Le pharaon Cheops souhaite emporter son trésor dans la tombe, afin d'en profiter quand il se réincarnera. Il demande à l'architecte Vashtar de lui construire un tombeau somptueux et inviolab... Tout lireLe pharaon Cheops souhaite emporter son trésor dans la tombe, afin d'en profiter quand il se réincarnera. Il demande à l'architecte Vashtar de lui construire un tombeau somptueux et inviolable, en échange de la libération de son peuple.Le pharaon Cheops souhaite emporter son trésor dans la tombe, afin d'en profiter quand il se réincarnera. Il demande à l'architecte Vashtar de lui construire un tombeau somptueux et inviolable, en échange de la libération de son peuple.
- Réalisation
- Scénario
- Casting principal
- Kyra
- (as Luisa Boni)
- Egyptian Architect
- (non crédité)
- Captain of the Guard
- (non crédité)
- Dancer at the Party
- (non crédité)
- Priest
- (non crédité)
- Nabuna, Nellifer's Bodyguard
- (non crédité)
- Bit Part
- (non crédité)
- Mea
- (non crédité)
- Dancer at the Party
- (non crédité)
Avis à la une
Jack Hawkins plays an Egyptian pharaoh named Khufu, who wants to be extremely prepared for his "second" life. He desires the perfect pyramid to be built to house his body and his plethora of treasures obtained from war. He learns that one of his current prisoners, Vashtar (James Robertson Justice), is an experienced architect, and indeed Vashtar comes up with some ingenious ideas for crafting an impregnable fortress. Meanwhile, Khufu obtains himself wife # 2, a young princess named Nellifer (Joan Collins). And she's a greedy and conniving person who stops at nothing to get what she wants.
"Land of the Pharaohs" may be a challenge for some people to take seriously, but technically it really is well made, and it's consistently entertaining. Also in the cast are Dewey Martin as Vashtars' son Senta, Alexis Minotis as Khufu's loyal high priest Hamar, Sydney Chaplin as the traitorous Treneh, and James Hayter as Vashtars' friend Mikka. These people all do the very best that they can, but it's the ravishing young Collins who tends to steal the show - and whom the audience is likely to remember the most.
Among the heaviest assets that this can boast are Dimitri Tiomkins' rousing music score, the cinematography by Lee Garmes & Russell Harlan, the art direction by Alexandre Trauner. and the various costumes (especially those worn by Collins). Viewers may also get a big kick out of the fairly grim twist ending.
Seven out of 10.
As a grand epic from the era where they made them big and were not afraid to spend money where it would show up on screen, "Land of the Pharaohs" surpasses many other epics of its period and even many recent films dealing with a similar subject (1999's "The Mummy" comes to mind). "Pharaohs" has an impressive and very satisfying climax that makes perfect sense historically and dramatically.
Also, no one seems to have mentioned the marvelous handling of crowds, particularly in the lengthy building of the pyramid sequence. I'll even go so far as to say the way Hawks composes his crowds for the cinemascope screen - arranging his Egyptian workers and pharaoh worshipers in intricate patterns with complex movements - rivals even Fritz Lang's similar work in "Metropolis" (1926), famous for its handling of crowds.
I think one of the reasons the film keeps getting bashed is because people haven't seen it in its original widescreen format in many years. Until recently, no Region 1 DVD has been available, so in its cropped, pan and scan VHS incarnation, the film comes across as wimpy and ridiculous. As can be seen in the widescreen DVD release, the grandeur is stunning, its art direction, costumes, sets and locations all holding up marvelously.
It must be said that composer Dimitri Tiomkin probably never wrote a score as majestically spirited as this one, a vast canvas of antiquity and drama. The cast is very much of its time, and some of the dialog is stilted and dated, but with the passing of time, most films suffer from this. Time passes and acting styles change. But a good plot holds up, and "Pharaohs" has plenty of the devious vs altruistic characters that drove many of Hawks plots effectively.
The powers that be in Hollywood finally released the film on DVD, promoting it as a camp classic, adorning the cover with a cheesy shot of Joan Collins, the one thing they apparently consider notable and sell-able about the film. Too bad. Yes, "Land of the Pharaohs" does have an element of campiness, but there is true grandeur in the vastness of the production and the fact that its cast of thousands was indeed a cast of thousands, not CGI. Perhaps one day the wonders of this film will be given the appreciation it deserves. As time passes these epics seem to be acquiring as much antiquity as the genuine historical period itself.
Most of the acting is high-quality, especially the legendary Jack Hawkins who is magnificent as usual although Yul Brynner or Charleton Heston probably would have fit the role better.
Beautifully filmed with a very expensive look it is a movie with an obviously lavish budget. Despite the extravagance, I can fully understand why it didn't do well at the box-office. Focused on death and monuments it can be seen as somewhat depressing and has a grim, doomed aspect overall amid the splendor.
Unless maybe written by Edgar Allan Poe, how is a film about a tomb going to attract a great public to the theater? The answer is: it didn't. It is not an adventure about getting to a tomb such as Indiana Jones-type films, it is basically only a film about a tomb itself.
Death, murder, slavery, a tomb. If not handled just right these subjects can't succeed alone. Here they do, but just barely.
Le saviez-vous
- AnecdotesThe movie was Producer and Director Howard Hawks' first commercial failure. It caused him to take a break from directing and travel through Europe for a few years. His next movie, Rio Bravo (1959), was the longest break between two movies in his career.
- GaffesDomesticated camels feature throughout the film, which is set in the early Old Kingdom. But the camel was not domesticated around Egypt until the end of the New Kingdom, some two thousand years later.
- Citations
Hamar: You must give the order, your Majesty.
Princess Nellifer: The order is given.
[a priest walks around the pharaoh's sarcophagus breaking the clay pots which will release the sand and set the sealing of the pyramid in motion]
Hamar: It is done, your Majesty.
Princess Nellifer: Then I Nellifer am now Queen of Egypt and I now order...
[she pauses listening to a distant sound]
Princess Nellifer: What is this?
Hamar: The tomb is being sealed, your Majesty.
Princess Nellifer: NO! Show me the way out! I command you; show me the way out!
Hamar: There's no way out. This is what you lied and schemed and murdered to achieve! THIS is your kingdom!
Princess Nellifer: No, no, no.
[she sobs uncontrollably]
Princess Nellifer: I don't want to die. I don't want to die. I don't want to die; Please help me!
[she collapses on the floor of the burial chamber]
- ConnexionsEdited into L'histoire de l'humanité (1957)
Meilleurs choix
- How long is Land of the Pharaohs?Alimenté par Alexa
Détails
Box-office
- Budget
- 2 900 000 $US (estimé)
- Durée
- 1h 46min(106 min)
- Rapport de forme
- 2.55 : 1