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Thursday, June 5, 2014

The Ten Commandments

Year:  1956

Filming:  Color

Length:  220 minutes

Genre:  Biblical/Epic

Maturity:  PG (for intense thematic elements)

Cast:  Charlton Heston (Moses), Yul Brynner (Pharaoh Ramses), Anne Baxter (Nefretiri), Yvonne De Carlo (Sephora), John Derik (Joshua), Debra Paget (Lilia), Edward G. Robinson (Dathan), Vincent Price (Baka)

Director:  Cecil B. DeMille 

Personal Rating:  4 Stars

***

    Some movies are so classic they should absolutely positively be seen at least one in a lifetime. With regards to The Ten Commandments, it still remains an Easter tradition set in stone for many. In spite of some far-fetched twists in the plot and hammy acting in places, Cecil B. DeMille’s “baby” has grown and thrived because it succeeded in his mission to make the Bible exciting and touched a chord for the post-war world trying to assess the true meaning of liberty.

    Charlton Heston stars as Prince Moses of Egypt, a Hebrew rescued from the Nile by Pharaoh’s daughter when he was only an infant. However, his adopted mother is the only one who knows this, and goes the extra mile to conceal it from her brother, Pharoah Seti, and the royal court. Favored by Seti and despised by his adopted cousin, Ramses, Moses wins great military victories and builds magnificent cities all while romancing with the seductive princess Nefretiri.

    But his lavish lifestyle comes to a grinding halt when a Hebrew swaddling cloth reveals his true identity. Unbeknownst to everyone else, he goes down to the mud pits and works like a slave to be with his “people”. In the course of his time there, he strangles an Egyptian taskmaster for trying to misuse an Israelite woman, Lilia, and for beating her lover, Joshua. He apprehended and brought before the Pharaoh’s throne to the shock of all. He then boisterously declares that he is favor of freedom for the slaves and is sent into exile in the desert.

    When he seems doomed to die, he is rescued by Bedouin shepherdess, Sephora, and her bevy of younger sisters, all overjoyed at finding a real live man! He gradually adapts to his life as a member of the tribe and tends his flocks beneath Mount Sinai, considered to be inhabited by God. He eventually marries Sephora, even though he is still mooning over Nefretiri who had thrown herself at his feet during his trial before Pharoah and vowed she would never forget him.  

    One day Moses runs into Joshua, who has escaped from captivity and come to hail him as the Chosen One who will lead the Children of Israel out of bondage. Moses is skeptical at first, but then he spies a burning bush that is not consumed by the flames on top of the Holy Mountain and decides he must see it more closely. He has a mystical experience with God, and acknowledges his mission to lead his people to the Promised Land. Coming down from Sinai, he is no longer himself.

    In Egypt, Moses and his brother Aaron go head-to-head with now Pharoah Ramses, his old rival, who has married Nefretiri and has a small son. Pharoah, needless to say, isn’t particularly moved when Moses tells him to “Let my people go!” As a result, the famous plagues descend on Egypt. At the same time Nefretiri tries to romantically reconnect with Moses, but he spurns her, and she in turn hardens Pharoah even further against him.

    When the final deadly plague slays the first-born of every house in Egypt, including the royal palace, the Hebrews are finally allowed their freedom. But Pharoah is soon goaded into changing his changing his mind by the embittered Nefretiri who has lost both her old love and her child. A climactic chase ensues, ending up at the shores of The Red Sea and the parting of the waters for the Israelites. But the conflict is not over. While Moses ascends Mount Sinai once more to receive the Commandments of God, the Children of Israel will come up against their own worst enemy: their sinful nature.

    The Ten Commandments is the Biblical epic from the golden era of the 1950’s. DeMille was an expert at serving up a feast for the eyes, and this was his ultimate extravaganza of panache and panorama. It’s a richly detailed drama, laden with sub-plots and character analysis as well as visual splendor. For the time period, the special effects were nothing less than stunning. While we might now be excused for cracking a smirk when the cartoonish fire descends from the sky or the green fog machine emits its lethal substance, or the gelatin Red Sea is poured out of monstrous cartons in reverse, it would be nothing less than pompous for us to sneer.  

    Beyond these imaginative efforts, there are some truly grand scenes including the mass Exodus of the Children of Israel. It is so well choreographed, impressive in its scale but also intimate in the way it focuses on individuals, such as a little boy herding ducks and a woman giving birth to a baby and old man dying and asking for his shrub to be planted in the Promised Land. The subsequent chase by Pharaoh and his charioteers is also a masterpiece.

