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  2. Hollywood’s interest in biblical epics is to some extent cyclical – in the 1950s and early 60s they were a staple. Legendary filmmaker Cecil B DeMille made a big impact with The Ten...

    • Why did Hollywood use the Bible in the 1950s?1
    • Why did Hollywood use the Bible in the 1950s?2
    • Why did Hollywood use the Bible in the 1950s?3
    • Why did Hollywood use the Bible in the 1950s?4
    • Why did Hollywood use the Bible in the 1950s?5
  3. Mar 27, 2010 · In Hollywood's defense, perhaps making an almost three-hour movie out of a few dozen Bible chapters requires some invention just to fill the time and keep viewers engaged. Historically, ABC-TV airs the classic movie, the highest grossing film of the 1950s, each year during Easter weekend.

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    • The Ten Commandments. Cecil B. Demille’s 1956 epic The Ten Commandments still stands as one of the best loved Bible movies fifty years later. Who can forget Charlton Heston’s incredible performance as Moses.
    • King of Kings. This 1961 classic was produced in a time when giants like MGM would make regular epics on Biblical stories. King of Kings follows the life of Jesus faithfully but with some conjecture.
    • Ben-Hur. Charlton Heston was no stranger to Biblical epics having starred in The Ten Commandments prior to this film, and Ben Hur became yet another classic.
    • The Robe. This movie follows a perspective we usually don’t think of – the Roman soldiers that helped to crucify Jesus. It looks at the life of the Roman soldier who won Jesus’ garment during the crucifixion.
    • Ben-Hur: A Tale of the Christ. Ben-Hur (3/10) Movie CLIP – The Chariot Race (1959) HD. Based on General Lew Wallace’s novel of the same name, 1959’s Ben-Hur was a remake of the 1925 silent film starring Ramon Navarro and Francis X. Bushman.
    • The Ten Commandments. Moses Parts the Sea – The Ten Commandments (6/10) Movie CLIP (1956) HD. Forget that DeMille veers from Holy Scripture to cultivate a love triangle between Moses, Rameses II, and the Egyptian princess Nefretiri.
    • Barabbas. The Day Became Night (Barabbas, 1961) Despite a filmography that included minor classics such as the film noir The Narrow Margin and the Disney sci-fi extravaganza 20,000 Leagues Under the Sea, filmmaker Richard Fleischer has also earned the enmity of countless critics for his other movies such as 1975’s Mandingo which Roger Ebert called “racist trash” and 1980’s The Jazz Singer which Leonard Maltin labeled a “BOMB!”
    • The Robe. The Robe – The Crucifixion. Based on the popular Lloyd C. Douglas novel, the 1953 production of The Robe is probably best known today for being the first Hollywood film shot in the widescreen format Cinemascope.
  4. After the war, some of Hollywood's highest grossing films were religious epics produced as vehicles for its biggest stars. [4] Samson and Delilah was the biggest moneymaking movie of 1949 and is considered the picture that sparked the biblical-epic film craze of the 1950s. [5]

  5. Aug 25, 2022 · By the end of the 1950s, Hollywood film producers were reaching the bottom of the barrel on the Bible, having told the stories of most of the most famous patriarchs, such as David, Samson,...

  6. May 29, 2013 · The Bible epic, as a genre, is typically associated with the 1950s, and for good reason. That’s when Hollywood churned out a series of Bible-themed films, such as David and Bathsheba...

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