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Ben-Hur: A Tale of the Christ (1925 film)

Ben-Hur: A Tale of the Christ is a 1925 American silent epic adventure-drama film directed by Fred Niblo and written by June Mathis based on the 1880 novel Ben-Hur: A Tale of the Christ by General Lew Wallace. Starring Ramon Novarro as the title character, the film is the first feature-length adaptation of the novel and second overall, following the 1907 short.

Ben-Hur
Theatrical release poster
Directed by
Screenplay by
Based onBen-Hur: A Tale of the Christ
by General Lew Wallace
Produced by
Starring
Cinematography
Edited by
Music by
Production
company
Distributed byMetro-Goldwyn-Mayer
Release dates
Running time
141 minutes
CountryUnited States
Languages
  • Silent
  • (English intertitles)
Budget$4 million[1][2]
Box office$10.7 million[1][2]

In 1997, Ben-Hur was selected for preservation in the United States National Film Registry by the Library of Congress as being "culturally, historically, or aesthetically significant."[3][4]

Plot

 
Ramon Novarro as Ben-Hur

Ben-Hur is a wealthy young Jewish prince and boyhood friend of the powerful Roman tribune, Messala. When an accident and a false accusation leads to Ben-Hur's arrest, Messala, who has become corrupt and arrogant, makes sure Ben-Hur and his family are jailed and separated.

Ben-Hur is sentenced to slave labor in a Roman war galley. Along the way, he unknowingly encounters Jesus, the carpenter's son who offers him water. Once aboard ship, his attitude of defiance and strength impresses a Roman admiral, Quintus Arrius, who allows him to remain unchained. This actually works in the admiral's favor because when his ship is attacked and sunk by pirates, Ben-Hur saves him from drowning.

Arrius then treats Ben-Hur as a son, and over the years the young man grows strong and becomes a victorious chariot racer. This eventually leads to a climactic showdown with Messala in a chariot race, in which Ben-Hur is the victor. However, Messala does not die, as he does in the more famous 1959 adaptation of the novel.

Ben-Hur is eventually reunited with his mother and sister, who have developed leprosy but are miraculously cured by Jesus Christ.[5]

Cast

Production

PLAY full film; runtime 02:20:52.

Ben-Hur: A Tale of The Christ had been a great success as a novel, and was adapted into a stage play which ran for twenty-five years. In 1922, two years after the play's last tour, the Goldwyn company purchased the film rights to Ben-Hur. The play's producer, Abraham Erlanger, put a heavy price on the screen rights. Erlanger was persuaded to accept a generous profit participation deal and total approval over every detail of the production.

Choosing the title role was difficult for June Mathis. Rudolph Valentino and dancer Paul Swan were considered until George Walsh was chosen. When asked why she chose him, she answered it was because of his eyes and his body. Gertrude Olmstead was cast as Esther.[7][8] While on location in Italy, Walsh was fired and replaced by Ramon Novarro. The role of Esther went to May McAvoy.

Shooting began in Rome, Italy in October 1923 under the direction of Charles Brabin who was replaced shortly after filming began. Additional recastings (including Ramon Novarro as Ben-Hur) and a change of director caused the production's budget to skyrocket. After two years of difficulties and accidents, the production was eventually moved back to Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer in Culver City, California and production resumed in the spring of 1925. B. Reeves Eason and Christy Cabanne directed the second unit footage.[9]

Production costs eventually rose to $3,900,000 ($60,260,000 today) compared to MGM's average for the season of $158,000 ($2,440,000 today),[2] making Ben-Hur the most expensive film of the silent era.[10]

A total of 200,000 feet (61,000 m) of film was shot for the chariot race sequence, which lead editor Lloyd Nosler eventually cut to 750 feet (230 m) for the released print.[11] Film historian and critic Kevin Brownlow has described the race sequence as "breathtakingly exciting, and as creative a piece of cinema as the Odessa Steps sequence from Battleship Potemkin", a Soviet film also released in 1925 and directed by Sergei Eisenstein, who introduced many modern concepts of editing and montage composition to motion-picture production.[12] Visual elements of the chariot race have been much imitated. The race's opening sequence was re-created shot-for-shot in the 1959 remake, copied in the 1998 animated film The Prince of Egypt, and imitated in the pod race scene in the 1999 film Star Wars: Episode I – The Phantom Menace.[13][14]

