No-one actually snarls ‘Did you spill my pint?’ in Centurion – I don’t think they had pints in 2nd-century
Elegance has never been the forte of Newcastle-born director Neil Marshall, who previously gave us underground zombies in The Descent and Mad Max-like car chases in Doomsday. Instead, his defining trait (apart from a full-blooded taste for gross excess and bone-crunching violence) has always been independence: like Luc Besson in
If you wanted to get political, you could say
‘Here’ is Scotland (also the setting for Doomsday, so maybe Mr. Marshall’s worked out a special relationship with the Scottish Film Board), treated like New Zealand in Lord of the Rings, a land of mist and mountains. An ambush in a misty forest is among the highlights, albeit turning into a long montage of carnage – split skulls, gouged eyes – that goes beyond anything Frodo and Co. had to face, the battlefield covered in “a slurry of blood, puke, piss, and the entrails of friends and enemies”. Centurion is pretty uninhibited when it comes to violence, though in fact there are hints of enforced cuts in various places: the murder of a child isn’t shown, understandably, nor (less understandably) is a sex scene that seems all but inevitable when Quintus and his men take shelter with a sultry necromancer. Given that the film was rated ‘15’ (not ‘18’) in Britain, you have to wonder if the sight of exposed flesh was too much for the UK Ratings Board, even though flesh being hacked and mauled was apparently okay.
There aren’t many clever twists in Centurion. A smarter film might’ve had our heroes kidnap the child and hold him hostage (he’s the son of the Pict chief) but here they just kill him, spurring a quest for revenge. Even when Quintus makes a plan, it counts for nothing (Etain finds them anyway). Brain is no match for brawn;
Still, there’s a lot to be said for the well-made B-movie – and Centurion, for all its flaws, has a certain uncompromising earnestness that’s almost endearing. It’s crude and messy but it’s made with passion, not by committee – a passion both for guilty movie pleasures and the Scottish landscape, the old warrior ethos, the Celtic wildness at the core of the British subconscious. I’ll continue watching