67:06 - 67:06
    lt's the Roman way
  • 67:07 - 67:10
    There are no kings here, Your Majesty
  • 67:10 - 67:11
    You see, all men in Rome are equal
  • 67:12 - 67:15
    Those of us who love the Republic
    would like to keep it that way
  • 67:35 - 67:39
    Your country has proven to be rich
    in plunder for my husband
  • 67:40 - 67:42
    That's not plunder
  • 67:43 - 67:46
    Those are gifts that l gave freely
    to Caesar
  • 67:46 - 67:48
    Are you sure?
  • 67:49 - 67:52
    They're being displayed as spoils of war
  • 68:20 - 68:22
    The Queen of Egypt!
  • 68:44 - 68:46
    What are they saying?
  • 68:47 - 68:51
    l believe they're saying
    Caesar's Whore, Your Majesty
  • 69:24 - 69:26
    You know Brutus, now listen to me,
  • 69:27 - 69:29
    the problem is that our calendar
    is based on the moon,
  • 69:29 - 69:30
    which l find makes the year imprecise
  • 69:30 - 69:34
    Surely, you're not suggesting that you
    want to change the calendar, Caesar?
  • 69:34 - 69:35
    l want to improve it
  • 69:35 - 69:40
    By reordering the very days of our lives
    Surely that's the province of a god
  • 69:40 - 69:41
    The Queen of Egypt!
  • 69:55 - 69:57
    Greetings, Queen Cleopatra!
  • 69:57 - 69:58
    We welcome your return
  • 69:58 - 70:00
    You must forgive our Roman ways
  • 70:02 - 70:04
    lf the Queen thinks so little
    of our Roman ways,
  • 70:04 - 70:05
    perhaps she should go back to Egypt
  • 70:09 - 70:11
    You have enjoyed the spoils of war...
  • 70:11 - 70:14
    now let me show you
    Egypt's greatest treasure
  • 70:33 - 70:36
    This is your son...Ptolemy Caesar
  • 70:40 - 70:42
    l lay him at your feet
  • 71:00 - 71:01
    Why don't you pick him up?
  • 71:03 - 71:05
    That is not Caesar's son!
  • 71:05 - 71:07
    You have no proof of the matter!
  • 71:07 - 71:11
    Caesar, don't touch him!
    lf you touch him, you claim him
  • 71:58 - 72:13
    This is my son
    His name is Ptolemy Caesar
  • 72:23 - 72:25
    lt seems you have a rival, Octavius
  • 72:27 - 72:30
    l underestimated you, Cleopatra
    Do you know what you've just done?
  • 72:30 - 72:33
    You've forced my hand,
    in my own capitol
  • 72:33 - 72:35
    And what am l? A whore?
    Happy to bear you a bastard son?
  • 72:36 - 72:38
    l'm a queen! And Caesarian is your heir!
  • 72:38 - 72:41
    He is my son, Octavius is my heir
  • 72:41 - 72:43
    Octavius is not your flesh and blood!
  • 72:43 - 72:44
    He is Roman!
  • 72:44 - 72:46
    l should go back to Egypt,
  • 72:46 - 72:49
    where my son will grow up
    to have real power and fulfill his destiny
  • 72:49 - 72:50
    lf he is allowed to
  • 72:53 - 72:54
    Our son will only fulfill his destiny
  • 72:54 - 72:58
    if Egypt remains free and independent
    from Rome
  • 72:58 - 73:01
    And that is in my power
  • 73:01 - 73:03
    Egypt is only free because l wish it so
  • 73:04 - 73:07
    And you remain Queen solely
    at my pleasure
  • 73:14 - 73:16
    Because l fell in love with you
  • 73:22 - 73:24
    How much do you love me?
  • 73:25 - 73:27
    l would lose everything
    rather than lose you
  • 73:47 - 73:51
    There's danger here for you and our son
  • 73:52 - 73:54
    l'll send Marc Antony to protect you both
  • 73:55 - 74:00
    He's the one that l can trust
  • 74:00 - 74:00
    Caesar
  • 74:01 - 74:02
    Nephew
  • 74:03 - 74:05
    l'm very troubled
  • 74:06 - 74:07
    About what?
  • 74:08 - 74:09
    The Egyptian Queen
  • 74:09 - 74:11
    And that child she's tricked you
    into claiming as your own
  • 74:12 - 74:13
    The child is my own, Octavius
  • 74:14 - 74:17
    Caesar, Cleopatra is using you
    to advance her own fortunes
  • 74:17 - 74:18
    Everyone can see this but you
  • 74:18 - 74:20
    And now this child
  • 74:22 - 74:24
    you have to do something
  • 74:25 - 74:26
    Do what, Octavius?
  • 74:27 - 74:30
    Get rid of him
  • 74:31 - 74:32
    That child is a threat to you
  • 74:33 - 74:36
    My son is no threat to me, Octavius
    Neither is he to you
  • 74:42 - 74:44
    His life is in Egypt
  • 74:44 - 74:49
    But if you harm one hair
    on my boy's head, l'll finish you
  • 75:06 - 75:07
    l beg your pardon
  • 75:08 - 75:09
    l'll be very careful
  • 75:10 - 75:12
    You're quite the Dionysian
  • 75:13 - 75:14
    When it suits me, Your Highness
  • 75:27 - 75:28
    l've fought hundreds of men in my time,
  • 75:28 - 75:30
    but l must say,
    your presence disarms me
  • 75:31 - 75:32
    l envy Caesar
  • 75:33 - 75:35
    To fortunate Caesar, then
  • 75:36 - 75:39
    Beloved by the gods,
    to have you as a prize
  • 75:42 - 75:44
    When will he come to me?
  • 75:44 - 75:46
    Have you seen him?
  • 75:49 - 75:50
    What's the matter?
  • 76:26 - 76:27
    Caesarian
  • 76:31 - 76:32
    Come...
  • 76:40 - 76:41
    lt was Octavius
  • 76:41 - 76:43
    What?
  • 76:43 - 76:45
    Octavius is Caesar's heir!
    lt was he who tried to kill my son!
  • 76:48 - 76:49
    Go!
  • 77:03 - 77:04
    Who sent you?
  • 77:08 - 77:09
    Who sent you?
  • 77:21 - 77:23
    Hail Caesar! Hail Caesar!
  • 77:30 - 77:35
    Caesar's fame and his divine capacity
    for achievement...
  • 77:35 - 77:38
    transcend human experience
  • 77:40 - 77:43
    They are absolute and superhuman
  • 77:43 - 77:47
    l claim this title as a right
  • 77:49 - 77:53
    As dictator for life, and demigod
  • 77:54 - 77:56
    l will crush this rebellion in Spain
  • 77:56 - 77:59
    l will secure our borders
    in Syria and Africa,
  • 78:00 - 78:03
    and encircle the Mediterranean
    in a ring of iron
  • 78:03 - 78:10
    Then my countrymen, we will turn
    the might of Rome to the East,
  • 78:10 - 78:17
    for the conquest of our greatest enemy
    and for our greatest prize
  • 78:17 - 78:19
    Parthia!
  • 78:20 - 78:27
    The glory of Rome will shine
    greater than the sun!
  • 78:29 - 78:31
    Hail Caesar!
  • 78:31 - 78:33
    Hail Caesar! Hail Caesar!
  • 78:59 - 79:04
    Dictator for life, a king
  • 79:04 - 79:05
    A king
  • 79:06 - 79:11
    Oh Caesar, you need to shake yourself
    free of the pettiness of Roman thought
  • 79:11 - 79:16
    Claim more, not less
    Make them honor you as a god
  • 79:16 - 79:18
    No wonder l love you so much!
  • 79:18 - 79:22
    l'm going to claim my greatest prize
  • 79:22 - 79:23
    Parthia!
  • 79:24 - 79:25
    l need your help
  • 79:25 - 79:28
    We'll conquer it together Cleopatra...
    you and l
  • 79:28 - 79:33
    Egypt and Rome as allies, hand in hand
  • 79:33 - 79:36
    Do you dare to realize our great dream?
