P
patrick457
Guest
Not really. Some Moses films tend to focus more on the daubing lamb’s blood over the doorposts rather than the meal. The Prince of Egypt, like The Bible, omits the meal entirely. (In fact, I note the overall huge influence The Prince of Egypt has on the Moses segment - something I already noted from the trailer.) DeMille’s The Ten Commandments show Moses and company having the meal, but AFAIK no scene where it is commanded.I loved the imagery of the burning bush! However, it really bothered me that for the Passover - they showed one lamb being cut - and everyone getting blood out to put on their doorpost. It totally left out the meal, the familes eating the lamb that they sacrificed.
Did that bother any one else?
I wonder if they will downplay the Last Supper.
A couple of films I know of that focus on the meal is the 1995 Moses (yet another Lux Vide production), which follows the biblical text more or less faithfully at this point, and the 2006 The Ten Commandments (the live-action TV series), but the overall impact of the scene in the latter is somewhat lessened due to that series’ de-emphasis on the Hebrews’ Hebrew identity (ironically, this is the only production along with the 1956 The Ten Commandments which shows Joseph’s bones being taken out of Egypt - in fact, this series even seems to pay more attention to it than in DeMille’s film): the animal blood is not explicitly identified as deriving from lambs or goats (in fact, what ‘meat’ they are to eat is never specified), and while Moses does command the people to tell their progeny of their former lives as slaves, there is no on-screen command of the meal being instituted as a perpetual ordinance.
BTW, did anyone notice how much of a large ham the pharaoh was here? I mean, he was more hammy than Yul Brynner’s Rameses.