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IMDbPro

Sansón y Dalila

Título original: Samson and Delilah
  • 1949
  • A
  • 2h 14min
PUNTUACIÓN EN IMDb
6,8/10
9,5 mil
TU PUNTUACIÓN
Hedy Lamarr and Victor Mature in Sansón y Dalila (1949)
When strongman Samson rejects the love of the beautiful Philistine woman Delilah, she seeks vengeance that brings horrible consequences they both regret.
Reproducir trailer2:11
1 vídeo
99+ imágenes
DramaDrama de épocaFamiliaHistoriaRomanceTragedia

Cuando el forzudo Sansón rechaza el amor de la bella filistea Dalila, ella busca una venganza que trae horribles consecuencias que ambos lamentarán.Cuando el forzudo Sansón rechaza el amor de la bella filistea Dalila, ella busca una venganza que trae horribles consecuencias que ambos lamentarán.Cuando el forzudo Sansón rechaza el amor de la bella filistea Dalila, ella busca una venganza que trae horribles consecuencias que ambos lamentarán.

  • Dirección
    • Cecil B. DeMille
  • Guión
    • Jesse Lasky Jr.
    • Fredric M. Frank
    • Harold Lamb
  • Reparto principal
    • Hedy Lamarr
    • Victor Mature
    • George Sanders
  • Ver la información de la producción en IMDbPro
  • PUNTUACIÓN EN IMDb
    6,8/10
    9,5 mil
    TU PUNTUACIÓN
    • Dirección
      • Cecil B. DeMille
    • Guión
      • Jesse Lasky Jr.
      • Fredric M. Frank
      • Harold Lamb
    • Reparto principal
      • Hedy Lamarr
      • Victor Mature
      • George Sanders
    • 93Reseñas de usuarios
    • 33Reseñas de críticos
  • Ver la información de la producción en IMDbPro
    • Ganó 2 premios Óscar
      • 7 premios y 5 nominaciones en total

    Vídeos1

    Trailer
    Trailer 2:11
    Trailer

    Imágenes125

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    + 117
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    Reparto principal99+

    Editar
    Hedy Lamarr
    Hedy Lamarr
    • Delilah
    Victor Mature
    Victor Mature
    • Samson
    George Sanders
    George Sanders
    • The Saran of Gaza
    Angela Lansbury
    Angela Lansbury
    • Semadar
    Henry Wilcoxon
    Henry Wilcoxon
    • Ahtur
    Olive Deering
    Olive Deering
    • Miriam
    Fay Holden
    Fay Holden
    • Hazelelponit
    Julia Faye
    Julia Faye
    • Hisham
    Russ Tamblyn
    Russ Tamblyn
    • Saul
    • (as Russell Tamblyn)
    William Farnum
    William Farnum
    • Tubal
    Lane Chandler
    Lane Chandler
    • Teresh
    Moroni Olsen
    Moroni Olsen
    • Targil
    Francis McDonald
    Francis McDonald
    • Story Teller
    • (as Francis J. McDonald)
    William 'Wee Willie' Davis
    William 'Wee Willie' Davis
    • Garmiskar
    • (as William Davis)
    John Miljan
    John Miljan
    • Lesh Lakish
    Arthur Q. Bryan
    • Fat Philistine Merchant Wearing No Robe
    Kasey Rogers
    Kasey Rogers
    • Spectator
    • (as Laura Elliot)
    Victor Varconi
    Victor Varconi
    • Lord of Ashdod
    • Dirección
      • Cecil B. DeMille
    • Guión
      • Jesse Lasky Jr.
      • Fredric M. Frank
      • Harold Lamb
    • Todo el reparto y equipo
    • Producción, taquilla y más en IMDbPro

    Reseñas de usuarios93

    6,89.5K
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    Reseñas destacadas

    7sol-kay

    The man has the strength of a Devil! No he has the strength of a God!