  • 79:38 - 79:40
    l will always dare, Caesar
  • 79:46 - 79:49
    But first, you must divorce Calpurnia,
  • 79:49 - 79:53
    marry me and proclaim Caesarian
    your heir
  • 79:53 - 79:55
    l can't do that
  • 79:56 - 79:58
    lt would finish Rome
  • 79:58 - 80:01
    Well, then finish it! Create
    something new! Something greater!
  • 80:03 - 80:04
    Caesar is Rome!
  • 80:05 - 80:07
    My ambitions are boundless,
  • 80:07 - 80:10
    but they're Roman ambitions
  • 80:10 - 80:13
    Then our dream is a lie
  • 80:14 - 80:20
    l should go back to Egypt where l am
    a queen and a goddess in my own right
  • 80:20 - 80:22
    and not merely your consort
  • 80:22 - 80:25
    No, l forbid it, you must stay with me
  • 80:25 - 80:28
    You forbid it? Are you giving me orders?
  • 80:28 - 80:31
    l didn't mean it like that
  • 80:32 - 80:35
    l meant,
    it would be to our mutual benefit...
  • 80:35 - 80:39
    What benefit is it to me? To Egypt?
  • 80:41 - 80:46
    lf you succeed against Parthia,
    l will still be Caesar's whore
  • 80:46 - 80:48
    And my son will still be his bastard
  • 80:49 - 80:53
    lf you fail, l will have the wrath of Parthia
    upon my people
  • 80:54 - 80:56
    Caesar will not fail
  • 81:00 - 81:02
    You don't believe me?
  • 81:09 - 81:10
    you don't, do you?
  • 81:11 - 81:12
    Answer me...
  • 81:12 - 81:14
    Why should l believe anything you say?
  • 81:14 - 81:19
    Should l believe you'll live tomorrow,
    or free my land,
  • 81:19 - 81:21
    or marry me, or be a true father?
  • 81:22 - 81:26
    When you can't even see your precious
    heir is trying to murder our son?
  • 81:26 - 81:28
    Do not speak against Octavius!
  • 81:28 - 81:32
    l will speak! l'm a mother,
    l know it in my heart
  • 81:32 - 81:37
    my child is in danger! Our child!
    The future of Rome!
  • 81:37 - 81:40
    His future is in Egypt...
  • 81:40 - 81:42
    His destiny is greater than that!
  • 81:42 - 81:45
    He joins two worlds! As your heir!
  • 81:45 - 81:51
    lt cannot be! lt will not be!
  • 81:58 - 82:00
    Then you are nothing to me! Nothing!
  • 82:09 - 82:13
    Caesar! Caesar, where are you going?
  • 82:19 - 82:20
    Go home to Egypt
  • 82:21 - 82:23
    l will conquer Parthia without you
  • 83:00 - 83:04
    ln the scared space of Rome,
    a statue to his whore
  • 83:04 - 83:06
    lt's preposterous
  • 83:07 - 83:09
    Such arrogance
  • 83:09 - 83:11
    A pity
  • 83:13 - 83:15
    He used to be strong
  • 83:16 - 83:20
    Now he's ruled by weakness...
    and indecent pleasure
  • 83:22 - 83:23
    He has a son
  • 83:25 - 83:27
    He will betray you too, Octavius
  • 83:28 - 83:30
    He listens now only to Cleopatra
  • 83:34 - 83:35
    What is it you want from me?
  • 83:36 - 83:38
    Stand with us against him
  • 83:39 - 83:40
    For the good of the Republic, Octavius
  • 83:43 - 83:45
    For Rome
  • 83:48 - 83:50
    l could never betray Caesar
  • 83:58 - 84:00
    But l won't stand against you
  • 84:19 - 84:20
    The gods seem troubled today
  • 84:30 - 84:31
    Caesar
  • 84:31 - 84:32
    Caesar
  • 84:32 - 84:35
    Mark Antony! Fulvia requests
    an immediate audience with you
  • 84:38 - 84:38
    Go on
  • 84:43 - 84:44
    Brutus
  • 84:44 - 84:47
    l cannot, and will not support this petition
  • 84:51 - 84:52
    Fulvia is not home today
  • 84:55 - 84:56
    l... l'm sure you are mistaken
  • 84:57 - 84:58
    No, l'm not
  • 85:01 - 85:03
    l am Caesar!
  • 85:03 - 85:04
    Do it!
  • 85:31 - 85:32
    Brutus
  • 85:55 - 85:57
    What's wrong, Your Majesty?
  • 85:59 - 86:00
    Something...
  • 86:10 - 86:12
    No Caesar!
  • 86:28 - 86:32
    My lord! My life! Villains!
  • 87:05 - 87:10
    Here lies the body of Caesar
  • 87:12 - 87:16
    Here lies the heart and soul of Rome
  • 87:16 - 87:18
    All this, he dreamed
  • 87:20 - 87:22
    All this, he built
  • 87:23 - 87:25
    All this, he conquered
  • 87:29 - 87:32
    Romans! Romans!
  • 87:33 - 87:39
    his dreams were too vast
    There are those who said that
  • 87:41 - 87:44
    Arrogance, they said
  • 87:44 - 87:46
    l say vision!
  • 87:47 - 87:51
    They could not abide his greatness,
  • 87:52 - 87:56
    because they felt too small beside it
  • 87:58 - 88:01
    So these small men...
  • 88:03 - 88:06
    They did this!
  • 88:07 - 88:10
    They cut the heart out of Rome!
  • 88:12 - 88:16
    You remember what
    they did to this man!
  • 88:17 - 88:22
    Because l swear to you, my countrymen,
    to my last, dying breath
  • 88:22 - 88:25
    l will avenge his death!
  • 88:35 - 88:37
    l will avenge his Caesar!
  • 88:40 - 88:42
    l will avenge his Rome!
  • 90:52 - 90:53
    Release
  • 91:09 - 91:13
    Cassius, Cassius
  • 91:55 - 91:58
    Marc Antony...let me die with honor!
  • 92:29 - 92:32
    No! No, please!
  • 92:34 - 92:36
    Have mercy...
  • 93:17 - 93:18
    Antony
  • 93:22 - 93:24
    Congratulations on your great victory
  • 93:24 - 93:27
    lt's a pity you were too ill to take part
  • 93:27 - 93:29
    There will be other battle
  • 93:29 - 93:30
    Yes, l'm sure of it
  • 93:32 - 93:33
    Cassius is dead
  • 93:35 - 93:36
    By his own hand
  • 93:36 - 93:38
    Excellent
  • 93:39 - 93:42
    lt's been a long, hard struggle...
  • 93:42 - 93:43
    Caesar's avenged
  • 93:44 - 93:45
    Three years is long enough
  • 93:45 - 93:47
    lt isn't over yet, Brutus is still at large
  • 94:01 - 94:04
    He too, perished by his own hand
  • 94:04 - 94:06
    Then he died a respectable death
  • 94:07 - 94:09
    Why did you do this?
  • 94:09 - 94:12
    Because l plan to take the traitor's head
    back to Rome
  • 94:13 - 94:14
    To lay at the head of Caesar's statue
  • 94:14 - 94:17
    Caesar would have never desecrated
    the bodies of his enemies
  • 94:19 - 94:21
    He murdered a Caesar!
  • 94:22 - 94:23
    He was an assassin!
  • 94:23 - 94:25
    And you are a butcher!
  • 94:42 - 94:45
    Octavius will invade Egypt
  • 94:45 - 94:46
    lt's just a matter of time
  • 94:47 - 94:48
    Octavius might be too busy,
    Your Majesty
  • 94:48 - 94:51
    He and Marc Antony are now
    ruling Rome as one
  • 94:52 - 94:54
    What do you make of that, Rufio?
  • 94:54 - 94:57
    Unlikely allies, Your Highness
  • 94:57 - 94:59
    Sooner or later, there will be
    a reckoning between them
  • 95:00 - 95:03
    And when that reckoning comes,
    which side will you choose?
  • 95:05 - 95:08
    How long can l rely on you
    to protect Egypt?
