Cast: Christian Bale, Joel Edgerton, John Turturro, Ben Kingsley, María Valverde, Sigourney Weaver, Indira Varma
Direction: Ridley Scott
Genre: Action
Duration: 2 hours 32 minutes
An epic tale, massive in scale
Story: Moses
(Bale) learns about who he really is and leads 400,000 Hebrew slaves
out of enslavement in Egypt to faraway Canaan. While battling his own
self-doubt, he must also escape the wrath of the furious Pharaoh Ramses.
Review: We
are introduced to a grown-up Moses (although his origins are helpfully
explained to him later in the film) who lives in the palace of the
Pharaoh Seti (Turturro) in the city of Memphis, along the River Nile. In
this magnificent palace, where superstitions abound, Moses prefers
pragmatism to ceremony. Moses is both brave and honest and Seti quite
clearly favours him, even though Ramses (Edgerton) is actually Seti's
son by blood.
Seti
presents Moses and Ramses with two beautiful, ornate swords and tells
them to look after one another on the battlefield as brothers would.
Later, in the thick of battle against the Hittites, Moses saves Ramses's
life. Then, when Moses visits the city of Pithom on an assignment, an
elder, Nun (Kingsley), tells a disbelieving Moses who he really is. Soon
after he returns to Memphis, Ramses inherits the throne and Moses is
exiled. He settles down in a faraway land and marries Zipporah
(Valverde, absolutely stunning) before having to embark on his
monumental mission.
While the visuals can only be described using
superlatives, some bits involving interpersonal relationships could
have been more developed. However, scenes involving Moses and Ramses are
often electrifying. So is the 'burning bush' sequence. The battles will
take your breath away - crashing chariots, splintering spears, flaming
arrows, metal against metal and more gore than you'd expect to see.
Ramses's cold-blooded disregard for human life is shocking. But then the
Ten Plagues unleashed on the Egyptians by God as punishment are
unrelenting in their devastation. The Nile runs blood red, overflowing
with dead fish. Masses of flies spread dread and disease. Clouds of
locusts ravage crops and a sinister shadow of death creeps across the
accursed land like a cold hand. Exodus: Gods and Kings is 'spectacle' with a capital 'S' and in more ways than one, definitely epic.
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