    Biblical epic that became the biggest hit, up until then, in Paramount Pictures history. The story about the Hebrew Hercules Samson, Victor Mature, who redeemed himself from a life of foolhardiness and slavery by taking down the Temple of Dagon, the Philistine Idol God. Samson not only destroyed Dagon's temple he took the lives, together with his own, of 3,000 of his bitter enemies and tormentors in the movies', Samson and Delilah, spectacular and ground shaking final scene.

    Never living up to what God wanted from him, to lead his people the ancient Israelites against the hated and occupying Philistines, Samson instead lead a life of womanizing and partying mostly with the Philistines who more then anything else wanted him dead. Because of his super-human strength Samson felt safe from anything that the Philistines could do to him, killing hundreds who tried, in capturing or killing the biblical strongman.

    It's when the Philistine temptress the drop-dead gorgeous Delilah, Hedy Lamarr, got to work on the big guy that he left himself open to be captured, by the Philistine army, in revealing the source of his strength; His black curly locks of hair on his head. Blinded, with a red hot iron put to his eyes, Samson was then forced to pull the grind-mill and made to look helpless as he was brutally mocked and tortured by his Philistine captors.

    As the days weeks and months went by and his hair, the source of his great strength, grew back Samson with Delilah's, who had since repented what she did to him, help then planned to finish the job that he never really started; annihilate his and his peoples enslavers the hated Philistines. Samson did it by, with Delilah's leading him to them, tearing down the pillars that held up Dagan's temple and thus bringing the entire house down.

    The film "Samson and Delilah" still holds up quite well despite it's bargain basement, compared to those now, special effects. Victor Mature as Samson was at his best being able to show off his hunky body without having to wear a suit and tie, as well as pants, like in his previous blockbusters "Kiss of Death" and My Darling Clementine". Heady Lamarr in her first Technicolor movie showed why she was considered to be, just get a load of her violet/lavender eyes, the most beautiful women in the world at that, back in 1950, time.

    The movies director Cecil B. DeMille really had very little to go on in making the biblical blockbuster in that it was based on only four chapters, the 13 to 16, of the Book of Judges. It was an obscure 1930 German language novel "the Judge and the Fool" by Vladimir Jabotinsky that filled in all the gaps and made a full length two hour plus film about the subject, Samson & Delilah, possible.
    nunval

    Lamarr = Beauty

    This film is a must for everyone who loves Technicolor, great actors and great movies. Mature is a wonderful Samson but Hedy Lamarr is the definitive incarnation of beauty. She is also a very good actress and directed by De Mille gets her screen triumph. Watch this over and over again and you'll not be tired.
    7Steffi_P

    "What invisable power strikes through his arm?"

    Cecil B. DeMille is best remembered for his biblical epics, even though in a forty-year, eighty-film career he only made four of them. It wasn't just that the bible pictures gave him some of his biggest hits; it was in these features that DeMille seemed most at home, and the one genre in which he had unique ability.

    Samson and Delilah brought an end to a long phase of epic-cum-adventure movies from DeMille. This period, beginning with The Plainsman in 1936, had some of the weakest pictures of his career for a number of reasons. For one thing, DeMille was not really very good at individualistic action scenes, and there was too much DeMillean historical grandeur and not enough of the free-spirited feel of the Errol Flynn or Tyrone power swashbucklers he was to some extent an trying to copy. What's more, these were mostly original stories or, at least, ones which were not well known, and DeMille's poor choice of source material and screenwriters meant the new characters and situations tended towards the feeble. DeMille's strength lay in his staging and presentation of a familiar tale, and as such his return to Sunday-school moralising, stuffy and pompous though it may be, is apt and welcome.

    You see, DeMille was probably aware on some level that although these fables were well-known in a largely Christian society, to a modern audience they were also historically distant, emotionally neutral and even ridiculous when presented literally. But DeMille never attempted any humanity or realism in his features, instead turning the remote, mythical nature of the stories into a virtue, portraying his subject matter with a kind of dignity and grace. Of course most ancient world epics do this to some extent, but DeMille did it the most effectively because he never demanded that the audience sympathise with the characters, merely that we marvel at their deeds.