  • 95:09 - 95:10
    To my death, Your Majesty
  • 95:11 - 95:12
    lt was Caesar's wish
  • 95:12 - 95:15
    There was no mention of Caesarian
    in Caesar's will
  • 95:15 - 95:19
    Without Caesar to protect us, who's
    going to guarantee our independence?
  • 95:22 - 95:26
    l will, l am building ships
  • 95:26 - 95:29
    We will soon have a great navy
    to defend our borders
  • 95:29 - 95:31
    lt's cost us a fortune, Your Majesty
  • 95:31 - 95:34
    All that matters is keeping Octavius out
  • 95:36 - 95:42
    He has already tried to kill my son once
    and he will try again
  • 95:42 - 95:43
    What are you saying?
  • 95:43 - 95:45
    Do you intend to wage war on Octavius?
  • 95:46 - 95:48
    l intend to protect my child
  • 95:48 - 95:50
    We'll be ready
  • 95:51 - 95:55
    Ready with the most powerful fleet
    in the world!
  • 96:01 - 96:05
    l want to show you a very wonderful thing
    in the night sky
  • 96:06 - 96:07
    look!
  • 96:09 - 96:11
    ls that a shooting star?
  • 96:14 - 96:18
    No, my love, that's your father
  • 96:18 - 96:21
    He's taking his place with the gods
  • 96:21 - 96:23
    He's there to watch over you
  • 96:26 - 96:31
    Your father, the great Caesar
  • 96:35 - 96:37
    We call her a six
  • 96:38 - 96:39
    Three tiers of oars on each side
  • 96:40 - 96:43
    There's no vessel on the seas mightier
    than this
  • 96:44 - 96:45
    But does she move fast enough?
  • 96:46 - 96:50
    Well, there are faster ships,
    but what's speed over power?
  • 96:51 - 96:53
    She was built to do battle, not race
  • 96:54 - 96:56
    And she's unsinkable!
  • 96:56 - 96:58
    How many of these ships altogether?
  • 96:59 - 97:00
    Over two hundred, Your Majesty
  • 97:02 - 97:04
    Good
  • 97:05 - 97:07
    l'm greatly pleased
  • 97:09 - 97:11
    This will bankrupt Egypt, you know
  • 97:12 - 97:14
    Better a bankrupt Egypt
    than a conquered one
  • 97:14 - 97:16
    And what would we do with this Navy?
  • 97:17 - 97:19
    Do you honestly expect to go up against
    all the might of Rome?
  • 97:19 - 97:25
    Perhaps not all of it, the fleet is ready
  • 97:27 - 97:28
    Where is Marc Antony now?
  • 97:29 - 97:30
    ln Tarsus...l believe
  • 97:31 - 97:35
    Tarsus? That's halfway here
  • 97:36 - 97:38
    Then l must bring him all the way...
  • 97:41 - 97:43
    l must go there at once
  • 97:43 - 97:46
    The future of Egypt depends on it
  • 97:47 - 97:49
    Prepare the royal barge...
  • 97:50 - 97:52
    for war!
  • 97:52 - 97:55
    For...for war?
  • 97:55 - 98:00
    Yes! A different kind of war
  • 98:13 - 98:16
    So, we are running out of provisions,
  • 98:16 - 98:18
    and the men have not been paid
    for months
  • 98:18 - 98:22
    They love you now, lmperator,
    but how long will it last?
  • 98:32 - 98:33
    What is that?
  • 98:34 - 98:36
    The Queen of Egypt, who else?
  • 99:45 - 99:47
    Welcome, Dionysus
  • 99:47 - 99:49
    Well, this is an unexpected pleasure
  • 99:50 - 99:53
    You never came to Egypt to visit me
  • 99:53 - 99:55
    Well, you never invited me
  • 99:56 - 99:58
    For three years l've waited
  • 99:58 - 100:00
    You were too busy fighting war
  • 100:01 - 100:03
    l'm never that busy
  • 100:07 - 100:09
    Shall we retire?
  • 100:10 - 100:12
    Of course
  • 100:15 - 100:16
    To dinner
  • 100:17 - 100:19
    of course
  • 100:29 - 100:31
    Why did you come to see me?
  • 100:32 - 100:34
    Because you were Caesar's friend
  • 100:34 - 100:36
    Because you're my friend
  • 100:40 - 100:42
    Brave gentlemen!
  • 100:43 - 100:48
    Allow me to salute you all for your valor
    and loyalty to Marc Antony
  • 100:49 - 100:51
    To Marc Antony! To Marc Antony!
  • 100:52 - 100:55
    And to Antony's new friendship
    with Egypt
  • 101:04 - 101:11
    As a token of that friendship,
    l offer you this trifle of a gift...
  • 101:21 - 101:25
    to celebrate the new alliance between
    Marc Antony and the Queen of Egypt!
  • 101:36 - 101:37
    Well! You're in a generous mood
  • 101:38 - 101:40
    Why are you doing this?
  • 101:40 - 101:41
    Egypt is bountiful
  • 101:42 - 101:44
    lt pleases me to share her riches
  • 101:44 - 101:45
    Are you trying to bribe me?
  • 101:45 - 101:48
    l don't bribe, Antony, l command
  • 101:48 - 101:50
    lf you truly wish to be my ally...
  • 101:51 - 101:52
    But l am your ally!
  • 101:53 - 101:55
    l just want to be more than that
  • 101:56 - 101:59
    We will talk tomorrow when you're
    more in possession of yourself
  • 102:00 - 102:00
    Good night
  • 102:01 - 102:02
    Wait...
  • 102:11 - 102:13
    Look, Antony!
  • 102:14 - 102:16
    lt's you!
  • 102:26 - 102:28
    Why have you put on this charade?
  • 102:28 - 102:30
    How dare you invade my privacy?
  • 102:30 - 102:31
    Leave us
  • 102:32 - 102:34
    Did you come all the way here just
    to make a fool of me?
  • 102:35 - 102:36
    Leave this room at once!
  • 102:37 - 102:39
    All night long you toy with me, and then
    you deny me, you don't want me...
  • 102:39 - 102:40
    No, l don't want you!
  • 102:41 - 102:42
    Then damn it, woman,
    what do you want?
  • 102:43 - 102:44
    lt's not what l want!
  • 102:45 - 102:47
    lt's what you must do!
  • 102:47 - 102:50
    We can rule Egypt and Rome together,
    you and l, with my son on the throne
  • 102:50 - 102:51
    What are you saying? Are you mad?
  • 102:52 - 102:54
    lf we don't, Octavius will kill us both
  • 102:54 - 102:55
    Can't you see that?
  • 102:55 - 102:57
    No, all l see is a mad queen
  • 102:57 - 102:59
    An enchantress, who's lusting for power
  • 102:59 - 103:02
    And all l see is a common soldier,
    lusting for sport!
  • 103:03 - 103:06
    You just follow orders,
    groveling before Octavius!
  • 103:06 - 103:08
    Grovel? l grovel before no man!
  • 103:08 - 103:09
    And no woman!
  • 103:09 - 103:11
    Then be strong! Be like Caesar!
  • 103:11 - 103:12
    l'm not a Caesar!
  • 103:15 - 103:17
    No, you're not
  • 103:19 - 103:20
    You feel this beating heart!
  • 103:21 - 103:22
    That's life you feel!
  • 103:22 - 103:24
    Not a dead king, not a memory
  • 103:24 - 103:26
    That's me, Marc Antony!
  • 103:26 - 103:29
    Here with you! Right now!
  • 103:31 - 103:33
    l am not your sport, general!
  • 103:33 - 103:35
    Now go away!
  • 105:06 - 105:07
    l surrender!
  • 105:10 - 105:12
    Ah, your body is so different
  • 105:14 - 105:15
    Than Caesar's?
  • 105:16 - 105:20
    Younger, more scars
  • 105:22 - 105:25
    Ah, l never thought l would know
    another man's body in this way
  • 105:28 - 105:30
    l need to spend more time with you
  • 105:32 - 105:34
    What are the conditions of
    my surrender?