Some of the scenes in the 1925 film were shot in two-color Technicolor, most notably the sequences involving Jesus. One of the assistant directors for this sequence was a young William Wyler, who would direct the 1959 MGM remake. The black-and-white footage was color tinted and toned in the film's original release print. MGM released a second remake of Ben-Hur in 2016.[9]

Reception

 
Messala's winged helmet, worn by Francis X. Bushman in Ben-Hur, sold at the Debbie Reynolds auction of film memorabilia (2011)

The studio's publicity department was relentless in promoting the film, advertising it with lines like: "The Picture Every Christian Ought to See!" and "The Supreme Motion Picture Masterpiece of All Time". Ben Hur went on to become MGM's highest-grossing film, with rentals of $9 million worldwide. Its foreign earnings of $5 million were not surpassed at MGM for at least 25 years. Despite the large revenues, its huge expenses and the deal with Erlanger made it a net financial loss for MGM. It recorded an overall loss of $698,000.[2]

In terms of publicity and prestige however, it was a great success. "The screen has yet to reveal anything more exquisitely moving than the scenes at Bethlehem, the blazing of the star in the heavens, the shepherds and the Wise Men watching. The gentle, radiant Madonna of Betty Bronson's is a masterpiece," wrote a reviewer for Photoplay. "No one," they concluded, "no matter what his age or religion, should miss it. And take the children."[15] It helped establish the new MGM as a major studio.[16][17]

The film was re-released in 1931 with an added musical score, by the original composers William Axt and David Mendoza, and sound effects. As the decades passed, the original two-color Technicolor segments were replaced by alternative black-and-white takes. Ben-Hur earned $1,352,000 during its re-release, including $1,153,000 of foreign earnings, and made a profit of $779,000 meaning it had an overall profit of $81,000.[2] The review aggregator website Rotten Tomatoes reported that 96% of critics have given the film a positive review based on 23 reviews, with an average rating of 7.8/10.[18]

The film became notorious after its release for the egregious animal abuse involved in filming. A reported one hundred horses were tripped and killed merely to produce the set piece footage of the major chariot race. Animal advocates especially criticized the use of the "running W" on set, a wire device that could trip a galloping horse. It would take a decade before such devices lost favor in Hollywood.[19]

The movie was banned in the 1930s in China under the category of "superstitious films" due to its religious subject matter involving gods and deities.[20]

Restoration

The Technicolor scenes were considered lost until the 1980s when Turner Entertainment (who by then had acquired the rights to the MGM film library) found the crucial sequences in a Czechoslovakian film archive. Current prints of the 1925 version are from the Turner-supervised restoration which includes the color tints and Technicolor sections set to resemble the original theatrical release. There is an addition of a newly recorded stereo orchestral soundtrack by Carl Davis with the London Philharmonic Orchestra which was originally recorded for a Thames Television screening of the movie.

Home media

Ben-Hur was released on DVD, complete with the Technicolor segments, in the four-disc collector's edition of the 1959 version starring Charlton Heston, as well as in the 2011 "Fiftieth Anniversary Edition" Blu-ray Collector's Edition three-disc box set.

