The wolf is the earthy forest threat; the eagle emblematic of Roman power. These are the symbols (notes 3,4) of a more empathic and personal story of pillage-and-plunder than you’ve seen in other series about the ancients. BARBARIANS, now streaming on Netflix, beats many blood-and-guts epics and harnesses your emotions to its galloping close, like a beautiful poem. It has plenty of sturm & drang, ‘Mists of Avalon’ tropes, and urgent, compelling drama. But showrunners Arne Nolting and Jan Martin Scharf have higher purpose — the rescue of an historic moment from Nazi fake news (note 1).
For story, we follow friends and poignant love triangle (above from l) Arminius (Laurence Rupp),Thusnelda (Jeanne Goursaud), and Folkwin, (David Schütter), from childhood into maturity and a famous battle. It’s a tale conceived around feuding local Germanic tribes (‘barbarians’ to the Romans) who join forces to throw off Roman rule. The battle of Teutoburg Forest 9AD was a singular loss and insult to Rome, ending its expansion in Germania/Germany. The Nazis used it to magnify German prowess and claim Arminius an ancestor to Hitler.
Of the three leads, only Folkwin Wulfspeer (above) is imaginary — village swordsman of humble folk, with smarter, gruffer intensity than Brad Pitt’s Achilles. Schütter is oddly arresting as the jock who spears and thinks, even more so than Arminius, whose story this is. Folkwin is lover of Thusnelda, whose controlling father, a Cherusci elder, is priming her for sale to the Chatti chief for five horses. Meanwhile, Arminius had been taken as a child and raised to a position of authority by renowned General Varus, whom he has now joined in Germania (below, Varus, l, Arminius, r).
According to historians (notes 1,2) the Battle of Teutoburg Forest in 9 AD became an ideological rallying point for the Nazis and Arminius an inspiration for far-right extremists. Primary scriptwriter Andreas Heckmann set out to remedy this Reich-wrong, spinning suspense and a love story quite apart from battle history, which has been avoided because of its Nazification. In 1875, after the founding of the German Empire, a mighty statue of Arminius was unveiled in the forest (below). He is depicted as a colossus who saved the ‘purity’ of German blood (Barbarians ‘pure’?) from Roman conquest. (Too bad the swastica, a pagan symbol of life, is too far corrupted by the Nazis for rescue.)
The series begins with Thusnelda being offered to Chatti chief, Hadgan, a greasy guy with bad teeth who complains her pelvis is too narrow. A bully, Hadgan is way out of his league here—Thusnelda talks to the gods and is a lethal warrior; she’ll dispose of him later. But for now, the Romans demand cows and grain — a resumption of their former depredations. Thusnelda escapes to Folkwin where they make love and plot to hunt bird — the Roman golden eagle standard— though there will be blood. The theft will prove that Rome can be beaten; the battle approaches.