Exodus: Gods and Kings (2014) [Blu-ray]
Action | Adventure | Drama
Tagline: Once Brothers, Now Enemies
From acclaimed director Ridley Scott (Gladiator, Prometheus) comes Exodus: Gods and Kings, the epic tale of one man's daring courage to take on an empire. Using state-of-the-art visual effects, this spectacular adventure brings new life to the story of
Moses (Christian Bale) as he defies the Pharaoh Ramses (Joel Edgerton), setting 400,000 slaves on a monumental journey of escape from Egypt and its terrifying cycle of deadly plagues.
Storyline: Epic adventure Exodus: Gods and Kings is the story of one man's daring courage to take on the might of an empire. Using state of the art visual effects and 3D immersion, Scott brings new life to the story of the
defiant leader Moses as he rises up against the Egyptian Pharaoh Ramses, setting 600,000 slaves on a monumental journey of escape from Egypt and its terrifying cycle of deadly plagues. Written by 20th Century Fox
Reviewer's Note: Reviewed by Jeffrey Kauffman, March 16, 2015 -- Otto Preminger's 1960 opus Exodus offered a still controversial portrayal of the rise of the nation of Israel in the wake of the horrifying linked events of
the Holocaust and World War II. The film is probably best remembered today for its iconic Academy Award winning score by Ernest Gold, a score whose towering theme became an unexpected number 2 charting hit for the piano duo of Ferrante and Teicher. In a
bit of unintentional irony, perhaps the most goyische singer of that era, Pat Boone, later wrote a lyric for Gold's theme, a lyric which included the opening lines: This land is mine
God gave this land to me.
Now Boone's lyric of course referred to the Jewish People in general and therefore perhaps Moses by inference, but it still may have seemed weirdly anachronistic for such a "white bread" crooner to be espousing territorial rights in a region that had been
beset by internecine (remember Abraham and his children, please) tribal warfare for untold millennia. The "real" (or at least original) exodus is of course one of the central stories of Judaism and by default Christianity, a tale that has been imprinted
in countless minds not just due to the Bible but perhaps (as sad as this may strike some folks) more so due to annual broadcasts of Cecil B. DeMille's legendary 1956 version of The Ten Commandments. That iteration of the timeless narrative
is almost unapologetically hokey at times (I still can't make it through a viewing without busting a gut when Anne Baxter gazes at Charlton Heston and emits the unforgettable line, "Oh, Moses, you stubborn, splendid, adorable fool!"), but it still manages
to work up a rather remarkably potent emotional aspect as it details the Jews' flight from slavery in Egypt into an ostensibly more hopeful future. Now Ridley Scott, certainly one of the more audacious and visually perspicacious directors working in
contemporary film, has offered his interpretation of the Moses chronicle, in a revision which may not rise to the almost magical realist levels of Darren Aronofsky's "reboot" of the Noah legend, but which certainly doesn't feel itself beholden to
either the original Biblical account or in fact to the accretion of popular tropes which have become part of the narrative due to offerings like the DeMille film. The result is often spectacular from a visual perspective, as might be expected, but
Exodus: Gods and Kings never really delivers on an emotional level, beset by inadequacies in the screenplay and some odd casting and performance choices that tend to lift the viewer squarely out of the supposed historical milieu and (somewhat like
the Aronofsky film) directly into a more contemporary ambience which is sometimes at odds with what's being portrayed.
If Exodus: Gods and Kings doesn't exactly plop the viewer down in media res, it at least forsakes the ark of bulrushes daubed with asphalt and pitch, as well as Moses' assimilation into the home of the Pharoah, instead picking things up from
Moses (Christian Bale) as an adult, about to join his "brother" Ramesses II (Joel Edgerton) on an incursion against the Hittites. A priestess offers ruling Pharoah Seti I (John Turturro— no, really, John Turturro) a mysterious prophecy indicating
that one of the two supposed siblings will soon be saved, and the one doing the saving will go on to be a celebrated leader. It doesn't take long for that prophecy to play out, and of course it's Moses coming to the rescue of Ramesses, an act that saves
Ramesses' life but which sets up a cascading series of events based on fear and paranoia, as well as a certain karmic justice as Moses' convoluted history finally comes to light.
A consortium of screenwriters, including Adam Cooper, Bill Collage (an especially fitting surname), Jeffrey Caine and Steven Zaillian, both redact and augment the original Biblical narrative, telescoping and in some cases outright omitting various
elements while also introducing some other aspects that may strike some "true believers" as unnecessarily fanciful. Chief among these is a sequence which is probably the most similar in tone to some of Aronofsky's formulation of the Noah story, when
Moses' vision of the burning bush is attended by a physical messenger from the Divine in the form of a child, all due to a bonk on the head courtesy of a rockslide. Despite Aronofsky's magical realist sensibilities which run rampant through Noah,
both he and in this film the more traditional skewing Scott seem averse to suggesting that God can just reach out and touch his creation. Instead, more "rational" seeming explanations (even if those are induced dream states, as in the case of Noah)
are proffered for some of the Divine "messaging", as if to make the reality of God interacting with humans somehow more palatable.