See also

References

Explanatory notes

Citations

  1. ^ a b "Ben-Hur (1925)". Turner Classic Movies. Retrieved January 7, 2012.
  2. ^ a b c d e H. Mark Glancy, 'MGM Film Grosses, 1924–28: The Eddie Mannix Ledger', Historical Journal of Film, Radio and Television, Vol 12 No. 2 1992 pp. 127–44 at p. 129
  3. ^ "New to the National Film Registry (December 1997) - Library of Congress Information Bulletin". Library of Congress. Retrieved May 18, 2020.
  4. ^ "Complete National Film Registry Listing". Library of Congress. Retrieved August 12, 2021.
  5. ^ . Classic Film Guide. Archived from the original on October 27, 2010. Retrieved January 26, 2007.
  6. ^ "Photoplay (Jul - Dec 1924)". Chicago, Photoplay Magazine Publishing Company. 1924.
  7. ^ Marshall, Eunice (April 1924). "What Will Happen to Ben-Hur?". Screenland. New York. Retrieved January 31, 2016.
  8. ^ Marshall, Eunice (April 1924). "What Will Happen to Ben-Hur? (Continued)". Screenland. New York. Retrieved January 31, 2016.
  9. ^ a b "Ben-Hur: A Tale of the Christ". silentera.com. Retrieved May 26, 2013.
  10. ^ Hall, Sheldon; Neale, Stephen (April 15, 2010). Epics, Spectacles, and Blockbusters: A Hollywood History. Wayne State University Press. p. 163. ISBN 978-0-8143-3008-1.
  11. ^ Brownlow, Kevin (1968). The Parade's Gone By... New York: Bonanza Books. p. 409. ISBN 978-0-5200-3068-8.
  12. ^ Brownlow, p. 413.
  13. ^ Bowman, James (1998). "Prince of Egypt, The", article published 1 December 1998, online journal of the Ethics and Public Policy Center (EPPC), Washington, D.C. Retrieved 13 August 2021.
  14. ^ MrRazNZ (2021). The Pod Race: How George Lucas copied, transformed and combined" on YouTube, scene-by-scene video comparison of race in Star Wars: Episode I – The Phantom Menace with the races in Ben Hur and in the 1975 Norwegian stop-motion animated feature The Pinchcliffe Grand Prix; uploaded 12 August 2021 to YouTube (San Bruno, California). Retrieved 13 August 2021.
  15. ^ "The Shadow Stage". Photoplay. New York. March 1926. Retrieved August 26, 2015.
  16. ^ Hoffman, Scott W. (2002). . St. James Encyclopedia of Pop Culture. Archived from the original on May 5, 2009. Retrieved August 12, 2021 – via BNET.
  17. ^ Hagopian, Kevin. . New York State Writers Institute. Archived from the original on December 5, 2006. Retrieved August 12, 2021.
  18. ^ "Ben-Hur: A Tale of the Christ (1926)". Rotten Tomatoes. Retrieved November 16, 2021.
  19. ^ "8 troubling tales of animal abuse on film shoots". The Week. November 19, 2012. Retrieved August 12, 2021.
  20. ^ Yingjin, Zhang (1999). Cinema and Urban Culture in Shanghai, 1922–1943. Stanford University Press. p. 190. ISBN 978-0-8047-3572-8.

Further reading

  • Keel, A. Chester, "The Fiasco of 'Ben Hur'," Photoplay, November 1924, p. 32.