  • 105:35 - 105:37
    Come to me in Egypt
  • 105:37 - 105:42
    Time is slower there, exquisitely slow
  • 105:42 - 105:43
    Then l will
  • 105:46 - 105:49
    After you break your alliance
    with Octavius
  • 105:56 - 105:59
    Do you have any idea what
    that would mean?
  • 106:01 - 106:03
    lt would be civil war!
  • 106:04 - 106:07
    lt would tear Rome apart
  • 106:08 - 106:09
    l can't do that
  • 106:15 - 106:17
    Then you'll never see me again
  • 106:22 - 106:24
    Do you accept my terms?
  • 106:25 - 106:27
    Do you, my love?
  • 106:28 - 106:30
    Don't ask me that
  • 106:33 - 106:34
    Answer me!
  • 106:36 - 106:37
    Cleopatra, please...
  • 106:37 - 106:38
    l need you to answer me!
  • 106:38 - 106:41
    No, no
  • 106:41 - 106:43
    l can't go against my country
  • 106:47 - 106:50
    Then go back to your superiors in Rome
  • 106:50 - 106:52
    Soldier
  • 107:32 - 107:34
    You're late
  • 107:34 - 107:37
    No, l'm just not as obsessively punctual
    as you, Octavius
  • 107:37 - 107:40
    Caesar, not Octavius
  • 107:41 - 107:45
    That title, that has to be earned,
    Octavius
  • 107:46 - 107:50
    We have called this meeting to divide
    all Roman provinces...
  • 107:50 - 107:55
    between the two of you as co-consuls...
    for the sake of Rome
  • 107:55 - 107:58
    The last thing we want is
    another civil war
  • 107:58 - 107:59
    l don't want such a war
  • 108:00 - 108:01
    l just don't care for the arrogance of
    a man...
  • 108:01 - 108:02
    who thinks that he can succeed Caesar
  • 108:03 - 108:05
    Caesar himself chose me as his heir
  • 108:05 - 108:07
    You deceived him into thinking
    you were worthy
  • 108:07 - 108:10
    Silence you two
    Both of you were allies in war
  • 108:11 - 108:13
    We expect you to be allies in peace,
  • 108:13 - 108:15
    to govern the empire equally
  • 108:16 - 108:19
    So long as he stays on his side
    of the world, and l'll stay on mine
  • 108:19 - 108:22
    l'll take the lands of the east...
    including Egypt
  • 108:22 - 108:26
    Of course, who better to govern a land
    of such decadence and luxury?
  • 108:27 - 108:30
    That would be agreeable,
    except that l have business in Egypt
  • 108:30 - 108:34
    You want to avoid a civil war,
    then you will stay out of Egypt
  • 108:36 - 108:38
    You can have everything else
  • 108:38 - 108:41
    Take it or leave it
  • 108:42 - 108:43
    Very well, then
  • 108:44 - 108:47
    l'll take Spain, Gaul and Africa
  • 108:48 - 108:49
    Then it's agreed
  • 108:49 - 108:53
    The east for Antony,
    the west for Octavius
  • 108:53 - 108:56
    l mean, Caesar
  • 108:57 - 108:59
    Are we understood?
  • 109:03 - 109:04
    Well that depends...
  • 109:08 - 109:13
    a private pact between two powers
    can be a frail thing
  • 109:14 - 109:20
    l think our new friendship requires
    a more...personal guarantee
  • 109:23 - 109:25
    Meaning what, exactly?
  • 109:25 - 109:28
    A more binding union
  • 109:30 - 109:32
    l have a sister, Octavia
  • 109:33 - 109:35
    You have no wife
  • 109:38 - 109:41
    And you'd be a member of our family
  • 109:42 - 109:45
    Then our interests would be the same
  • 109:47 - 109:52
    l'll even make you a wedding present,
    the Roman legions in Gaul
  • 109:52 - 109:54
    Do you accept?
  • 110:23 - 110:27
    You must help her get Antony out of
    her head, you must
  • 110:28 - 110:31
    She should not fear Antony's marriage
    to Octavia!
  • 110:34 - 110:36
    Your Majesty!
  • 110:39 - 110:41
    Your Majesty!
  • 110:43 - 110:45
    Please awaken!
  • 110:51 - 110:56
    Do not destroy yourself
    for the sake of Antony
  • 110:58 - 111:00
    Do not name that traitor!
  • 111:17 - 111:20
    lsis...lsis...
  • 111:30 - 111:34
    please help me
  • 112:12 - 112:14
    This is me
  • 112:15 - 112:23
    And there on the right, are you
  • 112:24 - 112:26
    But it doesn't look like me!
  • 112:27 - 112:30
    lt's not supposed to
  • 112:30 - 112:32
    All Pharaohs are made to look alike,
  • 112:33 - 112:36
    because our line is timeless
    and unchanging
  • 112:40 - 112:43
    Forgive me, l didn't mean to frighten you
  • 112:44 - 112:47
    My brethren and l welcome you,
    Daughter of lsis,
  • 112:47 - 112:48
    to the Temple of the Sun
  • 112:49 - 112:52
    Why are you here, Goddess?
  • 112:53 - 112:57
    l thought it was time for my son
    to learn about our gods,
  • 112:58 - 113:03
    and perhaps find answers about myself
  • 113:04 - 113:06
    About my destiny
  • 113:06 - 113:08
    You'll find them here
  • 113:09 - 113:12
    Come with me
  • 113:16 - 113:19
    Alone, please
  • 113:43 - 113:46
    This is where your father the sun comes
    every morning...
  • 113:46 - 113:49
    to touch the sacred obelisk
  • 113:49 - 113:51
    and greet the day
  • 114:03 - 114:05
    The sun is reborn!
  • 114:19 - 114:22
    The Sacred Cobra, Goddess
    Your protectress
  • 114:24 - 114:26
    Ordinary men she kills
  • 114:26 - 114:30
    but if she bites an immortal
    such as yourself, it's a gift
  • 114:33 - 114:38
    The fangs of the cobra can take you
    directly to the gods
  • 115:04 - 115:08
    Mardian! Mardian!
  • 115:09 - 115:10
    Yes, yes, yes
  • 115:10 - 115:12
    Where's my navy? Where's my army?
  • 115:12 - 115:15
    Get me the generals! Get me
    the admirals! The Romans are attacking
  • 115:16 - 115:19
    lt's Marc Antony, Your Majesty!
  • 115:59 - 116:01
    What is taking him so long?
  • 116:01 - 116:05
    Apparently Alexandria has taken a liking
    to Lord Antony
  • 116:37 - 116:39
    My most gracious Queen
  • 116:39 - 116:41
    My most unexpected guest
  • 116:44 - 116:45
    My humble respects,
  • 116:45 - 116:48
    King Ptolemy Caesar,
    Lord of Two Lands
  • 116:50 - 116:54
    This little creature found its way
    onto my ship
  • 116:54 - 116:57
    l thought perhaps he might make you
    a suitable companion
  • 116:59 - 117:01
    l hope you and he can become
    great friends
  • 117:01 - 117:03
    Thank you...general
  • 117:04 - 117:05
    Why have you come?
  • 117:06 - 117:09
    Are you here to collect taxes?
    Steal grain for Egypt's debt?
  • 117:11 - 117:13
    lnspect your conquest?
  • 117:14 - 117:19
    l'm here to taste Egypt's pleasures and
    to bear you a fine gift
  • 117:20 - 117:22
    Myself!
  • 117:24 - 117:26
    Marc Antony comes not
    to conquer Egypt,
  • 117:28 - 117:30
    but to surrender to her charms
  • 117:38 - 117:40
    l had no feelings for Octavia
  • 117:40 - 117:42
    l only did that to guarantee peace
  • 117:42 - 117:44
    You were my friend, yet you marry
    my worst enemy's sister!
  • 117:44 - 117:45
    There was a reason... Octavius...
  • 117:45 - 117:48
    Has the greatest soldier in the world
    become the greatest liar?
  • 117:48 - 117:49
    l trusted you!
  • 117:49 - 117:50
    l had to secure the East in order
    to protect you
  • 117:50 - 117:51
    To protect your own interests!
  • 117:52 - 117:53
    Octavius has pledged to
    stay out of Egypt
  • 117:53 - 117:53
    And you believe him?
