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Ben Hur

  • 1907
  • 15m
IMDb RATING
4.7/10
823
YOUR RATING
Ben Hur (1907)
DramaShort

The scene opens with an assembly of citizens who are harangued by one of their number, whose words have great weight with the crowd, and their attitude of approval shows that Roman misrule i... Read allThe scene opens with an assembly of citizens who are harangued by one of their number, whose words have great weight with the crowd, and their attitude of approval shows that Roman misrule in Jerusalem has reached its climax. Heralds now approach and Roman soldiers beat back the ... Read allThe scene opens with an assembly of citizens who are harangued by one of their number, whose words have great weight with the crowd, and their attitude of approval shows that Roman misrule in Jerusalem has reached its climax. Heralds now approach and Roman soldiers beat back the crowd to make way for the approach of the Roman Procurator. The scene changes to the home ... Read all

  • Directors
    • Sidney Olcott
    • Frank Oakes Rose
  • Writers
    • Gene Gauntier
    • Lew Wallace
  • Stars
    • Gene Gauntier
    • Harry T. Morey
    • William S. Hart
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    4.7/10
    823
    YOUR RATING
    • Directors
      • Sidney Olcott
      • Frank Oakes Rose
    • Writers
      • Gene Gauntier
      • Lew Wallace
    • Stars
      • Gene Gauntier
      • Harry T. Morey
      • William S. Hart
    • 14User reviews
    • 4Critic reviews
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • Photos1

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    Top cast4

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    Gene Gauntier
    Gene Gauntier
    Harry T. Morey
    Harry T. Morey
    William S. Hart
    William S. Hart
    • Messala
    • (uncredited)
    Herman Rottger
    • Ben Hur
    • (uncredited)
    • Directors
      • Sidney Olcott
      • Frank Oakes Rose
    • Writers
      • Gene Gauntier
      • Lew Wallace
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews14

    4.7823
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    Featured reviews

    3planktonrules

    Kind of like a highlights reel.

    This 'unauthorized' (i.e., made without paying proper royalties) version of "Ben Hur" is exceptionally early. I say this because huge spectacle films were still in the near future--so I was not surprised that this one came off as VERY choppy and the big scenes came off as ridiculously simple (such as the chariot race--it is VERY underwhelming). And, because of this, it's an incredibly unappealing little film. In other words, instead of telling a coherent story, it's like a very brief highlights reel--filled with a few brief clips from the famed story by General Lew Wallace but not telling any sort of narrative. If you think about it, the famed 1959 version by William Wyler was about three hours long. This 1907 version is about 10 minutes!! Audiences at the time could have only enjoyed it if they knew the story already.
    blairskids

    Watch it. It is short and an interesting insight to the capabilities of the era.

    I saw the first (1907) Ben Hur about 25 years ago in a film society back to back double feature with the Charlton Heston version. My memories are therefore fragmentary.

    The film should be called "Illustrated scenes from the life of Ben Hur" as it really doesn't try to tell the story in the time available. If you hadn't read the book you wouldn't know what was going on. One of my recollections is my wife nudging me and saying "there's the tile that's going to fall". Above the rather pathetic and bored looking extras (showing off their knees in Roman army costume) one roof tile was very different from the rest - it wasn't painted onto the set!! Sure enough, Ben Hur leaned rather obviously on this brick.

    The chariot race sticks in my mind too. A bunch of extras starts jumping up and down and two chariots race by the camera. The extras calm down and look bored for a while then start jumping up and down for the next rapid pass of two chariots. I can't remember how many times this was repeated, we were all laughing so hard that tears were running down my face.

    It is mercifully short, and interesting to compare with the 1925 big budget spectacular (also silent of course) which foreshadows the third version with amazing special effects.
    4smashtheelder

    Bad, even for the time

    It's true that film makers were still feeling their way in the 1900s, but that's no excuse for a film to be boring now. Look at "Le voyage dans la lune" or "The Great Train Robbery", both of which came several years before Ben-Hur 1907. Even "Sherlock Holmes Baffled", a silly trick film from 1900, is still amusing.