External links

tale, christ, 1925, film, tale, christ, 1925, american, silent, epic, adventure, drama, film, directed, fred, niblo, written, june, mathis, based, 1880, novel, tale, christ, general, wallace, starring, ramon, novarro, title, character, film, first, feature, le. Ben Hur A Tale of the Christ is a 1925 American silent epic adventure drama film directed by Fred Niblo and written by June Mathis based on the 1880 novel Ben Hur A Tale of the Christ by General Lew Wallace Starring Ramon Novarro as the title character the film is the first feature length adaptation of the novel and second overall following the 1907 short Ben HurTheatrical release posterDirected byFred Niblo Uncredited Charles BrabinScreenplay byAdaptation June Mathis Scenario Carey Wilson Continuity Bess Meredyth Carey Wilson Titles H H Caldwell Katharine HillikerBased onBen Hur A Tale of the Christby General Lew WallaceProduced byUncredited June Mathis Louis B Mayer Irving ThalbergStarringRamon Novarro May McAvoy Betty Bronson Francis X Bushman Carmel MyersCinematographyClyde DeVinna Rene Guissart Percy Hilburn French Karl StrussEdited byLloyd Nosler Basil Wrangler William Holmes Harry Reynolds Ben LewisMusic byWilliam Axt David Mendoza Stewart Copeland 2014 edition ProductioncompanyMetro Goldwyn MayerDistributed byMetro Goldwyn MayerRelease datesDecember 30 1925 1925 12 30 New York City premiere Running time141 minutesCountryUnited StatesLanguagesSilent English intertitles Budget 4 million 1 2 Box office 10 7 million 1 2 In 1997 Ben Hur was selected for preservation in the United States National Film Registry by the Library of Congress as being culturally historically or aesthetically significant 3 4 Contents 1 Plot 2 Cast 3 Production 4 Reception 5 Restoration 6 Home media 7 See also 8 References 9 Further reading 10 External linksPlot Edit Ramon Novarro as Ben Hur Ben Hur is a wealthy young Jewish prince and boyhood friend of the powerful Roman tribune Messala When an accident and a false accusation leads to Ben Hur s arrest Messala who has become corrupt and arrogant makes sure Ben Hur and his family are jailed and separated Ben Hur is sentenced to slave labor in a Roman war galley Along the way he unknowingly encounters Jesus the carpenter s son who offers him water Once aboard ship his attitude of defiance and strength impresses a Roman admiral Quintus Arrius who allows him to remain unchained This actually works in the admiral s favor because when his ship is attacked and sunk by pirates Ben Hur saves him from drowning Arrius then treats Ben Hur as a son and over the years the young man grows strong and becomes a victorious chariot racer This eventually leads to a climactic showdown with Messala in a chariot race in which Ben Hur is the victor However Messala does not die as he does in the more famous 1959 adaptation of the novel Ben Hur is eventually reunited with his mother and sister who have developed leprosy but are miraculously cured by Jesus Christ 5 Cast EditMain Ramon Novarro as Ben Hur Francis X Bushman as Messala May McAvoy as Esther Betty Bronson as Mary Claire McDowell as Princess of Hur Kathleen Key as Tirzah Carmel Myers as Iras Nigel de Brulier as Simonides Mitchell Lewis as Sheik Ilderim Leo White as Sanballat Frank Currier as Arrius Charles Belcher as Balthazar Dale Fuller as Amrah Winter Hall as Joseph Claude Payton as Jesus Christ uncredited George Walsh he recorded almost the entire film but was replaced by Ramon Novarro 6 Some notable crowd extras during chariot race Reginald Barker John Barrymore Lionel Barrymore Clarence Brown Joan Crawford Marion Davies Douglas Fairbanks George Fitzmaurice Sidney Franklin John Gilbert Dorothy Gish Lillian Gish Samuel Goldwyn Sid Grauman Rupert Julian Henry King Harold Lloyd Carole Lombard Myrna Loy Colleen Moore Mary PickfordProduction Edit source source source source source source source source source source PLAY full film runtime 02 20 52 Ben Hur A Tale of The Christ had been a great success as a novel and was adapted into a stage play which ran for twenty five years In 1922 two years after the play s last tour the Goldwyn company purchased the film rights to Ben Hur The play s producer Abraham Erlanger put a heavy price on the screen rights Erlanger was persuaded to accept a generous profit participation deal and total approval over every detail of the production Choosing the title role was difficult for June Mathis Rudolph Valentino and dancer Paul Swan were considered until George Walsh was chosen When asked why she chose him she answered it was because of his eyes and his body Gertrude Olmstead was cast as Esther 7 8 While on location in Italy Walsh was fired and replaced by Ramon Novarro The role of Esther went to May McAvoy Shooting began in Rome Italy in October 1923 under the direction of Charles Brabin who was replaced shortly after filming began Additional recastings including Ramon Novarro as Ben Hur and a change of director caused the production s budget to skyrocket After two years of difficulties and accidents the production was eventually moved back to Metro Goldwyn Mayer in Culver City California and production resumed in the spring of 1925 B Reeves Eason and Christy Cabanne directed the second unit footage 9 Production costs eventually rose to 3 900 000 60 260 000 today compared to MGM s average for the season of 158 000 2 440 000 today 2 making Ben Hur the most expensive film