Wednesday, January 14, 2015
Seven Places Where Exodus-Gods and Kings Got it Wrong
By Ken Spiro
Ridley Scott, who is better known for movies like Alien
and Gladiator, has decided to take a shot at The Book of Books-The
Bible. His new movie Exodus: Gods and Kings is the fourth attempt to
re-create this Biblical Epic. Cecil B. DeMille made two version in 1923 (a
silent movie) and 1956, The Ten Commandments, and DreamWorks did the
animated version, Prince of Egypt, in 1998.
It seems that each new remake of the classic Bible story gets
further and further away from the “original script.” So here’s a list of seven
places where Ridley got it wrong:
1-God: There
is no disembodied voice of God anywhere in the movie -not even speaking from
the burning bush! The only character who speaks on behalf of God is a petulant
pre-adolescent boy. I always thought that
if God had a voice He would sound more like James Earl Jones. I have no idea where the boy came from but he
inspires very little awe.
In The Book God is always talking to Moses and never appears
in any human-like form but always as a disembodied voice. The very notion of
God taking a human form goes completely against the incorporeal nature of the
infinite Creator of the universe that Judaism so strongly affirms.
2-Moses: Moses
is played by a very intense and often sulking Christian Bales. While Bales is a first-class actor there are
certainly enough Jewish actors in Hollywood so I have no idea why Scott didn't
use one of them or at least pick someone who looks a little Jewish! Scott’s
Moses has no idea he is Jewish until confronted by a band of Hebrew slaves
including his brother Aaron.
In The Book Moses,
who is raised by Pharaoh’s daughter (Scott got that one right), has his mother,
Yochevet, as his wet-nurse (I guess he only wants “kosher milk ;-) and
therefore always knows that he is Jewish. The fact that he stays loyal and
connected to the Jewish people despite their lowly position and his exalted
status is a testament to his greatness and his commitment.
In the movie, Moses gets his calling 9 years after he has
fled from Egypt.
In The Book he
spends decades in Median and only has his first prophetic encounter with the
burning bush at the ripe old age of 79. Jewish tradition tells us that he dies
when he’s 120 just prior to the Jews entering the Land of Israel and after 40
years of wandering in the desert.
3-Pharoah: Scott’s Ramses is Jealous of Moses’
special relationship with daddy (The Pharaoh Seti) and throughout the movie has
only a few direct encounters with Moses and
is given only a bare minimum of opportunities to relent and allow the
enslaved Hebrews to leave Egypt.
In The Book there is no indication of step-sibling rivalry
and Moses constantly pops into the palace, before and a between each plague
where he gives Pharaoh numerous chances to end the suffering of Egypt, but
Pharaoh hardens his heart and doesn't relent.
4-Plagues: While I will admit that Scott’s CGI
special effects are pretty impressive (In my opinion, the best part of the
movie) there are also some inaccuracies here.
He misses a few plagues: lice and wild beasts (unless you count the
crocodiles at the beginning which are NOT mentioned in the Bible) and he also
seems to hint that many of the plagues could possibly have natural
explanations. They also seem to take place
over a fairly short time span…a few weeks or so.
In The Book there are ten altogether and they take place over
a period of about a year. In addition
the Bible makes it clear that these plagues are truly supernatural complete
violations of the laws of nature: Hail
that is also on fire and darkness so thick that you couldn't move in it. The
point of all of these plagues was to demonstrate that idolatry is an illusion and
that God has absolute power over all the forces of nature. This idea of one,
all-powerful God was really radical and totally different from all the other polytheistic
religions of the ancient world.
5-Prophecy: Starting with Moses’ first revelation at
the Burning Bush and continuing throughout the film, Scott gets it all
wrong. In the movie Moses gets caught in
a storm on the mountain, gets hit on the head with a rock and then buried in a
mudslide. The implication is the whole
burning bush episode could be the by-product of a delusion caused by a head
injury. He also doesn't seem to have a
very good prophetic connection to the Almighty and is left to the mercy of the
random appearance of the petulant-pre-adolescent who speaks on behalf of God.
In The Book Moses wanders into a cave and has the very
powerful and fully conscious burning-bush prophetic experience. The Bible also makes it clear that Moses
reaches the highest level of prophecy humanly possible and throughout his
prophetic career had constant access and a clear connection to the Almighty. It
is precisely due to this uniquely clear nature of Moses’ prophecy that his word
has a unique status in Judaism and is the foundation of all Jewish law.
6-Guerrilla Warfare: Now here’s a bit that Scott
seems to pull completely out of nowhere.
Before all the plagues start Moses organizes and trains the Hebrew
slaves into a guerrilla army to sabotage Egypt and force pharaoh’s hand. Only when this fails does the petulant pre-teen
appear and tell Moses to stand aside and he’ll take it from here.
In The Book there is no mention of civil insurrection or
guerrilla warfare. The Jews are on the
sidelines from the beginning and God runs the show from the get go.
7-Splitting of the Sea:
As I mentioned before –The CGI sea-splitting scene is really cool
but again Scott embellishes this final dramatic climax to the story. As a tsunami-like monster-of a wave rushes
toward the fleeing Egyptian army, Moses and Pharaoh charge toward each other
intent on engaging in a Troy-like, one-on-one, fight-to-the death scene. Weather conditions don’t allow for that to
take place and the scene ends with Pharaoh, the sole survivor of the Egyptian
army, standing on the Egyptian shore, gazing off into the distance toward the
freed slaves who have escaped his wrath.
In The Book no such dramatic final show down takes place nor
is there any indication in the Bible that Pharaoh returned to his shattered
kingdom to resume his rule. In any case,
going back to Egypt would probably not have been the smartest move on Pharaoh’s
part as one could imagine that his popularity ratings would probably have been
pretty low upon his return.
There are actually many more inaccuracies in the movie but
it’s pretty clear that Exodus: Gods and Kings, while certainly being and
entertaining and exciting epic of a movie, once again proves the The Book is
always better than the movie.
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