Metacritic TV

Rome
Season 2

SERIES: HBO, Sunday 9:00p (60 minutes)

Starring Kevin McKidd, Ray Stevenson, Polly Walker, James Purefoy, Tobias Menzies, Lindsay Duncan, Max Pirkis, and Kerry Condon

Created by John Milius, William Macdonald, and Bruno Heller

Genre(s): Drama

FIRST AIR DATE: January 14, 2007

Overall Metascore

This is a weighted, normalized average of all individual scores given by critics, on a scale of 0 (worst) to 100 (best).

68 / 100

Critic Reviews

80 Seattle Post-Intelligencer Melanie McFarland
Turns like this take the series further into Aaron Spelling territory than it ever was, an idea that may offend those who can't let go of the notion that HBO is supposed to be better than regular TV.
80 Variety 
This splendidly acted melodrama delivers a bloody good time barreling toward oblivion, delivering enough political intrigue, violence and sex to slake even the most debauched viewing appetites.
80 Chicago Tribune Maureen Ryan
Though every detail of this lush Roman epic feels palpably authentic, history lessons don’t loom overly large; what’s most enjoyable about it is how deftly it mixes soap opera with senatorial debates.
80 Los Angeles Times Robert Lloyd
"Rome" is smart, dirty fun.
75 New York Post Linda Stasi
What the series gains this season by giving us more history and more compelling storylines, it loses by repeating some of its, er, epic mistakes. Again, no battle scenes - some of the most important in all of history - are shown.
75 Chicago Sun-Times Doug Elfman
"Rome" treats viewers as long-term fans of deep terrain. To follow "Rome," it is required you keep up. If you do, you may be rewarded with a fine tale, proper acting and a better-told history lesson.
75 Entertainment Weekly Lisa Schwarzbaum
There's a danger that visitors to Rome may contract a mild case of Naughty Classy Cable Fatigue.
70 Washington Post Tom Shales
The production is nothing if not rich, awash in muted hues, populated with rivetingly complex characters and yet disappointingly low on spectacle.
70 Boston Globe Matthew Gilbert
By the way, I don't mean the word "trash" as an insult. I enjoy well-made, quick-witted trash, and if you do, too, then you will find "Rome" as irresistible as ever.
70 Hollywood Reporter Ray Richmond
It remains a wholly impressive piece of work, stylish and graphic and bold in equal measure while at the same time greatly lacking a cohesive focus.
63 People Weekly Tom Gliatto
As in season 1, the acting is rich and lusty, with no costume-drama fustiness. [15 Jan 2007, p.33]
63 USA Today Robert Bianco
With each episode, the show seems to move further from real life and the real Rome and off into some sex-crazed, soap-opera fantasy version of a place that has never, thankfully, existed before or since.
60 The New York Times Alessandra Stanley
“Rome” is engaging even if it isn’t a swords-and-sandals version of “The Sopranos,” as HBO had hoped.
60 Pittsburgh Post-Gazette Rob Owen
HBO's most obtuse, impenetrable series.
60 The New Yorker Tad Friend
The notion that the Empire ran on pillow talk and poison--the Great Woman theory of history-was also at the heart of the BBC’s 1976 "I, Claudius," but "Rome," with its spitting catfights, is closer in spirit to "Dynasty."
60 TV Guide Matt Roush
It's like Deadwood in togas, a violent and bawdy tapestry of a vanished civilization.
50 Salon Heather Havrilesky
The second season of "Rome" feels more than a little claustrophobic, and operates on a much smaller scale than might be anticipated for such an epic production.
50 Slant Magazine Len Sousa
If only the creators sought fit to put as much detail into their character development as their history, the show might have earned itself a third season.

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