  • 117:54 - 117:55
    Will you please be silent!
  • 117:55 - 117:56
    Gods above!
  • 117:56 - 117:57
    How could you?
  • 117:58 - 118:00
    Forget Octavia!
  • 118:01 - 118:04
    l married for convenience...
  • 118:05 - 118:07
    but now l live for love
  • 118:09 - 118:13
    Cleopatra, there is a great noise
    in my heart
  • 118:13 - 118:17
    My eyes, they are clear now
    because l see only you
  • 118:17 - 118:20
    Everything l could ever want,
    everything l could ever treasure...
  • 118:21 - 118:23
    is right here, with you!
  • 118:26 - 118:29
    l give myself to you, my Queen
  • 118:29 - 118:31
    l'm yours now
  • 118:32 - 118:35
    ln the eyes of the gods,
    we are already one!
  • 118:36 - 118:40
    l give myself, l give myself to Egypt
  • 118:59 - 119:02
    l can never get enough of you
  • 119:05 - 119:07
    Do you feel the same?
  • 119:07 - 119:09
    Yes, Egypt
  • 119:10 - 119:11
    l could never leave you
  • 119:13 - 119:16
    We have so much to do together
  • 119:16 - 119:18
    So much to see and explore...
  • 119:18 - 119:20
    And conquer?
  • 119:22 - 119:25
    l was talking about your country
  • 119:26 - 119:29
    l want to learn everything about it...
    every detail
  • 119:32 - 119:34
    l haven't felt this alive since...
  • 119:35 - 119:37
    Shh, don't talk about the past
  • 119:38 - 119:40
    Your life is just beginning
  • 119:49 - 119:51
    Citizens of Alexandria!
  • 119:52 - 119:55
    l stand before you with
    all the might of Rome
  • 119:56 - 120:01
    And l hereby declare that
    Queen Cleopatra,
  • 120:01 - 120:04
    widow of Gaius Julius Caesar,
  • 120:04 - 120:08
    was his once true and legal wife!
  • 120:17 - 120:20
    And that their child, Ptolemy Caesar,
    is the true,
  • 120:21 - 120:26
    legitimate and only son of great Caesar!
  • 120:30 - 120:32
    Come forth, young Caesar!
  • 120:34 - 120:35
    Let your people see you!
  • 120:44 - 120:51
    Let it be known throughout the world
    that l, Marcus Antonius,
  • 120:51 - 120:54
    have renounced
    my false Roman marriage...
  • 120:54 - 121:00
    and have taken as
    my wife Queen Cleopatra...
  • 121:03 - 121:06
    and as a token of this great union...
  • 121:07 - 121:11
    l hereby bequeath,
    to the throne of Ptolemy,
  • 121:11 - 121:16
    the land of Syria,
    to the limits of its borders!
  • 121:21 - 121:26
    Not only does he proclaim
    an Egyptian bastard as heir to Rome,
  • 121:27 - 121:31
    he secedes the wealth of Syria
    to a foreign power!
  • 121:32 - 121:33
    Shame! Shame!
  • 121:34 - 121:37
    Now, far be it for me to say that
    Marc Antony is not an honorable man
  • 121:38 - 121:42
    Yet there he remains, in the east,
  • 121:42 - 121:46
    wallowing in the mud
    with the whore of the Nile,
  • 121:46 - 121:50
    caught by the same hook as Caesar
  • 121:51 - 121:55
    l submit to you, fellow Romans,
  • 121:55 - 122:00
    that Marc Antony has broken the pact
    between us
  • 122:00 - 122:01
    He has! He has!
  • 122:01 - 122:06
    For the good of the empire l,
    as co-consul,
  • 122:06 - 122:09
    must do as Roman justice
    commands me
  • 122:24 - 122:33
    l hereby declare a just and righteous
    war against Antony and Cleopatra!
  • 123:11 - 123:14
    Generals! Come quickly! Octavius!
  • 123:38 - 123:40
    Ah, Generals Grattius, Cornelius
  • 123:40 - 123:41
    Try one of these cakes
  • 123:42 - 123:43
    They're hard to come by in Gaul
  • 123:43 - 123:45
    What are you doing here?
  • 123:45 - 123:47
    l've come to take command
  • 123:51 - 123:52
    These are Antony's men
  • 123:53 - 123:54
    You have a letter from Antony?
  • 123:55 - 123:57
    Antony is no longer relevant to
    Roman affairs
  • 123:57 - 123:59
    His thoughts are only
    of Egypt and Cleopatra
  • 124:00 - 124:01
    l will not surrender the Gallic legions,
  • 124:01 - 124:04
    unless Antony personally instructs me
    to do so
  • 124:06 - 124:07
    Then you will die
  • 124:16 - 124:20
    These men are loyal to Antony
  • 124:20 - 124:22
    Yes, but they will follow your lead
  • 124:22 - 124:24
    Antony! Antony!
  • 124:37 - 124:38
    Stop him!
  • 124:41 - 124:43
    Move! Get after him!
  • 124:50 - 124:52
    He's wonderful with the child
  • 124:52 - 124:55
    l shouldn't wonder, he's a child himself
  • 124:56 - 125:00
    You would do well not to disparage
    Antony is my presence
  • 125:00 - 125:02
    Are you that much in love with him?
  • 125:02 - 125:05
    ls your judgement that clouded?
  • 125:05 - 125:07
    l am in love, Olympos,
  • 125:08 - 125:09
    but my mind is clear
  • 125:10 - 125:14
    Egypt needs him
    We need Antony's strength
  • 125:14 - 125:18
    You haven't really tested his strength
    Only his weaknesses
  • 125:19 - 125:20
    What do you mean?
  • 125:21 - 125:23
    You are strong, my queen
  • 125:24 - 125:27
    You have the metal to seize
    and heel the world
  • 125:27 - 125:31
    But Antony, he wants only to seize you
  • 125:32 - 125:34
    And that makes him weak
  • 125:36 - 125:38
    You're wrong, Olympos
  • 125:39 - 125:41
    Antony does share the vision
  • 125:41 - 125:43
    And he's not weak
  • 125:54 - 125:56
    Grattius!
  • 125:56 - 125:57
    What is it?
  • 125:57 - 125:58
    Why are you come to Alexandria?
  • 125:58 - 125:59
    Your Lordship
  • 125:59 - 126:02
    Octavius has stolen your legions in Gaul
  • 126:04 - 126:05
    General Cornelius?
  • 126:05 - 126:06
    Dead
  • 126:12 - 126:14
    He's deliberately flaunting me!
  • 126:15 - 126:17
    Octavius has broken his pledge
  • 126:20 - 126:22
    lmperator, go to Rome!
  • 126:22 - 126:25
    Take your grievance to the Senate
  • 126:25 - 126:28
    Strike, first, that's what you said, isn't it?
  • 126:28 - 126:30
    A civil war?
  • 126:30 - 126:31
    Romans against Romans, Antony!
  • 126:32 - 126:33
    You must talk to the Senate!
  • 126:34 - 126:37
    Take the world, before it takes you?
  • 126:37 - 126:39
    We'll not wait for Octavius to come to us
  • 126:39 - 126:41
    We'll go to him
  • 127:06 - 127:11
    Your fleet, my queen, there, is Octavius
  • 127:13 - 127:14
    More than an equal match, l think
  • 127:15 - 127:16
    l don't like it
  • 127:17 - 127:18
    What don't you like, General?
  • 127:18 - 127:21
    lt's a bad business, attacking by sea
  • 127:21 - 127:24
    lf we really mean to defeat them,
    we should do it the Roman way
  • 127:24 - 127:26
    strike quickly, by land!
  • 127:26 - 127:29
    Octavius has us blockaded
    inside the gulf, General
  • 127:30 - 127:32
    We have no choice
    We must fight our way out
  • 127:32 - 127:34
    But General, it's full of dangers
  • 127:34 - 127:36
    The enemy is upon us, comrades
  • 127:37 - 127:38
    Prepare your stations
  • 127:43 - 127:44
    lt will be decided here
  • 127:44 - 127:46
    May the gods favor us
  • 128:15 - 128:16
    There's Marc Antony's ship
  • 128:22 - 128:24
    Faster! Faster!
