Pompeii in popular culture

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Karl Brullov, The Last Day of Pompeii (1830–1833)

The ancient Roman city of Pompeii has been frequently featured in literature and popular culture since its modern rediscovery. Pompeii was buried under 4 to 6 m (13 to 20 ft) of volcanic ash and pumice in the eruption of Mount Vesuvius in AD 79.

Pompeii served as the background for the historic novels The Last Days of Pompeii (1834) by Edward Bulwer-Lytton (since adapted for film and TV), Arria Marcella (1852) by Théophile Gautier, The Taras Report on Pompeii (1975) by Alan Lloyd. Pompeii also appears in Shadows in Bronze (1990) and other novels in the Marcus Didius Falco series.

Film

The Last Days of Pompeii (1908)

There have been several movies based on Edward Bulwer-Lytton's 1834 book, The Last Days of Pompeii:

Productions using Pompeii as a story backdrop include:

Allusions to Pompeii

  • Vesuvius is the name of the fictional glam metal band in the 2008 comedy The Rocker, which produces a hit song called "Pompeii Nights", depicting a glorified but grim version of the disaster.

Games

Music

Artists

Compositions

Albums

  • The St. Louis post-hardcore band Adair named their 2006 concept album, The Destruction of Everything is the Beginning of Something New, after the theme of Pompeii's demise. The album's lyrics often reference the idea of death and rebirth.

Songs

TV

Pompeii is featured in many television biographies and documentaries. It is also featured in ABC's television series called Roman Mysteries.

Entertainment

  • Pompeii was supposedly fueled with supernatural energy. The paranormal reality TV show Destination Truth feature this historic land to prove a paranormal presence roams the ancient city.

Fiction

  • It was the setting for the British comedy television series Up Pompeii!, the 1971 movie of the series Up Pompeii, and its two one-off specials Further Up Pompeii! (1975) and Further Up Pompeii (1991). Only in the movie does Mount Vesuvius actually erupt.
  • The Last Days of Pompeii (Italy/UK/US) is a television miniseries from 1984 based on Edward Bulwer-Lytton's book The Last Days of Pompeii.
  • In The Simpsons episode "The Italian Bob" the family visits the remnants of Pompeii where Lisa refers to the numerous victims whose bodies were preserved by the ash in the position they were in the moment they died. One group of plaster cast victims include a family exactly resembling the Simpsons with a Homer look-alike strangling a Bart look-alike. The couch gag from "Homer and Lisa Exchange Cross Words" is also a reference to Pompeii.
  • Pompeii featured in the second episode of the fourth series of revived BBC drama series Doctor Who, named "The Fires of Pompeii", where it transpires that the Tenth Doctor and Donna Noble caused the eruption in order to prevent the Earth from being taken over by an alien race known as the Pyroviles.[10]
  • "The Fires of Vulcan" – Doctor Who audio drama in the city just before the eruption with the Seventh Doctor.
  • Within the universe of the Highlander franchise, immortals are not allowed to take heads on holy ground. According to the character Joe Dawson in the episode Little Tin God, there is a story that tells of how two immortals engaged on holy ground resulted in the eruption of Mount Vesuvius.
  • In the television series Forever Knight, vampire Lucien Lacroix was a Roman general who returns home to Pompeii to find his daughter Divia has become a vampire. He is turned into a vampire by his daughter during the fall of Pompeii.
  • Apocalypse Pompeii (2014) TV film – Mount Vesuvius erupts when a family visits Pompeii. A Former Special Ops commando visits the ancient city on business with his wife and daughter and become trapped as Mt. Vesuvius erupts with massive force. While his family fights to survive the deadly onslaught of heat and lava, he enlists his former teammates in a daring operation beneath the ruins of Pompeii.
  • Pompeii's destruction is depicted in the Disney+ series Loki, set in the Marvel Cinematic Universe. In the episode "The Variant", an alternative version of the character Loki warns the people of Pompeii about Mount Vesuvius' coming eruption. The villagers at first dismiss his warnings until the eruption starts, while Agent Mobius notices that Loki's actions did not affect the timeline.
  • It was the setting for the Japanese anime T・P BON on Netflix. In the episode The Wrath of the Gods, it was the eruption of Mount Vesuvius during the battle of Lazarus on Amphitheatre of Pompeii in 79 AD.

Documentaries

  • Ancient Mysteries: Pompeii: Buried Alive (1996), an A&E television documentary narrated by Leonard Nimoy.[11]
  • In the Shadow of Vesuvius (1997), a National Geographic special that explores the sites of Pompeii and Herculaneum, interviews archaeologists, and examines the events leading up to the eruption of Vesuvius.[citation needed]
  • Pompeii: The Last Day (2003), an hour-long drama produced for the BBC that portrays several characters (with historically attested names, but fictional life-stories) living in Pompeii, Herculaneum and around the Bay of Naples, and their last hours, including a fuller and his wife, two gladiators, and Pliny the Elder. It also portrays the facts of the eruption. It is heavily influenced by Edward Bulwer-Lytton's book The Last Days of Pompeii (see Pompeii in popular culture#Books and other printed works), which – while being responsible for the popularization of Pompeii in Western culture – has been dismissed for its lack of historical credibility. To give some historical reality to the characters, the death throes of the characters portrayed are based on actual skeletons and bodies found during excavations in the 18th century, while Pliny the Elder's death is shown as based on the accounts of how he actually died. Although in the story the narrator uses reports that Pliny the Elder died from inhaling the fumes of the final and greatest pyroclastic surge, as many reports have found, he most likely had suffered a heart attack or stroke.[citation needed]
  • Pompeii and the 79 AD eruption (2004), a 120-minute Tokyo Broadcasting System.
  • Pompeii Live (June 28, 2006), a Channel 5 production featuring a live archaeological dig at Pompeii and Herculaneum[12][13]
  • Pompeii: The Mystery of the People Frozen in Time (2013), a BBC One drama documentary presented by Dr. Margaret Mountford.[14]

Visual art

Art exhibitions

Artworks

Other uses

References

Related Articles

Wikiwand AI