    Specifically, DeMille composes the picture with overstated gesturing and painterly tableau, like a Gustave Dore print come to life. This is combined with the vivid colours of a bible stories illustration, coded with drab shades for humbleness and virtue, garish ones for extravagance and sin. Throughout, DeMille's flair for dreamlike, rhythmic motion keeps the images flowing, most notably in the establishing tracking shot at the wedding feast - although if you watch closely you'll see one of the two men engaged in a mock swordfight is actually camply slapping his opponent with a feather duster.

    And DeMille was perhaps unique in that he even used the imagery to turn God into a character. You can see from one of his much earlier religious pictures, 1929's The Godless Girl, that DeMille associated God with natural beauty, and in Samson and Delilah God makes several key "appearances" as a breathtaking skyscape. This touch would be expanded upon in the 1956 version of Ten Commandments.

    It's a pity DeMille didn't associate God with good acting, because even the theatrical presentation on offer here could do with at least some half-decent hamming. The trouble is DeMille chose his actors for their physicality, not for their ability to qualify their job description. In this respect Victor Mature and Hedy Lamarr are natural choices. DeMille's business associate Henry Wilcoxon, whom the director unbelievably used to cast in lead roles, is as wooden as ever, and the somewhat hit-and-miss Angela Lansbury, misses this time. The only standout is George Sanders who proves, just as Herbert Marshall did in DeMille's Four Frightened People, that bad dialogue becomes bearable if you underplay it.

    Fortunately when it came to crew DeMille always procured the best. Samson and Delilah boasts Oscar-winning costumes and art direction from no less personages than Edith Head and Hans Dreier respectively. The Technicolor cinematography is great, with some remarkably clear night time shots. Some of the effects may be a little dubious; whenever Victor Mature lifts up something heavy it's obvious it's being hoisted from offscreen, and that woolly-rug/lion tamer scene is actually betrayed by bad editing, but overall this is a solid, high-quality production.

    Yes, Samson and Delilah is as corny as anything, but it looks great, and above all it entertains. Don't be too harsh on DeMille's staginess or his archaic moralism, for as his willing appearance as himself in Sunset Boulevard proves, he probably didn't have a sense of irony. And his earnestness was probably his greatest asset.
    Charlie-123

    Engrossing, vivid,absorbing and a tribute to the Old Testament

    In 1949, I was 11years old and saw it in NYC when it was first released. My aunt Ethel, may she rest in peace, took me during Christmas vacation. I was mesmerized by it which led me to check out the story in that Chapter of the O.T. called Judges. And I remember being asked by my 6th or 7th grade teacher to do an oral report about the film before the class. I found it a bit awkward to discuss the idea of seduction at that time especially when I heard the pubescent girls giggling. At any rate I did make that report and remember displaying the book I had bought about the film right at the theater. I estimate from age 11 to 14, I saw the film a dozen times and I'm not kidding. In my adulthood, I saw it once on free TV and rented it once for kicks. Quite honestly, I never saw a more beautiful woman than Hedy in that role. And Victor was perfect thanks to his countenance and physique. After seeing it first and then reading the story in the O.T. I came to the conclusion that the film certainly was factual and illuminating. The bible came alive thanks to the genius of Cecil B.DeMille. The special effects were brilliant, way ahead of its time. What I especially loved about this film was the haunting score by Victor Young and I do remember going out to buy it on 78 rpm disks. And I do have the radio program on cassette, "Lux Presents Hollywood-Samson and Delilah starring Mature and Lamarr. That last scene will always stick in my mind as Samson, standing blind between the two main pillars of the Temple of Dagon, the Phillistine God,called on Jehovah to give him the strength to crush his enemies and WHAT A SCENE FOLLOWED. Good heavens, DeMille was indeed a GENIUS! I recommend the film to EVERYONE because of the amazing story, color
    7bkoganbing

    NOT Another run of DeMille Picture

    By the time the 1940s were rolling around, Cecil B. DeMille was doing a lot less work, but the work was getting more expensive. DeMille took off a couple of years now between films to create the opulent splendor that typifies his work.