    The story is fragmented and would only make sense if you already knew it. (Which, to be fair, was likely at the time; Ben-Hur was as popular then as Harry Potter is now.) The chariot race is pathetic, being nothing more than the horses passing the camera several times until the movie ends. It would have been difficult to film an exciting chariot race within the limitations of the time, but this was not a good workaround. The only saving grace of this movie is that, like others of the time, it is short, barely ten minutes long.

    Ben-Hur 1907 is proof that crappy cash-ins have been around even in the early days of cinema. We are fortunate it has survived, if only because that prevents any mystique from being attached to it, as has happened with films like "The Great Gatsby (1925)".
    Rodrigo_Amaro

    Good? Bad? I really don't know!

    What can be said about 1907 version of "Ben Hur", the first filmed version of the story? If I say something good it will never be good enough to make people feel interested on watching it; and if I say something bad it's gonna be the same sensation of kicking someone who's dead, pointless. With all that in mind I won't give any stars to this short film but I will do write about his failures, technical problems and the challenge this film has to really become a good work.

    The story is reduced to a 15 minutes film so the director had the problem of filming a detailed account about Ben Hur; it is difficult to see or hear something, the quality of the lasting film is very very poor; the acting is invisible, although William S. Hart has a role in the film. The worst part of all is the editing of the chariot scene because during the silent film era that camera didn't move, it was sustained by a tripod and everything was so distant from it, so when the chariot race begins you see something laughable, the horses appearing and disappearing over and over again until Ben Hur wins the race.

    And I must compare this little film with the 11 Oscar winner "Ben Hur" (1959). The classic directed by William Wyler is amazing in everything, and in every possible way you might want to watch it. DVD, VHS, downloading on the net, TV, cable TV, projection, CinemaScope, whatever, that is a truly great picture that is always good. The movie had everything better than this silent version. It's a fair comparison? Not at all but it's the only way you can have an opinion on things.

    We must praise the 1907 film because it managed to survive (badly although) the time, the movie exists and even more than 100 years old people can watch it and say something about it. Back then when the movie was released it was just a form of taking money from people to see something different on the screen. I don't know if the producers got back the U$500 of investment, but all I know is that they were sued because they infringed author's copyright.

    To me it was a boring experience to stare the screen for a few minutes. The movie didn't took off at all. For those interested in the early days of filmmaking it's an (un)interesting opportunity for you to see something different. Otherwise just laugh about it if you can.
    6ksdilauri

    6/10 for effort!

    Remember, folks, this mini-Hur was made well over a century ago. It would be nearly two decades before the excellent 1926 version was produced. Still, this was a worthy effort for the time. It's a rare glimpse of Hollywood moviemaking in its infancy---interestingly, there are scene-change titles, but no dialogue cards---and this 13-minute incarnation gave audiences a taste of the 1880 Lew Wallace novel. (It also spares us the presence of the oft-overrated Charlton Heston.) If only for its historical value, this is worth at least one watch for film buffs.

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    Storyline

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    Did you know

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    • Trivia
      The making of this movie brought about the first-ever question of film rights to an author's work. Harper's, the publisher of Lew Wallace's novel, sued Kalem, the movie's producers, for copyright infringement. After fighting the case for four years, Kalem finally settled for $25,000.
    • Connections
      Featured in Ben-Hur: The Making of an Epic (1994)

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    Details

    Edit
    • Release date
      • December 7, 1907 (United States)
    • Country of origin
      • United States
    • Language
      • None
    • Also known as
      • Бен-Гур
    • Filming locations
      • Manhattan Beach, Brooklyn, New York City, New York, USA(chariot race)
    • Production company
      • Kalem Company
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Box office

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    • Budget
      • $500 (estimated)
    See detailed box office info on IMDbPro

    Tech specs

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    • Runtime
      • 15m
    • Color
      • Black and White
    • Sound mix
      • Silent
    • Aspect ratio
      • 1.33 : 1

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