Scott's visual sense never fails him in this appealingly gargantuan production, but as sometimes at least tends to be the case with this director, story elements are not always well focused. This film is also beset by some peculiar performance choices, as
well as some stunt casting that will pull most viewers squarely out of the historical milieu. In the first of those aforementioned issues, Joel Edgerton offers a mumbly Method take on Ramesses that might have been done by someone of James Dean's
sensibilities back in the days of good old Cecil B. DeMille. In the second category, when people like Sigourney Weaver (no, really, Sigourney Weaver) traipse through the film (as Pharoah John Turturro's wife) with little to offer other than
differing (and patently odd) headdresses, the typical reaction will probably be stifled snickering and rolled eyes, despite what may have been Scott's purely honorable intentions in offering his former collaborator a chance to dress up and get paid for
it.
The film offers suitably grand, CGI laden, sequences for big set pieces like the parting of the Red Sea and (at least some of) the plagues that beset Egypt, but it often fails to really connect on an intimate level, despite halting attempts to deliver
more "human interest" via Moses' contentious relationship with Zipporah (Maria Valverde). Occasionally, supporting performances like Aaron Paul's Joshua manage to crack through Scott's overwhelming visual style to deliver something approaching genuine
emotion.
It's been a really interesting last year or so for the so-called Biblical Epic, with Aronofsky's completely peculiar but often quite compelling take on Noah and now this somewhat more stolid but occasionally audacious "reboot" of the Moses story. A
lot of people have been going on record stating that love it or loathe it, the Aronofsky film at least offered something rather radically different from the DeMille days of yore. The ironic thing about this is that Scott may have reinvigorated the DeMille
ethos in more ways than one. His Exodus: Gods and Kings is certainly relatively more traditional, despite some occasional lapses into whimsy, but it also recreates a certain glossy sheen that tended to be part and parcel of Biblical Epics
back in the 1950s and 1960s. That sheen is almost always fascinating to look at it, but it also acts as a lacquer keeping the characters and the audience separated by an emotionless if shiny veneer.
Exodus: Gods and Kings is a problematic treatment of iconic source material, one that trades a bit too much in a post-modern approach toward its subject, while also resolutely eschewing even the hint of any "real" supernaturally Divine
interference. That makes it a rather odd "Biblical" epic to begin with, something that is probably only exacerbated by some annoying performances. All of that said, the film is often quite riveting and is certainly never less than stunning from a
purely visual standpoint, and (as in the case of Noah, love it or loathe it), it's a much more traditional film than perhaps even Ridley Scott meant for it to be. Technical merits are very strong, though those wanting more fulsome
supplements may want to check out the 3D release as an alternative. With caveats noted about the film itself, Exodus: Gods and Kings comes Recommended.
[CSW] -2.4- I agree with this reviewer:
The story of Moses & the Exodus is the most iconic, epic, & well known Bible story. His journey represents the archetypal hero quest. All of the basic elements that make a timeless adventure are present in the story of Exodus: the struggle for
the freedom of a nation, a leader who guides them & wields a magical staff, a royal court hell bent on oppression, plagues, a sea being split in two. The script nearly writes itself! All a filmmaker need do is fill in the gaps with artistic license &
presto the epic is made, & has been. All of the magic, the wonder, the drama has already been lavishly & faithfully portrayed in The Ten Commandments & in The Prince of Egypt. This is what Exodus: Gods & Kings fails to do, on nearly
every level. The emotional heart of the story of Moses' identity crisis is not present. Ramses simply makes him leave Egypt upon learning of his heritage. Fast forward to a lackluster burning bush scene & the story is wrought & without heart, humanity, or
ethos. And, as if that were not bad enough, every magical, supernatural, and stirring dramatic element that makes the story so iconic is eschewed and replaced by lackluster realism. For one, Moses doesn't even wield his magical staff in this film (that's
like having Batman without the Batmobile)!Out of all the Bible stories to retell in a realistic fashion, they chose the one with the most spectacular fantasy set pieces & took out all of the wonder, majesty, magic and heart out of the story! This film
transforms this epic historical fantasy into a bleak, grey, soulless, & joyless exercise. For shame. Simply put, what Exodus: God & Kings could have used was the wizardry of myth instead of its boring bleak realism.
[V5.0-A5.0] MPEG-4 AVC - D-Box 10/10.
º º