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I Am Only Getting The MF Doom Gladiator 2 Popcorn Bucket If It Fits On My Head

'My name is Maximus Decimus Meridius, commander of the armies of the North, general of the Felix Legions and loyal servant to the true emperor, Marcus Aurelius'

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Gladiator 2 popcorn buckets sit on a table.
Screenshot: Regal / Kotaku

Gladiator 2 is out next month, so it was only a matter of time before we caught a glimpse of a popcorn bucket that embodied all of the decadence that eventually led Rome to collapse. It’s a call back to the helmet Maximus Decimus Meridius wears in the first movie which will presumably have a cameo in the sequel. It’s also what rapper MF Doom’s iconic mask is based on.

In other words, I better be able to wear this popcorn bucket like a helmet or I’m going to be severely disappointed. Limited edition popcorn buckets tend to be around 7-10 inches in diameter, which roughly comes out to the average adult’s head circumference. The top of the helmet opens up and there’s all the cardboard in the way but finding a way to strap it to my skull is the least I can do to honor the sacrifices of all the Colosseum’s victims, fictional or otherwise.

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If you haven’t been paying attention, Gladiator 2 is director Ridley Scott returning to his hit 2000 blockbuster starring Russell Crowe with a story that takes place 20 years after the original. Paul Mescal plays Crowe’s son, Pedro Pascal is the Roman general who massacres Mescal’s family, and Denzel Washington is a former slave turned arms dealer looking to usurp control of Rome from its bumbling co-emperors.

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It’s a thin but potentially entertaining setup that only Scott, in the late, untouchable stage of his storied career, could seemingly get $200-$300 million to gamble on. This time around he’s upping the stakes with more animals and better VFX. “I’ve got a troop of 12 baboons who are carnivorous,” Scott recently told Total Film. “Trust me, these are real. And they look real. You’re staring at 12 real baboons and a real rhino, and a massive water battle with sharks in the water in the Colosseum.”

The original movie looked incredible for its time, with massive backdrops of Rome and a memorable setpiece with a real lion. CGI was deployed but sparingly given the technology’s limitations and cost back then. Hopefully, it remains a subtle addition to Gladiator 2. Somehow I doubt it will be. Whether Scott delivers another epic or a dud like last year’s Napoleon, at least we’ll have the popcorn bucket. Gladiator 2 hits theaters on November 15.

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