A noticeable piece of dramatic license has Spartacus' son born exactly at the moment Spartacus dies in battle. As Marcus Crassus and Pompey Magnus are proclaimed co-consuls, the announcer calls Rome an Empire, when it was still an Republic at the time.
The plot, setting and costumes are nearly identical to those of Stanley Kubrick's Spartacus (1960). However, this adaptation follows Howard Fast's novel more closely than does Kubrick's movie. (Two of the more noticeable omissions of the new adaptation are the "I am Spartacus!" scene, and Spartacus and his wife's reunion after battle.) The mini-series is shown as a story as a woman narrates to her son, who are later revealed to be Spartacus' wife and son.
Sir Alan Bates' last performance. He died on December 27, 2003 at the age of sixty-nine.
Based on the novel of the same name by Howard Fast.
In the movie the character Aggripa commits suicide by stabbing himself in the upper abdomen probably in the pancreas. The actor who played Aggripa died of pancreatic cancer between the filming and the TV premier.