What Parents Should Know
Parents need to know that there are potentially
nightmare-inducing elements for small children, such as the Ten
Plagues (which do not spare children and innocents). While
essential parts are faithful to the biblical narrative, much of
the late parts of Exodus and Deuteronomy are excised, and much
is Hollywood scriptwriters filling in the blanks with
romantic-triangle melodrama. Part of the appeal of "biblical
epics" was that they could get away with depicting some pretty
intense (for the time) violence and sensuality, as long as it
was in the context of sin and inevitably punished by heaven.
This wasn't the worst offender by far -- in fact scenes of
debauchery come off as more silly than sexy -- but that's
something to keep in mind.
Families can talk about the film's religious message, and its portrayal of Moses as a liberator of slaves and a champion of freedom and justice for the downtrodden. While not contrary to the Old Testament, do you think this is a mainstream "Americanization" of the Bible's themes, especially in Cold War-era Hollywood? You can use the movie as a way to get kids to read the Bible or the Torah to see if and how The Ten Commandments deviates.
Common Sense Media Review
A long-running theatrical hit and traditional network TV
airing every year at Passover/Easter, THE TEN COMMANDMENTS is
so burned into viewer consciousness it's practically impossible
to separate its images from the Bible and Torah narratives.
Remember that, however inspired by the divine it might be, this
was a Hollywood movie, a high point in a number of "Bible
epics" filmed at a time when the movie industry was fearful of
competition from television. The aim for epic-specialist
director Cecil B. DeMille, thus, became BIG films for theaters,
so BIG and IMPORTANT that TV couldn't rival it. God's lawgiver
was judged to be sufficiently big.
Drawbacks for the home viewers: First that you should watch The Ten Commandments on a widescreen setup to get the full visual impact of the vast sets, color, f/x, and pageantry DeMille oversaw. In the "full-screen" version the image is constrained, the dramatics sometimes stagey and stiff. Secondly, it's very long -- expect to take an intermission (like theatrical viewers got) or space viewing sessions out. Third -- and more importantly -- know that while the basic narrative sticks to the Bible, a lot of the rest is Hollywood scriptwriters filling in the blanks with romantic-triangle melodrama, or drawing material from at least three separate novels about Moses, plus a silent-era version of The Ten Commandments that DeMille also directed (some of the silent stars make cameos here).
A Hebrew baby, the prophesied savior of the enslaved Jewish people, is secretly adopted into the mighty royal household of Egypt. Growing up exceptionally noble, humane, and chivalrous, the young prince Moses ( Charlton Heston) is the aging pharaoh's favorite and chosen successor. But when Moses discovers his origins, he willingly becomes a slave like all the other Hebrews, and is ultimately sent into exile. Contacted personally by God, Moses returns to Egypt and frees his people, the Israelites.



