Updated
Updated · Screen Rant · Jun 13
Russell Crowe Blocked Maximus Sex Scene in Gladiator, Defending Film's $465 Million Moral Core
Updated
Updated · Screen Rant · Jun 13

Russell Crowe Blocked Maximus Sex Scene in Gladiator, Defending Film's $465 Million Moral Core

3 articles · Updated · Screen Rant · Jun 13

Summary

  • At the 2026 Taormina Film Festival, Russell Crowe said he repeatedly opposed studio and producer pressure to give Maximus a sex scene after his family's murder, arguing it would break the character's vengeance arc and devotion to his wife.
  • Ridley Scott ultimately backed Crowe, who said the emotional core of Gladiator depended on Maximus never pausing that journey for a romance or sexual encounter.
  • Crowe tied that choice to the original film's success, saying Gladiator worked because of its "moral core" and drew strong female audiences; the 2000 film grossed $465 million on a $103 million budget.
  • He contrasted that with Gladiator II, criticizing the sequel's revelation that Lucius is Maximus and Lucilla's son and arguing it misunderstood the first film's appeal; the sequel made $462 million globally against a reported $250 million-$300 million budget.

Insights

Why did director Ridley Scott's sequel betray the 'moral core' he once protected alongside Russell Crowe?
If Gladiator II is a streaming hit, does that prove Russell Crowe's criticism about its missing soul was wrong?
With data analytics now backing Crowe's critique, how will it impact the creative direction of the planned Gladiator 3?