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Review: Ben-Hur

9
Posted April 5, 2012 by in Action

Rating

Plot
90%


Acting
95%


Directing
90%


Cinematography
90%


Costume
93%


Musical Score
90%


Total Score
91%

91/ 100

What We Thought

Genre: ,
 
Director:
 
Actors: , ,
 
MPAA:
 

What We Liked :

Another spectacular performance from Charlton Heston
 

What We Disliked:

Events are unbelievable, but that's the power of faith
 
Bottom Line

There is a reason Ben-Hur won eleven academy awards when it was released. It is an excellent film and they don’t make them like this anymore.

by Max
Full Article

Ben-Hur is a cinema classic that should need no introduction. Unfortunately, there are too many of us who have yet to see this epic, myself included until recently. Blu-ray has allowed me to see this movie as it has never been seen before and I’d like to share my journey into the biblical epic that is Ben-Hur.

Ben-Hur stars Charlton Heston as Judah Ben-Hur, a wealthy, highly regarded Jewish prince in Jerusalem during the 1st century. An old friend of his is coming into Jerusalem, but his intentions are not pure at heart. Messala arrives in Jerusalem with his army of Roman’s, ready to conquer for the Roman Empire. Messala requests Judah’s help, in essentially, taking control of Judah’s people and land.

Judah refuses to help his friend and when an accident disrupts a Roman brigade, Messala is all to quick to turn a blind eye to Ben-Hur’s request for help. At this point in the story, I was reminded of Gladiator. A high-ranking officials fall from grace and cast away to rot and die. It just shows how timeless the story of Ben-Hur continues to be today. Judah is about to fade away in the desert until a concealed man gives him a cup of water.

This man is supposed to be Jesus Christ. Going into Ben-Hur, I never knew it was a biblical epic. That is made quite clear in the opening sequence of events. Featuring scenes captured throughout our history of the birth of Christ, the scenes tell the story gracefully without even have to explain the events unfolding. Jesus is the entity that drives the story forward even if all we focus on is the struggle and perseverance of Judah Ben-Hur.

There can be no such thing as spoilers for a movie that is fifty years old, so from here on I’m going into my thoughts and highlighting some of the classic sequences. If you want to witness Ben-Hur for your first time unspoiled, I highly recommend picking up the new Blu-ray set. 

The scene everyone remembers from Ben-Hur is probably the chariot race. I was stunned watching that scene. From the costume design, to actually having to build the stadium and statues for the event, it’s an amazing achievement. On top of all that, Heston has to learn to ride chariot for the scene. I don’t see very many actors accomplishing that these days.

Finally, I did not expect Ben-Hur’s family to survive imprisonment. What an unlikely surprise that the miracle of Christ, saved their lives and made them believers. Ben-Hur doesn’t drive faith down your throat the whole movie, which is something I respect about the movie. Having no religious attachment to the material (Jewish), I felt a pain when Ben-Hur was witnesses the crucifixion of Jesus Christ. I would recommend it to all my friends and family regardless of faith.

Ben-Hur is a monumental film achievement. Every person involved with the production, casting, designing should forever remembered for the gift they gave cinema. There is a reason Ben-Hur won eleven academy awards when it was released. It is an excellent film and they don’t make them like this anymore.

[Images from dvdbeaver.com]

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About the Author

Max

Chief Editor of Impassionedcinema. A film enthusiast who studies and creates his own films. Criticizing movies is his favorite pass-time.

9 Comments


  1.  

    i LOVE Ben-Hur. always have, always will. So glad you finally got to see this my friend, and that you enjoyed it. Truly deserving of all the awards it won! and the soundtrack…may I say, possibly ahead of its time, which makes it classic!




    •  
      Max

      Thanks for reading. I thought this review as running a little long, but I didn't even get to go into the nitty gritty of a lot of it. I was pleasantly surprised at how much I enjoyed it. Classic status well deserved.




  2.  

    Oh my goodness, how could I miss your glowing review of this! I'm so glad you finally saw this masterpiece, Max. I totally agree people should see this regardless of their personal belief even though I really admire the filmmaker for making such a big statement of faith and portraying Christ in such a respectful manner. That scene of Christ giving Judah water is my all-time favorite scene and always leaves me speechless. I love the fact that they never show Christ's face, it made even more impact I think.

    It's A+++ in my book, too! Thanks for this review.




    •  
      Max

      I thought that was great framing. They never needed to show Christ's face because you knew exactly who he was. I was so surprised about the mother and sister though. I didn't expect their storyline to go down that path.




  3.  

    YES!! Wonderful review to an all time great masterpiece. I love what you wrote in the Bottom Line, Max.




    •  
      Max

      I see that you love this movie enough to comment twice! I bumped up the review due to the holiday weekend. I have another classic that I'm reviewing for this weekend with Heston in it.




      •  

        Ahah, yes I just realized that, now make that three. You made me want to see it for Easter weekend, though I may only have time for parts of it.




  4.  

    You're right. They don't make films like this any more.

    Although Michael Bay seems to think he does.




    •  
      Max

      Hahaha. Michael Bay. hahahaha. Oh sorry your still here. I'm hoping 'Noah' can approach some of this epicness, but I doubt he's going to get a budget like this film did.





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