
And a rather enjoyable telling it is. Steve Reeves (of Hercules fame) stars opposite fellow bodybuilder-turned-actor Gordon Scott (of Tarzan fame) as the titular brothers. At the time, Reeves was probably the biggest star of European cinema, but it is Scott who really sticks in the mind due to his superior abilities as an actor. Though, to be fair to him, Reeves does appear to have the more impressively bulging biceps.

The other noteable in the movie is sexy blonde Virna Lisa, who plays the love interest which serves to drive a further wedge between the two brothers (the primary wedge being the blind ambition of Remus). In the years which followed, Lisa went on to play in high-profile Hollywood romantic comedies opposite the likes of Jack Lemmon, Tony Curtis and Frank Sinatra, and her career flourished for many decades beyond.
The same cannot be said for Reeves and Scott, both of whom retired at around the time the Spaghetti western emerged, and interest in sweaty men in loincloths began to wane.

None of this bears much direct relation to the original ancient legend of Romulus and Remus, of which there are a number of different versions. The opening sequence, and the inevitable climax, are the only elements that really stay true to the source material. The movie takes us on a journey all of its own, and an enjoyable adventure is had by all who partake.

This fact is something of an injustice; even the fantastically terrible B-movie fare of Hercules and the Captive Women are remembered more than these perfectly serviceable historical epics. Perhaps the problem is simply that they aren't good enough to be cinematic classics, nor are they bad enough to feature on MST3K.
Movies such as this are lost in the bottomless sea of mediocrity, from whence few souls have been recovered.