  • 128:39 - 128:42
    Marc Antony thinks
    this is a cavalry charge
  • 128:42 - 128:43
    lf it's a fight he wants...
  • 128:43 - 128:45
    Patience, patience
  • 128:46 - 128:48
    We'll draw him in
  • 128:59 - 129:01
    He's going too fast!
  • 129:02 - 129:03
    He's too far forward!
  • 129:07 - 129:09
    He's sailing into a trap!
  • 129:14 - 129:15
    Pull back!
  • 129:52 - 129:53
    Octavius!
  • 130:25 - 130:26
    Boarders!
  • 130:27 - 130:29
    Your Majesty, you must go below
  • 130:58 - 131:00
    Drive them back!
  • 131:00 - 131:02
    Fight for your Queen!
  • 131:09 - 131:11
    Force them back!
  • 131:39 - 131:41
    Where is Antony? We must find him!
  • 131:42 - 131:43
    His flagship sank, Your Majesty
  • 131:44 - 131:45
    He might still be alive..
  • 131:45 - 131:47
    Forgive me, but he can't survive that
  • 131:47 - 131:49
    Octavius will be searching for you,
    my Queen
  • 131:50 - 131:51
    l can't leave him here
    l must do something!
  • 131:52 - 131:54
    You must save yourself while you can!
  • 131:54 - 131:56
    For Egypt!
  • 132:05 - 132:07
    Antony!
  • 132:24 - 132:28
    Take out the purple sails, have them
    ready to hoist before Alexandria
  • 132:28 - 132:30
    Our victory sails?
  • 132:30 - 132:32
    You heard me, now do it!
  • 132:33 - 132:34
    As you wish, Your Highness
  • 132:34 - 132:36
    Exactly as l wish
  • 132:38 - 132:40
    Place the garlands on the bow
  • 132:40 - 132:42
    On the masts as well
  • 132:42 - 132:44
    And have the men ready to sing
    a victory chant...
  • 132:44 - 132:47
    before we sail into Alexandria
  • 132:50 - 132:55
    l shall not allow my people
    to see their Queen in defeat
  • 134:31 - 134:33
    lsis, my mother
  • 134:34 - 134:36
    don't turn from me now
  • 134:37 - 134:40
    Don't turn from Egypt
  • 135:15 - 135:16
    No!
  • 135:17 - 135:20
    No! lt's over now
  • 135:20 - 135:22
    lt's over
  • 135:37 - 135:39
    l have good news for you!
  • 135:56 - 135:57
    Antony!
  • 136:07 - 136:09
    Leave us
  • 136:11 - 136:12
    Leave us
  • 136:17 - 136:19
    Oh, l thought you were dead!
  • 136:20 - 136:21
    l am dead
  • 136:22 - 136:24
    No...no, don't say that
  • 136:24 - 136:26
    This place is like a gigantic tomb
  • 136:27 - 136:29
    you stay here long enough one
    becomes mummified
  • 136:31 - 136:32
    You deserted me!
  • 136:32 - 136:34
    They told me you were dead!
  • 136:36 - 136:38
    What should l have done?
  • 136:38 - 136:42
    l saw something tonight
    that l could not believe
  • 136:42 - 136:45
    The city...in victory
  • 136:45 - 136:46
    l had to buy time
  • 136:47 - 136:50
    To keep my people from panic,
    to organize a defense
  • 136:50 - 136:52
    A defense? What defense?
  • 136:52 - 136:54
    Octavius has defeated us completely!
  • 136:54 - 136:56
    He has not defeated me!
  • 136:56 - 136:57
    l still rule Egypt
  • 136:58 - 137:00
    How! By lying to your people?
  • 137:00 - 137:01
    How could you let them believe
    we've triumphed...
  • 137:02 - 137:03
    when we've failed so miserably?
  • 137:03 - 137:08
    We'll triumph, Antony, we will make that
    falsehood come true
  • 137:08 - 137:11
    You've humiliated me
    with this vile hypocrisy!
  • 137:11 - 137:12
    As if l haven't been humiliated enough!
  • 137:13 - 137:14
    Be quiet!
  • 137:14 - 137:16
    Your men will hear you!
  • 137:16 - 137:17
    My men? What men?
  • 137:18 - 137:19
    The bottom of the sea is littered
    with the bones of my men
  • 137:20 - 137:21
    You still have four legions loyal to you
  • 137:22 - 137:23
    Four legions
  • 137:24 - 137:25
    Have you given up hope
  • 137:25 - 137:27
    Perhaps l have
  • 137:33 - 137:37
    Caesar once stopped a whole army
    with only two legions
  • 137:38 - 137:41
    l'm not Caesar!
  • 137:41 - 137:45
    l am not a god, l am not a king
  • 137:45 - 137:46
    l'm a man
  • 137:46 - 137:52
    l'm just a man who reached
    for too big a prize!
  • 138:21 - 138:22
    Where is he now?
  • 138:22 - 138:24
    Octavius has taken Pelusium
  • 138:25 - 138:26
    That quickly
  • 138:41 - 138:42
    Give these to Rufio
  • 138:43 - 138:45
    Have him deliver them to Octavius
  • 138:45 - 138:47
    But these are the emblems
    of your office!
  • 138:48 - 138:50
    Send them to him with this letter
  • 138:51 - 138:53
    l am offering my abdication
    if he'll spare Caesarian...
  • 138:53 - 138:57
    and let him sit on the throne of Egypt
  • 138:58 - 139:00
    But why, Your Majesty?
  • 139:00 - 139:02
    Has it really come to this?
  • 139:03 - 139:05
    There is no other recourse
  • 139:05 - 139:07
    We must buy time
  • 139:07 - 139:09
    Go now!
  • 139:32 - 139:33
    Down
  • 139:44 - 139:45
    Out of my way!
  • 139:54 - 139:55
    Stop it!
  • 139:56 - 139:57
    What? What?
  • 139:57 - 140:00
    Why did you stop...
  • 140:01 - 140:03
    Welcome, welcome Aphrodite!
  • 140:04 - 140:05
    Welcome to Bacchus's beach!
  • 140:06 - 140:07
    Octavius has reached Ashkelon
  • 140:08 - 140:11
    Ashkelon is weeks away
    from Alexandria
  • 140:12 - 140:13
    Come and dance with us
  • 140:13 - 140:14
    come on ... purge your demons!
  • 140:15 - 140:17
    How long are you going to stay drunk?
  • 140:18 - 140:19
    How would you prefer me?
  • 140:19 - 140:24
    Perhaps riding in the head of
    my four legions to meet him in battle?
  • 140:25 - 140:27
    For yet another victory celebration?
  • 140:27 - 140:29
    A true king is not a coward!
  • 140:30 - 140:31
    l am not a coward
  • 140:31 - 140:33
    l am merely a fool in exile
  • 140:34 - 140:36
    with no place to hide
    except my wife's country
  • 140:37 - 140:38
    Enough!
  • 140:39 - 140:42
    Enough! Everybody out! Out
  • 140:47 - 140:48
    Be well
  • 140:52 - 140:54
    l trusted you
  • 140:55 - 140:56
    l believed in you
  • 140:57 - 141:00
    l, l believed in your strength
  • 141:01 - 141:04
    Could l have misjudged you?
  • 141:04 - 141:06
    You misjudged yourself
  • 141:06 - 141:08
    lt may be your nature
    to see victory in defeat
  • 141:08 - 141:13
    But it's not mine, l fear...l fear...
  • 141:21 - 141:26
    l fear l can lead no more...
  • 141:29 - 141:31
    l should have died...l should have...
  • 141:32 - 141:36
    where's my sword? l had a sword...
  • 141:36 - 141:38
    l must die...
  • 141:38 - 141:42
    l must die with honor
    My men believed in me...
  • 141:43 - 141:44
    l must have it...
  • 141:44 - 141:45
    Stop it!
  • 141:45 - 141:47
    Give me my sword! Give me my sword!
    l must have my honor!
  • 141:47 - 141:49
    This is no honor!