    One clip that always stays with me is when Nefretiri gazes out of her balcony as we see the full might of the Egyptian host charge across desert, shimmering from the heat and golden sand. Of course the race between the walls of jello-water may be a tad hoaky, but it is still pretty exciting. One more note I have to make involves the color of the sky at intense moments. The eerie blood-red color or storm-black hew it sometimes takes on is deliciously surreal.

    This film is chock full of artful symbolism, like the moment when Nefretiri is playing Hounds and Jackals with Pharoah Seti and the head of her game piece flies off, skidding across the marble floor and landing at Ramses’ feet. Also there is the scene when Ramses tries to discredit Moses with his father, casually laying weights on a scale as each charge is leveled against his brother. Accused on giving the slaves too many privileges, Moses slams down a brick on the other side of the scale, demonstrating the fact that he has gotten his slaves to build a city, whereas Ramses has not.

    The bulk of the main acting is pretty good. Charlton Heston shines once again as the man-against-the-odds, going from glory to griminess before reemerging as liberator. As in equally famous role as Judah Ben-Hur, he rather block-headedly refuses to make use of the opportunities afforded him by his exalted position, even spurning Seti’s offer to forgive him providing he vow he would not lead the Hebrews in rebellion against him. Instead of using tact or grace in his wording (which I think could have helped his people much more from the get-go!), he declares he definitely would lead “his people” rebellion after all!

   The thing that’s a bit irksome in this is his instant disavowal of his loyalty to Egypt and the Pharaoh, even though he was been raised in the court since an infant. Great, so he’s Hebrew by blood, but does that change all his past perceptions and beliefs in a twinkling? The whole thing is blown up for dramatic effect, and even I will admit it is dramatic if a bit unrealistic. One way or another, it does help propel him on his search for the divine. In an interesting twist, Heston is voice of God coming from the burning bush, since he thought interlocutions may well come out that way. A bit cheesy the way they slowed down his voice to sound almost like an alien, but interesting concept nonetheless.

    His counterpart, Yul Brynner, makes a wonderfully agile villain that you almost find yourself admiring at given times. He may be a power-hungry slave-driver who miscalculates when he defies the Hebrew God, but he has a certain noble, authoritative stride to his step, even when he finds his world crumbling around him. Judging from the way he beseeches his Egyptian god of darkness to restore the life of his son, he seems to be a very religious man. By the end of the film, he seems to have experienced enlightenment the hard way when he admits, “Moses’ god is God.”

    The character of Nefretiri, played by Anne Baxter, is probably one of my least favorite in the film. First of all, I think she throws things off in the way of plot and historical accuracy. Yes, she is your typical sword-and-sandal seductress fare, and I don’t suppose the epic would be quite complete without her. But she’s basically a sex symbol with a pathetic lack of depth who finds herself in a worn cycle of being misused while in search of true love. Actually, one of the main emotions here character draws from me is pity.

    Needless to say, the whole little love triangle with Moses, Ramses, and Nefretiri is a fabrication, and I think the character of Moses comes off the worse for it. When he is Prince of Egypt, he is gung-ho about their passionate love affair. But when he returns to Egypt years later as “The Messenger of God”, he treats her with an extremely cold attitude. Yes, she is making a nuisance of herself trying to rekindle their old romance, but I would think it would be more instinctive to feel a deep compassion for his former flame and treat her more sensitively, even if she was trying to get him to sin. She is a lost soul seeking love in all the wrong places, and instead of being firm yet still loving, he comes off as almost flaunting his new position as prophet with a haughty air.

    One love triangle apparently wasn’t sufficient, so they decided have Nefretiri and Sephora come head-to-head over Moses as well before being mutually disillusioned by his role as prophet. “You lost him when he went in search of his God,” Sephora explains. “I lost him when he found his God.” We do seem to “lose touch” with Moses as soon as he descends from Mount Sinai. This is a pity, since it deprives us of getting into his head during the most pivotal points of the movie. That having been said, I like the way these two female leads are contrasted with poetic language to explain that inner beauty is the most important of all. “Love is not an art to us; it is life to us”, Sephora tells Moses.

