![]() ![]() The late-1960s BBC show Up Pompeii!offered a comedic rendering of life in the city before the explosion, but more serious interpretations, like the 2014 Hollywood movie Pompeii, met with only lukewarm critical reception. Watch it, and you can see Pompeii brought back to life with computer-generated imagery - and then, in snapshots over the course of 48 hours, entombed by Vesuvius again.Īs inherently compelling as we find the story of Pompeii, modern drama has struggled to capture the power of the disaster that defines it. The exhibition included a 3D theater installation that featured the animation above. ![]() A Day in Pompeii, an exhibition held at the Melbourne Museum in 2009, gave its more than 330,000 visitors a chance to experience Pompeii’s life even more vividly. The ash-preserved ruins of Pompeii, more than any other source, have provided historians with a window into just what life in that time and place was like. Baths, houses, tools and other possessions (including plenty of wine bottles), frescoes, graffiti, an ampitheater, an aqueduct, the “ Villa of the Mysteries“: Pompeii has it all, as far as the stuff of first-century Roman life goes. Buried and thus frozen in time by the eruption of Mount Vesuvius in 79 AD, the ancient Roman town of 11,000 has provided an object of great historical interest ever since its rediscovery in 1599. A good disaster story never fails to fascinate - and, given that it actually happened, the story of Pompeii especially so. ![]()
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