The Prince of Egypt Movie Review
The Prince of Egypt Review

"The Prince of Egypt" Overview

Rating: PG
1998
Cast and Crew
Director : Brenda Chapman,Steve HicknerProducer : Sandra Rabins,Penney Cox
Screenwiter : Kelly Asbury,Lorna Cook
Starring : Val Kilmer,Ralph Fiennes,Patrick Stewart,Sandra Bullock
This was the one everyone had been waiting for. Dreamworks had had its varied
successes with The Peacemaker, Deep Impact, and the recently released Antz.
But The Prince of Egypt was to be the cornerstone of a new animation empire,
the first that would match Disney. That is the whole reason Jeffrey Katzenberg
was even allowed into this triumvirate anyway right? To recreate that magical
formula for animation that he had supposedly perfected at Disney with the likes
of Beauty and the Beast, Aladdin, and The Lion King. Well. . . better luck
next year.
Don't get too far ahead of me now. The Prince of Egypt is a solid and
consistent movie. The animation is first rate, the storyline is strong, and at
first glance it is missing nothing from the formula of winning animation.
Nonetheless, it rises more to the level of recent mid-range Disney successes
like Hercules and Hunchback, than the pantheon of Belle and Simba. And its
fundamental shortcoming is really no different than that of these two recent
Disney releases, which is a basic disregard for the animation formula. In
short, these movies seem to ignore the fact that they are first and foremost
musicals. And the most important element of a musical is, or course, the music.
Maybe its a bigger problem than that. Maybe society as a whole doesn't want to
accept that the musical could still survive in today's cynical age. And if
accepting that means I might have to witness the second coming of Madonna in
Evita, then I sure as hell don't want anything to do with a musical revival.
But the fact of the matter is that animation is the lone remaining bastion of
the musical genre in film, and for some reason or another, the combination
works. So Dreamworks can steal all of Disney's animators, their animation
directors (and by the way, where did these guys come from anyway?), and even
the production cheif. But in the end, it's the music guys. Don't forget the
music.
The Prince of Egypt has a slightly bigger problem in that on top of this, the
Dreamworks guys decided to go highbrow on Disney and make theirs a mature
animated film. Unlike any of the G-rated Disney classics aforementioned,
Prince is almost unmentionably PG. Alright, so they wanted to hit it big, grab
the Oscar noms, but at the end of the day, it's still a musical. If you wanted
to make the greatest story ever told an action-adventure-drama, too late, we
saw that one 40 years ago. So guys, I'm not really trying to nag too much. It
was actually a pretty good showing, but next time: pick a genre and go with it.
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Go down, Moses.
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Review by Bradley Null
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