Gladiator II features minor progressive elements primarily through casting choices like Denzel Washington's portrayal of Macrinus, a role sparking race-swapping accusations despite historical Berber roots, and Pedro Pascal as a Roman general, adding incidental diversity without clashing severely with the ancient setting. The emperors Geta and Caracalla are depicted as flamboyant, bisexual tyrants with mixed-gender harems, providing noticeable LGBTQ+ representation but as decadent villains using anti-woke stereotypes rather than sympathetic heroes or lectures on identity. A rumored gay kiss involving Washington was cut, and a Palestinian actress's role was removed, avoiding overt activism. The core story remains a traditional tale of masculine revenge, honor, and gladiatorial combat led by straight white protagonist Paul Mescal's Lucius, with minimal female roles and no driving social justice themes, systemic critiques, or DEI mandates evident in plot or creator statements. Ridley Scott prioritizes spectacle over messaging, dismissing historical nitpicks. While trailer backlash labeled it 'woke' over casting, audience reactions are split, with many praising its anti-woke tropes and box office success ($800M+ worldwide) confirming entertainment focus prevails, uncompromised by ideology.