  • 141:50 - 141:52
    ls this how you want them
    to remember you?
  • 141:53 - 141:56
    A man who no longer believes
    in himself?
  • 141:56 - 141:59
    Stand up! Stand up and fight!
  • 142:00 - 142:01
    Be a man!
  • 142:01 - 142:03
    You want me to be a man?
  • 142:10 - 142:13
    Yes...Antony, look at me!
  • 142:13 - 142:14
    Look at me!
  • 142:15 - 142:19
    We'll fight!
  • 142:27 - 142:28
    You may tell your Queen, Rufio,
  • 142:28 - 142:32
    that l've received her tokens of
    submission and am most grateful
  • 142:32 - 142:35
    As to the request to spare her son
  • 142:35 - 142:37
    l can not answer that for the moment
  • 142:40 - 142:43
    Why are you still loyal to her?
  • 142:43 - 142:45
    Has she enchanted you as well?
  • 142:45 - 142:46
    l'm under orders from Caesar...
  • 142:46 - 142:50
    Caesar is dead! l am Caesar now
  • 142:52 - 142:55
    You could be my ears in Alexandria
  • 142:59 - 143:00
    Very well, then
  • 143:02 - 143:06
    Tell her that,
    before l can accept her offer,
  • 143:06 - 143:08
    l would require
    some gesture of sincerity...
  • 143:12 - 143:18
    tell her to deliver to me...
    the head of Marc Antony
  • 143:26 - 143:28
    You may go...
  • 143:40 - 143:44
    Provide Octavius with what he requires
  • 143:44 - 143:47
    and you'll find him most grateful
  • 143:49 - 143:51
    No
  • 143:53 - 143:54
    You must
  • 143:55 - 143:57
    Your Majesty, in the name of lsis, please,
  • 143:57 - 143:59
    do not forsake your country,
    your own child
  • 143:59 - 144:03
    Not for love
  • 144:05 - 144:09
    lt would be like stabbing my own heart
  • 144:09 - 144:12
    Better Antony than Egypt
  • 144:12 - 144:15
    Better that than your own son's life!
  • 144:18 - 144:19
    Take the knife
  • 145:01 - 145:04
    l want to share something with you
  • 145:07 - 145:09
    Come...
  • 145:23 - 145:26
    What's this? Another temple of death?
  • 145:27 - 145:30
    lt's my tomb, Antony
  • 145:31 - 145:34
    When l die, it will be sealed tight
  • 145:38 - 145:43
    Here is where l'll lie, but not be confined
  • 145:43 - 145:50
    Beyond flesh, l will journey
    to the next life and back at will
  • 145:52 - 146:00
    And there, my sweet, noble king,
  • 146:01 - 146:04
    l have reserved a place for you to travel
    with me
  • 146:13 - 146:17
    l will lie anywhere with you, Cleopatra,
  • 146:17 - 146:20
    but l'm not ready to accept death,
    not, not yet
  • 146:21 - 146:22
    Tonight, l had a dream
  • 146:24 - 146:29
    l was winning a great battle!
    ln the desert!
  • 146:30 - 146:33
    Even the ground was in my favor
  • 146:33 - 146:36
    Octavius' army was marching
    on impossible terrain
  • 146:36 - 146:39
    no place to deploy,
    nowhere to maneuver his army
  • 146:39 - 146:41
    lf l strike him,
    and l strike him hard and fast,
  • 146:41 - 146:43
    l can stop his momentum...
  • 146:43 - 146:44
    And finish him in the desert!
  • 146:44 - 146:49
    That's right!
    So we may finally realise your vision...
  • 146:50 - 146:52
    of uniting the east and west
    in a new Golden Age of light, of love,
  • 146:52 - 146:59
    and dominion
  • 147:16 - 147:17
    Antony!
  • 147:20 - 147:21
    Let me and my men come with you
  • 147:21 - 147:23
    No, l need someone here l can trust
  • 147:23 - 147:24
    You'll see that the Queen is safe?
  • 147:24 - 147:26
    On my life
  • 148:19 - 148:20
    These are just ornaments
  • 148:20 - 148:22
    Still, Octavius will not have them
  • 148:23 - 148:25
    Your Majesty, this is the whole list?
  • 148:25 - 148:26
    You must complete this side
  • 148:26 - 148:27
    Yes
  • 148:28 - 148:31
    Where is Caesarian?
    l haven't seen him of late
  • 148:32 - 148:34
    Why do you wish to know?
  • 148:36 - 148:38
    No reason
  • 148:38 - 148:40
    l fear for his safety, that is all
  • 148:41 - 148:46
    l'm sworn to protect him
    as well as yourself, Your Majesty
  • 148:47 - 148:48
    Thank you, Rufio
  • 148:51 - 148:53
    For your loyalty
  • 149:46 - 149:49
    There were supposed to be
    only six legions!
  • 149:49 - 149:51
    lmperator, we must withdraw
  • 149:51 - 149:52
    Have you lost your courage, General?
  • 149:52 - 149:54
    lt's not a question of courage
  • 149:55 - 149:56
    These are Roman soldiers
  • 149:56 - 149:59
    lt's not right for them to have to
    fight their fellow countrymen
  • 150:06 - 150:09
    We fight to win, Commander?
  • 150:18 - 150:20
    We fight to win!
  • 150:40 - 150:45
    Charge!
  • 151:31 - 151:33
    Anthony!
  • 152:27 - 152:28
    Get Olympos!
  • 152:28 - 152:30
    We must get Caesarian out of the city
    now!
  • 152:39 - 152:43
    Caesarian, Caesarian!
  • 152:44 - 152:45
    You're going on a trip
  • 152:45 - 152:50
    A beautiful ship is going to take you
    to lndia, a land of many wonders
  • 152:50 - 152:52
    Aren't you coming with me?
  • 152:52 - 152:55
    No, Mama has to stay here
  • 152:56 - 152:57
    Are you going to die?
  • 153:00 - 153:01
    No
  • 153:04 - 153:09
    l don't want you to die! l don't want to go!
  • 153:15 - 153:16
    What news?
  • 153:16 - 153:19
    We couldn't stop them...too many!
  • 153:19 - 153:20
    Octavius is coming!
  • 153:25 - 153:27
    You must go my son
  • 153:28 - 153:29
    You know why?
  • 153:31 - 153:34
    Because you are the future of Egypt
  • 153:38 - 153:41
    l don't want to go! l don't want to go!
  • 153:43 - 153:45
    He will be safe with me
  • 153:45 - 153:49
    He is Egypt, that is all l've ever lived for!
  • 153:49 - 153:52
    And now he must live for you!
  • 154:27 - 154:31
    Your Majesty! Your Majesty!
    Your Majesty!
  • 154:31 - 154:33
    ls Marc Antony alive?
  • 154:33 - 154:34
    l do not know, my Queen
  • 154:34 - 154:35
    But you have to flee the city
  • 154:35 - 154:37
    Octavius' army will be here
    within the hour!
  • 154:37 - 154:40
    No! l will wait for my king
  • 154:40 - 154:41
    Your Majesty...
  • 154:43 - 154:45
    there are documents that
    have to be destroyed...
  • 154:45 - 154:46
    Go! Go!
  • 154:54 - 154:57
    Have you seen Caesarian?
    Where is he?
  • 154:57 - 155:00
    Have you seen the child?
    Where's the child?
  • 155:03 - 155:04
    Out of my way!
  • 155:05 - 155:05
    What're you doing here?
  • 155:06 - 155:07
    Your Queen needs you on guard!
  • 155:07 - 155:08
    Where's the boy?
  • 155:08 - 155:10
    He's not here, by the blessings of lsis
  • 155:10 - 155:11
    Not here? What do you mean?
  • 155:11 - 155:13
    lt doesn't matter, he's safe
  • 155:14 - 155:15
    Listen to me, Mardian
  • 155:15 - 155:18
    Caesarian is in grave danger
  • 155:18 - 155:20
    Now you must tell me where to find him
  • 155:20 - 155:22
    Yes, but l promised the Queen...that l...
  • 155:22 - 155:25
    l'm the only one who can protect him!
