


For a story entirely about people of color, the cast is intensely whitewashed (a problem that the recent headed-to-Broadway stage version addresses with a diverse cast).Īnd of course, the Exodus tale deals with heavy themes like infanticide, slavery, and war. Now, don’t let my personal devotion blur the less magical parts of the movie. And when producers at Dreamworks were deciding who to give this multi-million dollar project to, they trusted the capable hands of stalwart Disney writer Brenda Chapman (The Lion King, Beauty and the Beast).

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The all-star cast captures the spirit of each character completely from the emotive Ofra Haza as Moses' birth-mother, to comedic giants like Steve Martin ( Father of the Bride), Martin Short ( Inherent Vice), and Jeff Goldblum ( Isle of Dogs), who pepper the movie with many moments of fun and laughter.īut most crucially, clear and strong direction is more necessary in animation than maybe any other genre. The layer beneath is the creative team, which also earns high marks! The screenplay by Philip LaZebnik ( Mulan Pocahontas) is tender and funny by turns, offering gripping conversations and characters with depth. Between the majestic score by Hans Zimmer (The Lion King), the jubilant and heart-wrenching songs by Stephen Schwartz (Wicked), and the glorious, mind-bending animation courtesy of Dreamworks artists, there’s enough spectacle to satisfy even the most skeptical cinephile. We want our jaws to drop, we want our ears to tingle. I think we can all agree that a huge part of moviegoing is entertainment: the “shock and awe” factor. So what it is about this flick that keeps me returning?īroadly speaking, the movie is totally a sumptuous banquet for the senses. Instead of leaning into his claim to royalty, Moses chooses the harder path: “Let my people go,” he famously demands about his enslaved brothers and sisters. Raised as the son of a powerful Egyptian Pharaoh, Moses ( Val Kilmer, Song to Song sung by Amick Byram) is rocked by the discovery that he was actually born of a Hebrew woman, a member of the slave class in Egypt, and barely escaped genocide sanctioned by his own adopted-father. As in The Ten Commandments and Exodus: Gods and Kings, the Jewish Prophet Moses takes center stage in this oft-told story that lays the crucial groundwork for many major world religions. The plot is a tale as old as time (or rather, older than properly recorded history) so I won’t belabor the details. And after all this time, The Prince of Egypt is one movie I keep revisiting every few years (and to be honest, weeping more profusely at each time). In fact, this December will mark 20 years since its theatrical release (which, um, excuse me while I freak out since that is definitely my earliest going-to-the-movies memory). The Prince of Egypt– where to begin? It’s not exactly a hot new flick.
