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Le roi des rois

Original title: King of Kings
  • 1961
  • Tous publics
  • 2h 48m
IMDb RATING
7.0/10
9.7K
YOUR RATING
Le roi des rois (1961)
Official Trailer
Play trailer3:24
2 Videos
99+ Photos
EpicSword & SandalBiographyDrama

The temporary physical life of the Biblical Savior, Jesus Christ.The temporary physical life of the Biblical Savior, Jesus Christ.The temporary physical life of the Biblical Savior, Jesus Christ.

  • Director
    • Nicholas Ray
  • Writers
    • Philip Yordan
    • Ray Bradbury
  • Stars
    • Jeffrey Hunter
    • Siobhan McKenna
    • Hurd Hatfield
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    7.0/10
    9.7K
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Nicholas Ray
    • Writers
      • Philip Yordan
      • Ray Bradbury
    • Stars
      • Jeffrey Hunter
      • Siobhan McKenna
      • Hurd Hatfield
    • 153User reviews
    • 35Critic reviews
  • See production info at IMDbPro
    • Awards
      • 2 wins & 1 nomination total

    Videos2

    King of Kings
    Trailer 3:24
    King of Kings
    King of Kings
    Trailer 1:40
    King of Kings
    King of Kings
    Trailer 1:40
    King of Kings

    Photos153

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    + 145
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    Top cast44

    Edit
    Jeffrey Hunter
    Jeffrey Hunter
    • Jesus
    Siobhan McKenna
    Siobhan McKenna
    • Mary
    Hurd Hatfield
    Hurd Hatfield
    • Pontius Pilate
    Ron Randell
    Ron Randell
    • Lucius
    Viveca Lindfors
    Viveca Lindfors
    • Claudia
    Rita Gam
    Rita Gam
    • Herodias
    Carmen Sevilla
    Carmen Sevilla
    • Mary Magdalene
    Brigid Bazlen
    Brigid Bazlen
    • Salome
    Harry Guardino
    Harry Guardino
    • Barabbas
    Rip Torn
    Rip Torn
    • Judas
    Frank Thring
    Frank Thring
    • Herod Antipas
    Guy Rolfe
    Guy Rolfe
    • Caiaphas
    Royal Dano
    Royal Dano
    • Peter
    Robert Ryan
    Robert Ryan
    • John The Baptist
    Edric Connor
    • Balthazar
    Maurice Marsac
    Maurice Marsac
    • Nicodemus
    Grégoire Aslan
    Grégoire Aslan
    • Herod
    • (as Gregoire Aslan)
    George Coulouris
    George Coulouris
    • Camel Driver
    • Director
      • Nicholas Ray
    • Writers
      • Philip Yordan
      • Ray Bradbury
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews153

    7.09.6K
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    Featured reviews

    inspt71-1

    A Well Done Biblical Movie.

    This movie is so underrated. I think it's one of the best movies about Christ which was well played by Jeffery Hunter. There was also a great supporting cast that included Sobian McKenna, Robert Ryan and many others. Why this film

    didn't get any attention at the 1961 Oscars, i'll never know. I would have given this film an Oscar Nomination for Miklos Rosza's music score which is one of his best scores ever. I think also the set designs were pretty good and worth of an Oscar nomination as well. The Cinematography was pretty good even though

    there was better work at that time. I think this movie beats 1965's "The Greatest Story Ever Told" which went way too long and just wasn't as interesting as this one. Nicholas Ray did a great job with this one and this film deserved a lot more than it got.
    7jimtheven