  • 155:28 - 155:30
    He's out of the country, isn't he?
  • 155:31 - 155:34
    Where? Judea, Syria?
  • 155:36 - 155:38
    No matter, we'll find him
  • 155:38 - 155:41
    Why are you doing this?
    How can you turn against your Queen?
  • 155:41 - 155:45
    She's not my Queen, you fat, little fool!
  • 155:45 - 155:46
    l answer only to Rome
  • 155:56 - 156:00
    Traitor! Traitor!
  • 156:22 - 156:25
    Goddess! Goddess!
  • 156:29 - 156:33
    l brought you this from
    the Temple of the Sun, Goddess,
  • 156:35 - 156:37
    to help you speed your way
  • 156:52 - 156:54
    Out of the way!
  • 156:59 - 157:02
    Tell your Queen it's Marc Antony!
  • 157:02 - 157:06
    Your Majesty! Your Majesty! lt's Antony!
  • 157:06 - 157:08
    Antony! lt's Antony!
  • 157:09 - 157:11
    He lives!
  • 157:12 - 157:14
    Bring him inside!
  • 157:18 - 157:19
    Close up the gates!
  • 157:39 - 157:41
    Hail, Caesar!
  • 157:47 - 157:48
    Did you kill the boy?
  • 158:07 - 158:10
    Antony, my husband...
  • 158:11 - 158:15
    my love...don't leave without me!
  • 158:17 - 158:20
    Look at me, Antony, look at me!
  • 158:23 - 158:26
    As you command...my Queen
  • 158:34 - 158:37
    We lost the day...
  • 158:38 - 158:43
    ln my eyes, you are greatness
  • 158:56 - 159:01
    l'm here, l'm here with you
  • 159:01 - 159:02
    Don't stay...
  • 159:04 - 159:06
    don't stay with me...fight!
  • 159:07 - 159:09
    l'm not leaving you!
  • 159:12 - 159:17
    l'll be waiting for you in the next life
  • 159:19 - 159:22
    l see nothing but you!
  • 159:23 - 159:26
    l'll never be further from you than this!
  • 159:27 - 159:29
    Antony!
  • 160:30 - 160:34
    Queen Cleopatra!
  • 160:38 - 160:40
    Come out
  • 160:40 - 160:43
    Yield yourself to me!
  • 160:49 - 160:51
    Open this door!
  • 160:52 - 160:53
    ls she alive?
  • 160:54 - 160:55
    l don't know
  • 160:56 - 160:57
    Get the battering ram!
  • 160:57 - 160:59
    Caesar...
  • 161:20 - 161:23
    So, Antony has gone to join Caesar
  • 161:24 - 161:27
    No, he's here with me
  • 161:31 - 161:35
    Take the riches of Egypt
    Then let me die properly
  • 161:36 - 161:37
    l have no desire for you to die
  • 161:38 - 161:42
    l've conquered a great country,
    a great Queen
  • 161:43 - 161:46
    lt's my wish that you accompany me
    to Rome
  • 161:48 - 161:51
    So you can walk me behind
    your chariots...you Egyptian prize?
  • 161:51 - 161:54
    Octavius' trophy?
  • 161:55 - 161:58
    That would do, yes
  • 162:04 - 162:11
    l answer to no earthly superior,
    much less a mortal like yourself
  • 162:17 - 162:22
    l am a goddess! l am immortal!
  • 162:22 - 162:24
    Ah yes, the Daughter of lsis
  • 162:29 - 162:31
    You and l are very much alike
  • 162:32 - 162:35
    Compelled to follow our own natures,
  • 162:35 - 162:38
    fulfill our destinies
  • 162:40 - 162:44
    But l have won, Cleopatra
    And you will come to Rome!
  • 162:55 - 162:57
    l will come with you to Rome
  • 162:59 - 163:02
    But l want something in return
  • 163:02 - 163:04
    Anything, l can be very generous
  • 163:06 - 163:09
    Let my son rule Egypt
  • 163:11 - 163:13
    Not for the moment, no
  • 163:19 - 163:22
    Then let me give Antony
    an Egyptian burial
  • 163:23 - 163:26
    Here, in this place
  • 163:27 - 163:33
    Then l will come to you as the Queen of
    Egypt, bowing to the might of Rome
  • 163:35 - 163:36
    Very well
  • 163:38 - 163:40
    l'll need time to prepare
  • 163:41 - 163:43
    And the emblems of my office?
  • 163:43 - 163:46
    Of course, you can have them
    l have no use for them
  • 163:47 - 163:49
    l have what l want
  • 164:07 - 164:09
    Make sure she doesn't harm herself
  • 164:37 - 164:39
    Wait for me, Antony
  • 164:41 - 164:42
    l won't be long
  • 165:20 - 165:23
    Where is our Queen?
  • 165:23 - 165:25
    What have you done with her?
  • 165:47 - 165:50
    Why weren't you here to protect me,
    Rufio?
  • 165:51 - 165:54
    l regret that it was not possible,
    Your Majesty
  • 166:01 - 166:03
    We need to be alone to pray
  • 166:03 - 166:04
    Away from Roman eyes
  • 166:05 - 166:07
    l'm afraid l can't allow that
  • 166:10 - 166:13
    You should know our ways by now
  • 166:17 - 166:19
    Don't you trust me?
  • 166:22 - 166:25
    l've trusted you all these years
  • 166:46 - 166:51
    Where is our Queen?
    What have you done with her?
  • 166:51 - 166:56
    We want our Queen!
    We want our Queen!
  • 166:59 - 167:01
    Open the doors, Your Majesty!
  • 167:02 - 167:04
    Open them now...
    or l'll have to break them down!
  • 167:05 - 167:06
    Get the ram!
  • 167:06 - 167:09
    Citizens of Alexandria,
  • 167:14 - 167:17
    you have nothing to fear from Caesar
  • 167:20 - 167:25
    Egypt and Rome have always been
    close...
  • 167:27 - 167:29
    Magnificent, isn't it?
  • 167:30 - 167:32
    We want our Queen!
  • 167:33 - 167:34
    We want our Queen!
  • 167:35 - 167:37
    We want our Queen!
  • 167:47 - 167:51
    Bring the basket now, quickly
  • 167:56 - 167:59
    Your Majesty, let us come with you,
    on your journey
  • 168:04 - 168:07
    lt's a longer journey than
    you may care to take
  • 168:07 - 168:09
    We have no one but you
  • 168:09 - 168:11
    You're our only world
  • 168:13 - 168:17
    Then we shall go to the next world
    together
  • 168:32 - 168:34
    Your Queen ...
  • 168:39 - 168:46
    Your Queen accepts Caesar
    as her friend and sovereign
  • 168:48 - 168:49
    what is that?
  • 168:56 - 168:57
    Come!
  • 169:19 - 169:21
    Take me to lsis!
  • 169:43 - 169:48
    Again! Put your backs into it!
  • 169:49 - 169:54
    Get these doors open!
  • 170:06 - 170:07
    Lie me down
  • 170:22 - 170:24
    One night more,
  • 170:29 - 170:31
    then the sun will be reborn...
  • 170:35 - 170:39
    And the waters of the Nile...
  • 170:43 - 170:47
    The Nile will rise...
  • 170:51 - 170:54
    and...fall...
  • 171:35 - 171:37
    lt's giving! Come on!
  • 171:54 - 171:55
    Leave us
  • 171:55 - 171:57
    Wait for me
  • 172:28 - 172:32
    You've won, Cleopatra
  • 172:42 - 172:45
    Farewell, Egypt
Title:
Cleopatra (Full Movie)
Description:

Cleopatra is a 1999 fictional film portrayal of the Egyptian queen Cleopatra, produced by Hallmark Entertainment, starring Leonor Varela as the title character, Timothy Dalton as Julius Caesar, Billy Zane as Mark Antony, Rupert Graves as Octavius, Sean Pertwee as Brutus and Bruce Payne as Cassius. The movie was based on the book Memoirs of Cleopatra by Margaret George.

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Video Language:
English
Duration:
02:54:24

English subtitles

Revisions