Roman City
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Average customer review:Product Description
Studio: Pbs Release Date: 05/06/2009 Run time: 60 minutes
Product Details
- Amazon Sales Rank: #37626 in DVD
- Brand: PBS
- Released on: 2006-04-11
- Rating: NR (Not Rated)
- Aspect ratio: 1.33:1
- Formats: Color, DVD, NTSC
- Original language: English
- Number of discs: 1
- Running time: 60 minutes
Customer Reviews
Great teaching tool about Roman Urban planning!
Okay, I showed the first 2/3rds of the film to my high school students, and then they came back during lunch to watch the ending! An animated story line ties together a very good look at the how and why of various important functions and considerations of planning a Roman city. The audio-visual work is high class! Some adults expressed regret that there wasn't more animation! They enjoyed the story telling as well as the students. Make learning fun, add this to your collection!
A Clever Look At Roman City Building, And Don't Forget To Also Buy David Macaulay's Book
If cities largely define civilization, Western cities have been defined by the city planners and civic engineers of ancient Rome. As the empire expanded, these engineers planned and built cities throughout three continents that had logic, that had ample water by way of aqueducts, that had water distribution systems, sewers, paved streets with curbs and devices to slow traffic, public baths and public toilets, buildings devoted to culture and entertainment, warehouses, shops, homes and tenements. When the empire fell apart, it took 1,400 years for Western civilization to meet the challenges of urban living which the Romans had met.
Roman City was a PBS production built around David Macaulay's illustrated book, City: A Story of Roman Planning and Engineering. Macaulay is a writer and illustrator who is fascinated by how things work. He also is a first-rate teacher, able to describe and show concepts and techniques so they are understandable and fascinating. Roman City, with Macaulay as narrator, opens up his book with location shots at several ancient Roman cities such as Pompeii, Herculaneum and Ostia, as well as with illustrations taken from the book and with animation. We get to see why Roman cities were laid out the way they were and how important arches and concrete were. As with the book, the program tells the story of the planning, building and growth of the fictional city of Verbonia in Gaul, beginning with the decision of Caesar Augustus to establish the city in 27 B.C. The cast of characters includes the animations of young Marcus Fabricius (voiced by Derek Jacobi), the engineer charged with designing and building the city; Gaius Verlius (voiced by Brian Blessed), the former general appointed by Caesar to run Verbonia; and Caesar Augustus himself (voiced by Ian McKellan). The story line works up to a point. The device of the fictitious Fabricius and Verlius helps to personalize the problems and decisions. On the other hand, there are side issues -- the conflicts between the Gauls and Romans, the hatred of the Druids, the corruption of officials -- which, in my view, become distractions to the fascination of how things were actually built. A couple of the fictional secondary characters quickly become irritating when they show up for some humor.
On balance, I think this is an hour-long program that fans of engineering and ancient Rome will enjoy. I did. But I'd encourage anyone who gets this to also get a copy of David Macaulay's book. It's excellent throughout with none of the distractions. PBS also did programs based on three other outstanding Macaulay books, Pyramid, Castle and Cathedral.
The DVD presentation looks good. There are no extras.
Excellent explanation of people, politics, and architecture
I am a high school history teacher. I show this video to my students when we discuss the Roman empire. It gives a strong overview of life, politics, and architecture of a Roman city. It is extremely interesting, and my students actually requested to see it again. Macaulay combines the reality of an actual Roman city with a story in animation. This story depicts a time during Roman expansion. This combination works well to show how people lived and issues they faced as Rome built cities across Europe.