    Rebel With A Cause

    For me and, I suspect, a lot of other Boomers who were pious as kids and tipped off by nuns about the 4:30 Movie on Good Friday, this one is beyond criticism. When it's time for us to go, many of us will be seeing Hunter's face, baby blues and all, in the midst of the white light... But personal soft spots aside, it's a pretty good Jesus picture. Hunter may speak with the unctious blandness of a TV game show host, but he's earnest and vigorous and has a certain charisma you could take as Godhood... The music is sublime. Ray's direction has a lot of the REBEL WITHOUT quirks. Note the weird angles during Salome's dance. The Sermon on the Mount is probably the best sequence. Those oddly lit and artsily angled close-ups of Jesus are intriguing. Then He comes over the hill with His arms outstretched and it's pure glory... Sweet as a jelly bean, redolent of Easter lilies.
    8TheLittleSongbird

    Uneven but when it's good it's very good, fantastic in some cases

    There is a lot of great talent here in King of Kings and on the most part it is well-used. King of Kings does have some unevenness, with the Barabbas and Herod subplots taking too much time and there should have been more of Jesus. There are a few performances that didn't quite do it for me, Frank Thring and Harry Guardino go overboard in the hammy camp department as Herod Antipas and Barabbas and Royal Dano has some very awkward, emotionless dialogue delivery that was suggestive of him not knowing what to do with it. A lot of King of Kings is very good though, Robert Ryan is subdued at times but is a charismatic John the Baptist, Rip Torn is a moving Judas, Hurd Hatfield plays Pontious Pilate with authority and Brigid Bazlen's Salome is sexy and wicked. The film is intelligently scripted and directed with skill by Nicholas Ray who knows how to do majestic spectacle and character relationships, there's proof of knowing how to balance the two as well. The story sustains its running time very well, and while not completely successful with the aforementioned distracting subplots but the Dance of the Seven Veils, the Last Supper and Gethsemane scenes are very well done. Jesus' relationships with the apostles and his mother are believably portrayed too. Jeffrey Hunter is surprisingly excellent, the quiet dignity he brings is perfect for Jesus and his eyes communicate so much. There are several fantastic things too, the best asset being Miklos Rozsa's score which is just marvellous and essentially IS the film. Rozsa was a truly great film composer with some equally great scores under his belt, and he provides some majestic and beautiful moments, the hauntingly beautiful yet uplifting scoring in the ending scene in my mind is some of the best he ever did. The ending honestly left me floored, it should be emotional and it was, devastating even and the score has a lot to do with it. Orson Welles' narration, which added a lot to the story actually, is distinctive and understatedly powerful, and the film is very lavishly mounted in detail and scope with the cinematography just as sumptuous. Overall, King of Kings is far from perfect with the story needing more balance and a few performances underwhelmed but there are a lot of good things, with Hunter, the ending, the production values, Welles' narration and the music especially working. 7.5/10 Bethany Cox
    didi-5

    the music, the narration, the blue eyes ...

    Everything fits together as soon as the film opens with Orson Welles' narrating the story of the Son of God. Little Jesus grows up to be the very American and impossibly blue-eyed Jeffrey Hunter (his opening scene with Robert Ryan's Baptist is superb), who goes on to cure the lame, the insane, the blind, rehabilitate Mary Magdelene, and all the usual things. Hunter is very good in the role, which may have been surprising at the time given his previous form in Westerns (and later in Star Trek's pilot episode!). Other good points - Hurd 'Dorian Gray' Hatfield as Pilate, the dance of the seven veils, the ending, the glorious score ...

    It fits together better than The Greatest Story Ever Told, which got too starry and was spoiled by John Wayne's son of gawd. Here everyone knows their place and the religious context remains unscathed by the whitewash of Hollywood. Excellent.
    7bkoganbing

    "Lo, I Am With You"

    A few years earlier than George Stevens mammoth all star film about the life of Jesus was this film by Nicholas Ray. Taking, it's title from the Cecil B. DeMille silent film, this version of King of Kings is in no way a remake of the DeMille epic. This King of Kings is a moving reverential account of the life of the obscure carpenter from Galilee whose thoughts still move millions today. The voice you hear doing the narration bridging of the various episodes of Jesus's life is the familiar one of Orson Welles.

