Trailers & Videos

WNEW Moses 1980 TV promo
Cast

Burt Lancaster
Moses

Anthony Quayle
Aaron

Ingrid Thulin
Miriam

Irene Papas
Zippora

Aharon Ipalé
Josua

Marina Berti
Eliseba

Yosef Shiloach
Dathan

Mariangela Melato
Prinzessin Bithia

Laurent Terzieff
Pharao Mernefta

Bill Lancaster
Der junge Moses

Jacques Herlin
Magier

Mario Ferrari
Pharao Ramses II.

Simonetta Stefanelli
Cotbi

Michele Placido
Kaleb

John Bartha
Ägypter

Antonio Piovanelli
Korah

Richard Johnson
Erzähler-Stimme

José Quaglio
Minister # 1

Umberto Raho
Minister # 2

Dina Doron
Jochebet
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Reviews
CinemaSerf
To be fair to this biopic of the man who led the Jews from Pharaonic rule in Egypt to the land of Milk and Honey, there has been some serious effort put into the writing. It is less archaic than much of the original biblical text, but it does still manage to convey something of the gravitas of that tome - especially when delivered by Burt Lancaster in the title role. Now true, at times he does over-egg it on the earnestness front, especially towards the end, but for the most part he holds this together remarkably well. He is helped along by the equally rousing oratory of Sir Anthony Quayle who takes on the role of high priest Aaron and by a solid effort from Ingrid Thulin as Miriam. Sadly, though, these three cannot really compensate for the sluggish pace of the whole thing, nor the really pretty lacklustre supporting cast. That’s probably best exemplified by Laurent Terzieff’s weak performance as the Pharoah, but Mariangela Melato doesn’t fare so very much better as Moses’s adopted mother Bithia. It doesn’t compare at all well with DeMille’s “Ten Commandments” (1956) on the lavishness front, but I think it might outdo it on the authenticity front when they travel through the desert eking out an existence from the scraps they can find amongst the brush. It also goes some way to illustrating that all was not always sweetness and light amongst the tribes; that temptation was never far from many a mind and that, as many people may have found from reading the book of Exodus, their lord God wasn’t always the easiest deity to keep sweet! This simply hadn’t the budget nor Gianfranco De Bosio the imagination or vision to create something compelling to watch. It does have it’s moments - thought the parting of the Red Sea maybe isn’t one of them - but it needed a more robust and characterful cast to support the leads and much more succinct and focussed direction.
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