Reviewed by: Brett Willis
STAFF WRITER
Moral Rating: | Good |
Moviemaking Quality: |
|
Primary Audience: | Family |
Genre: | Biblical Epic Adventure Biography Drama |
Length: | 3 hr. 39 min. |
Year of Release: | 1956 |
USA Release: | 3 hr. 40 min. |
The story of Moses (illustrated)
Details about Moses of the Bible
Are you good enough to get to Heaven? Answer
How good is good enough? Answer
Featuring |
Charlton Heston … Moses Yul Brynner … Rameses Anne Baxter … Nefretiri Edward G. Robinson … Dathan Yvonne De Carlo … Sephora Debra Paget … Lilia John Derek … Joshua Cedric Hardwicke … Sethi Nina Foch … Bithiah Martha Scott … Yochabel Judith Anderson … Memnet Vincent Price … Baka John Carradine … Aaron Clint Walker … Sardinian Captain See all » |
Director |
Cecil B. DeMille |
Producer |
Motion Picture Associates Cecil B. DeMille Henry Wilcoxon |
Distributor |
Paramount Pictures Corporation, a subsidiary of ViacomCBS |
With an all-star cast and a high budget, this was and still is an impressive Biblical epic.
We see the panorama of Moses’ life: his mother putting him into the bulrushes to be found by Pharaoh’s family; the early Egyptian career and the exile to Midian; the call from the Burning Bush; the plagues and the Red Sea; the giving of the Law. There are many details added which are not found in the Scriptures (the credits acknowledge that the books “On Eagles’ Wings,” “Pillar of Fire” and “The Prince of Egypt” were used as source material), and some events are altered or merged. I do not agree that while Israel was in Egypt, both they and Abraham’s other descendants had no name for God. And I believe that Moses’ real mother, while nursing him for Pharaoh (which in that culture might have gone on for much longer than we’re accustomed to today), used that time to instill something of the knowledge of the true God (and probably a knowledge of his own identity) in him. But compared to what Hollywood has done in some other Biblical films, this one came out very well. The overall picture of the Israelites being delivered from Egypt by the hand of God is correct, and is treated seriously and respectfully.
There’s no way to tell this story without some historical depictions of violence and death. These scenes are not exploitative in any way. Charlton Heston as Moses and Yul Brynner as the Pharaoh of the Exodus are both excellent. For anyone seeing this film for the first time, the sadness of Pharaoh causing untold suffering by hardening his heart against the commandments of God is not soon forgotten. And there’s the lesson for all of us.
Learn more about the Ten Commandments—GO