EPISODE
SEASON
Spartacus: Blood and Sand - Season 1
Spartacus survived in Capua and now he is back to where he was first betrayed to revolt against Batiatus
4 January 1994, Czech Republic
6 November 1966, Melbourne, Victoria, Australia
17 January 1988, Auckland, New Zealand
1970, Auckland, New Zealand
2 April 1966
4 December 1979
14 July 1965, Essex, England, UK
20 May 1992, Sydney, Australia
30 September 1985, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, USA
23 April 1962, East Kilbride, Scotland, UK
January 22, 2010
Indeed, when the smoke clears from this blood-splattered battle, the survivors will likely stand and sheepishly plead, "I'm not 'Spartacus!' Please, don't confuse me with 'Spartacus!'"
January 22, 2010
It was written either by master satirists hoping to inspire viewer drinking games each time blood drops sail in slo-mo or by teen boys.
January 22, 2010
Although some characters share the same names as those in the 1960 Kirk Douglas movie of the same name, this vivid, revealing remake is not for the faint of heart.
January 22, 2010
A heady mix of 300-style graphic violence and Debbie Does Rome soft-core porn, Spartacus: Blood and Sand is proof of TV's ever-expanding boundaries and ever-plummeting tastes.
January 22, 2010
Spartacus is a rousing, addictive show that doesn't tax with too much moral complexity.
January 22, 2010
Not even my affection for honorary TCA member Lucy Lawless is going to keep me around.
January 22, 2010
The trappings up front are so over the top that to say you watch Spartacus to see a contemporary reworking of a cinema classic is like saying you go to Hooters for the food.
January 22, 2010
Imagine watching a boring porn movie with swords, sandals, CGI, buckets and buckets of blood, and excessive slow-motion "action" scenes, all while Satan pulls your soul out of your backside. That's Spartacus: Blood and Sand.
January 22, 2010
The problem is that this Spartacus is so over the top that it begs to be considered as total camp.
January 22, 2010
If Stanley Kubrick were still alive - he directed the 1960 Kirk Douglas classic of the same name - he wouldn't know whether to laugh or weep.