     Nothing is mentioned in The Bible or elsewhere about Ramses planning on killing the Jewish first-borns during the “let-my-people-go” crisis. It would have been more accurate and reasonable if the film had just hearkened back to the killings of infants when Moses was a baby and indicated that The Angel of Death was avenging that travesty than creating a new one for sensationalism purposes. This addition leads to another awkward moment: Nefretiri goes the extra mile to save Moses’ son, but Moses doesn’t show her much compassion when her own son is sentenced to die or make any major moves to try to save him.

    Two of the worst miscasts have to be the casting of Vincent Price as Baka and Edward G. Robinson as Dathan for this film. Put simply, they doom themselves by being themselves…..with turbines! Shades of John Wayne as Kublai Kahn in The Conqueror, to be sure. But that’s another gruesome tale.  And of course these two incongruent odd-balls would make a run for the same less-than-impressed girl.

    This unfortunate female, Lilia, serves as a representation of the Nation of Israel – “a water lily in the mud”.” Loved by Joshua, bringer down of walls, and misused by creepy miscasts, she almost dies as a result of the green mist but is saved by Joshua who paint’s lamb’s blood over Dathan’s door. She is later almost sacrificed at the altar of the golden calf but is rescued by Moses in the nick of time.  Innocence, defilement, and redemption – the cycle is emblematic of The Chosen People in The Old Testament.

    The Ten Commandments, for all its eccentricities and quirks, remains a masterpiece of storyteller and spectacle that cannot be repeated, and watching it is an Easter tradition for thousands, including myself. I think the transcendence of it can be best captured in the scenes where Moses is struggling through the desert being poured out, bled dry, and left literally in the dust. It is a precursor to Christ’s 40 days in the desert, and emblematic of all those who must be beaten out before they can find God and their calling in life by following His Word. As Pharoah famously says: “So let it be written; so let it be done.”   
  


Moses (Charlton Heston) descends Mt. Sinai with The Ten Commandments

4 comments:

  1. O Most Excellent Pearl! A rare disagreement! Vincent Price is deliciously wicked and slithery! Baca's whip is both the serpent in the Garden and symbolic of inappropriate sexuality, while Edward G. Robinson's Dathan is the fussy, corrupt "suit" who profits from betraying his own people. I suppose the modern Dathan is the businessman who, in collusion with Peking / Beijing, makes millions from the blood of workers in China.

    But, wow! There is almost nothing better on film than Aaron crying out "The Lord is God! The Lord is one!" as a signal to the People of Israel to leave Egypt.

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  2. I both loved and feared this movie as a kid. It's very grand and impressive, but has very human moments as well. The Angel of Death TERRIFIED me, and to this day, I eye any patch of mist with some trepidation.

    Do we know how much time passes between Moses being cast out of Egypt and his return? I got the impression that he ended up spending many years outside Egypt, and it's possible that, over time, remembering how the Hebrew slaves in Egypt were treated, coming to terms with the idea that they were his people, and possibly a more human emotion of anger and retribution towards the Egyptians for taking away the fine lifestyle he'd been raised in may have contributed to his coldness and insensitivity when he returned to free his people. Perhaps his lack of finesse in talking with the Pharaoh came from the (mistaken) idea that he was still a prince, an equal speaking to an equal...which wouldn't have gone over well with the Pharaoh. Some people seem to think that negotiations or quieter measures or cowardly, and that perception, especially for men, may have been even stronger back then.

    I'll have to watch the movie again to pick up on some of the problems or inconsistencies you mentioned, since I haven't seen it in years. Great review!

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  3. What I always thought was hilarious was that after the golden calf incident, they whip through forty years in two seconds. :)

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  4. @Mack: Well, to each his/her own! Maybe I should go to a Price/Robinson reappreciation camp, lol! That is interesting about the symbolism behind Baka's whip, though! And I agree that Aaron's signal for the Israelites to start their trek to the Promised Land is powerful!

    @Kat: Yeah, the green mist is sort of....eek! <:-O Good point about the rather vague time gap between the time Moses is cast out of Egypt and the time he comes back. I mean, he has white hair and a beard upon his return, but I'm not sure if that was just supposed to indicate that he had "seen God" on Sinai.

    Thanks for posting your insights into Moses's attitude! Now that you mention it, anger for having been thrown out of Egypt probably did contribute to his way of handling the Egyptians later on, and his princely upbringing also may have given him a continued feeling of indestructibility!

    @Emerald: I think DeMille's super-budget was just running way low. I mean, who cares about following nomads for 40 years, wandering through the desert? Time-saving measures simply had to be taken! ;-)

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