Ben-Hur Movie Review
Ben-Hur Review

"Ben-Hur" Overview

Rating: G
1959
Cast and Crew
Director : William WylerProducer : Sam Zimbalist
Screenwiter : Karl Tunberg
Starring : Charlton Heston,Jack Hawkins,Haya Harareet,Stephen Boyd,Hugh Griffith,Martha Scott,Cathy O'Donnell,Sam Jaffe,Finlay Currie
To hell with Gladiator.
Scratch that. Ben-Hur is no stupid gladiator movie. As the title sequence
tells us, this is "A Tale of the Christ," an unabashed religious fable, albeit
one that only shows its hero from the back.
Of course, Jesus is not the real subject of this tale, it's Judah Ben-Hur, a
Jewish prince living in Judea, played by the incomparable Charlton Heston.
Ben-Hur lives high on the hog, here in the year 26, as we're told. And he's a
good guy, nice to his slaves and everything. But woe be unto Judah when the
Romans step up their military presence in his territory. Despite their being
led by his old friend Massala (Stephen Boyd, who never starred in another big
hit after Ben-Hur), tensions run high, and when some tiles accidentally fall
from Ben-Hur's roof, nearly hitting the new Governor of Judea, Judah is quickly
sentenced without trial to hard labor, rowing in the galleys of the Roman navy.
From prince to slave he goes, and because of his endless compassion, Ben-Hur
finds himself legally adopted by a Roman nobleman whose life he has saved years
later. He practices his charioteering, and soon enough he is at liberty to
avenge not only his imprisonment, but that of his mother and sister as well.
That vengeance, as any moviegoer knows, takes place on the chariot course in a
sequence so famous, dramatic, and long it consumes 10 chapters of the film's
61-chapter DVD release.
At 3 1/2 full hours of running time, you aren't likely to find another G-rated
film that kids will hate more than Ben-Hur. Even as an (ostensible) adult, I'm
torn on the film. It's not particularly well-written. The music is
heavy-handed and grates on the ears. The story is far-fetched and lacks proper
editing. And it's 3 1/2 hours long.
But don't mind me. Nominated for 12 Oscars, Ben-Hur won 11, a record. Shot on
65mm super-widescreen film, it is one of the most resplendent films you'll ever
see (check out the new DVD release if you don't believe me -- it also includes
a documentary about the making of the film and a commentary track by Heston,
not to mention an old screen test with Leslie Nielsen as Massala). And Heston
is unforgettable (the rest of the cast is another story). Moviegoers agreed,
when Ben-Hur's grosses saved MGM from bankruptcy. (Warner Brothers has the
rights now.)
All told, I'm content to let the overly dramatic theatrics of Ben-Hur fall by
the wayside (case in point: after four years in prison, Ben-Hur's sister and
mother develop leprosy -- and who do we know that can cure leprosy, hmmmmm).
Instead, I'll sit back and take my place in the stands for that thundering
chariot race. Hell, that's better than a cruddy, overrated gladiator picture
any day.
Ride 'em, cowboy.
Reviewer: Christopher Null