    Well Samson and Delilah abounds in opulence. The color cinematography is first rate and reason enough to see the film. Of course it has the usual stilted dialog that is common in DeMille's costume work. But one has to remember that DeMille made his show business bones with David Belasco in the Edwardian era. And that's how folks talked in those Belasco plays.

    Acting honors in this go to George Sanders as the Saran of Gaza, Philistine ruler and sophisticated cad. This was the height of Sanders career, he received a Best Supporting Actor Oscar for All About Eve the same year. I think the Saran and Addison DeWitt would have understood each other very well.

    Angela Lansbury is the original object of Samson's lust and she does okay, but personally if you had the choice between Jessica Fletcher and Tondelayo, who would you choose? Is that ever a no-brainer.

    DeMille got a couple of loan-outs to play the leads. Hedy Lamarr could easily lay claim to be the most beautiful woman in the cinema. She never had much acting skill, but all she has to do is be seductive and that no one could do better.

    And Victor Mature away from his home studio of 20th Century Fox where he was languishing, Samson and Delilah provided a whole new vista for him with roles in spectacle pictures where he could truly be that beautiful hunk of man.

    Fay Holden is good as Samson's mother. In modern times I can just hear her telling him about settling down with a good Jewish girl.

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    Argumento

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    • Curiosidades
      For the scene in which Samson kills the lion, Victor Mature refused to wrestle a tame movie lion. Told by Producer and Director Cecil B. DeMille that the lion had no teeth, Mature replied, "I don't want to be gummed to death, either." The scene shows a stuntman wrestling the tame lion, intercut with close-ups of Mature wrestling a lion skin.
    • Pifias
      Just after Delilah rings for her servant to bring dinner, the mike boom casts a shadow on one of the curtain walls of her tent.
    • Citas

      Samson: You came to this house as wedding guests. Fire and death are your gifts to my bride. For all that I do against you now, I shall be blameless. I'll give you back fire for fire, and death for death!

    • Créditos adicionales
      Although the opening credits mention "Holy Land Photography," the second-unit location shooting occurred in North Africa (Algiers and Morocco), not Israel or the Middle East.
    • Versiones alternativas
      Previous home media releases of the film (LaserDisc, VHS) did not include the overture and exit music. They were restored for Paramount's official DVD release in 2013 and the subsequent Blu-ray release in 2014.
    • Conexiones
      Featured in History Brought to Life (1950)
    • Banda sonora
      For To Win A Bride
      (uncredited)

      Written by Victor Young and Jesse Lasky Jr.

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    Preguntas frecuentes

    • How long is Samson and Delilah?Con tecnología de Alexa
    • Why did Samson choose Semadar instead of Delilah?

    Detalles

    Editar
    • Fecha de lanzamiento
      • 21 de septiembre de 1950 (Italia)
    • País de origen
      • Estados Unidos
    • Sitio oficial
      • Official site
    • Idioma
      • Inglés
    • Títulos en diferentes países
      • Samson and Delilah
    • Localizaciones del rodaje
      • Bou-Saada, Algiers, Algeria
    • Empresa productora
      • Paramount Pictures
    • Ver más compañías en los créditos en IMDbPro

    Taquilla

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    • Presupuesto
      • 3.000.000 US$ (estimación)
    Ver información detallada de taquilla en IMDbPro

    Especificaciones técnicas

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    • Duración
      2 horas 14 minutos
    • Color
      • Color
    • Relación de aspecto
      • 1.37 : 1

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