    Nicholas Ray shot this film in Spain with the broad central plain serving as Judea in the early years of AD. Unlike Stevens, Nicholas Ray used second line players for the most part, the biggest name in the cast is that of Robert Ryan as John the Baptist.

    Jesus is played by Jeffrey Hunter and if you were to ask today's movie fans what they most remember about Hunter, they will either say his role in the original Star Trek pilot as Captain Christopher Pike, or his two roles in John Ford films, The Searchers and Sergeant Rutledge. Some reviewers have remarked about Hunter's blue eyes, personally I think Nicholas Ray might have cast Hunter with those baby blues to mark Jesus as indeed unique among the populace of Judea. In any event it's a sincere portrayal that Hunter gives. He's most effective in the Sermon on the Mount scene.

    King of Kings takes a great deal more liberties with the four Gospels than does the Greatest Story Ever Told. It fleshes out the peripheral characters in the Bible giving them more identity than Scripture does. Barabbas as played by Harry Guardino is a guerrilla leader rather than a bandit and Rip Torn who is Judas is one of his associates who leaves Barabbas after the Sermon on the Mount.

    Judas's motives for betrayal are explained as an effort to force Jesus's hand. He wants Jesus to use his power of miracles to aid in the freedom fight against Rome. I think most people view Judas as doing what he did because he totally failed to understand the mission and nature of who he was following, What Ray does here is deepen that context.

    There are a few scenes in their besides this part of the storyline that are not biblically found. After Jesus saves Mary Magdalene, Carmen Sevilla as Mary goes searching for him and visits with Mary his mother who is played by Siobhan McKenna. They talk for a bit, McKenna describes some of the miracles attributed to her son.

    Jesus himself drops out of biblical dialog in a scene where he asks to visit John the Baptist. The scene is with the Centurion Lucius who was present at the massacre in Bethlehem and later would pronounce His epitaph at the cross. Ron Randell plays Lucius and his Lucius is a world weary professional soldier, sickened by the court of Herod the Great and his successor Herod Antipas. He hates having to serve these people because Rome is backing them as surrogate leaders. Randell has a key role here, he serves as a prototype for the gentiles who Jesus says his disciples must minister to.

    Being inveterate star gazer I am, I do like The Greatest Story Ever Told better. But King of Kings is still a fine retelling of that selfsame story.

    Related interests

    Orson Welles in Citizen Kane (1941)
    Epic
    Russell Crowe in Gladiator (2000)
    Sword & Sandal
    Ben Kingsley, Rohini Hattangadi, and Geraldine James in Gandhi (1982)
    Biography
    Mahershala Ali and Alex R. Hibbert in Moonlight (2016)
    Drama

    Storyline

    Edit

    Did you know

    Edit
    • Trivia
      Jeffrey Hunter and Robert Ryan's car broke down on the way to the "Sermon on the Mount" scene. In costume as Jesus Christ and John the Baptist, they had to push the car to get it started.
    • Goofs
      Near the end of the temptation of Christ by Satan scene, 2 power line poles can clearly be seen in 2 shots, in the upper right rear of a long shot of the desert and canyons.
    • Quotes

      [Jesus is mending a chair for the Virgin Mary, but has to leave for Jerusalem]

      Jesus: The chair will have to wait until I return.

      Virgin Mary: [having a vague premonition of Jesus' arrest, trial and death] The chair will never be mended. I am going with you.

    • Connections
      Featured in Manille (1975)

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    FAQ18

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    Details

    Edit
    • Release date
      • February 2, 1962 (France)
    • Country of origin
      • United States
    • Language
      • English
    • Also known as
      • Trol
    • Filming locations
      • Aldea del Fresno, Madrid, Comunidad de Madrid, Spain(River Jordan)
    • Production company
      • Samuel Bronston Productions
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Box office

    Edit
    • Budget
      • $5,037,000 (estimated)
    See detailed box office info on IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      • 2h 48m(168 min)
    • Color
      • Color
    • Aspect ratio
      • 2.20 : 1

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