of the silent era 10 A total of 200 000 feet 61 000 m of film was shot for the chariot race sequence which lead editor Lloyd Nosler eventually cut to 750 feet 230 m for the released print 11 Film historian and critic Kevin Brownlow has described the race sequence as breathtakingly exciting and as creative a piece of cinema as the Odessa Steps sequence from Battleship Potemkin a Soviet film also released in 1925 and directed by Sergei Eisenstein who introduced many modern concepts of editing and montage composition to motion picture production 12 Visual elements of the chariot race have been much imitated The race s opening sequence was re created shot for shot in the 1959 remake copied in the 1998 animated film The Prince of Egypt and imitated in the pod race scene in the 1999 film Star Wars Episode I The Phantom Menace 13 14 Some of the scenes in the 1925 film were shot in two color Technicolor most notably the sequences involving Jesus One of the assistant directors for this sequence was a young William Wyler who would direct the 1959 MGM remake The black and white footage was color tinted and toned in the film s original release print MGM released a second remake of Ben Hur in 2016 9 Reception Edit Messala s winged helmet worn by Francis X Bushman in Ben Hur sold at the Debbie Reynolds auction of film memorabilia 2011 The studio s publicity department was relentless in promoting the film advertising it with lines like The Picture Every Christian Ought to See and The Supreme Motion Picture Masterpiece of All Time Ben Hur went on to become MGM s highest grossing film with rentals of 9 million worldwide Its foreign earnings of 5 million were not surpassed at MGM for at least 25 years Despite the large revenues its huge expenses and the deal with Erlanger made it a net financial loss for MGM It recorded an overall loss of 698 000 2 In terms of publicity and prestige however it was a great success The screen has yet to reveal anything more exquisitely moving than the scenes at Bethlehem the blazing of the star in the heavens the shepherds and the Wise Men watching The gentle radiant Madonna of Betty Bronson s is a masterpiece wrote a reviewer for Photoplay No one they concluded no matter what his age or religion should miss it And take the children 15 It helped establish the new MGM as a major studio 16 17 The film was re released in 1931 with an added musical score by the original composers William Axt and David Mendoza and sound effects As the decades passed the original two color Technicolor segments were replaced by alternative black and white takes Ben Hur earned 1 352 000 during its re release including 1 153 000 of foreign earnings and made a profit of 779 000 meaning it had an overall profit of 81 000 2 The review aggregator website Rotten Tomatoes reported that 96 of critics have given the film a positive review based on 23 reviews with an average rating of 7 8 10 18 The film became notorious after its release for the egregious animal abuse involved in filming A reported one hundred horses were tripped and killed merely to produce the set piece footage of the major chariot race Animal advocates especially criticized the use of the running W on set a wire device that could trip a galloping horse It would take a decade before such devices lost favor in Hollywood 19 The movie was banned in the 1930s in China under the category of superstitious films due to its religious subject matter involving gods and deities 20 Restoration EditThe Technicolor scenes were considered lost until the 1980s when Turner Entertainment who by then had acquired the rights to the MGM film library found the crucial sequences in a Czechoslovakian film archive Current prints of the 1925 version are from the Turner supervised restoration which includes the color tints and Technicolor sections set to resemble the original theatrical release There is an addition of a newly recorded stereo orchestral soundtrack by Carl Davis with the London Philharmonic Orchestra which was originally recorded for a Thames Television screening of the movie Home media EditBen Hur was released on DVD complete with the Technicolor segments in the four disc collector s edition of the 1959 version starring Charlton Heston as well as in the 2011 Fiftieth Anniversary Edition Blu ray Collector s Edition three disc box set See also EditList of films featuring slavery Francis X Bushman filmography List of films with a 100 rating on Rotten Tomatoes a film review aggregator websiteReferences EditExplanatory notes Citations a b Ben Hur 1925 Turner Classic Movies Retrieved January 7 2012 a b c d e H Mark Glancy MGM Film Grosses 1924 28 The Eddie Mannix Ledger Historical Journal of Film Radio and Television Vol 12 No 2 1992 pp 127 44 at p 129 New to the National Film Registry December 1997 Library of Congress Information Bulletin Library of Congress Retrieved May 18 2020 Complete National Film Registry Listing Library of Congress Retrieved August 12 2021 Plot Summary for Ben Hur Classic Film Guide Archived from the original on October 27 2010 Retrieved January 26 2007 Photoplay Jul Dec 1924 Chicago Photoplay Magazine Publishing Company 1924 Marshall Eunice April 1924 What Will Happen to Ben Hur Screenland New York Retrieved January 31 2016 Marshall Eunice April 1924 What Will Happen to Ben Hur Continued Screenland New York Retrieved January 31 2016 a b Ben Hur A Tale of the Christ silentera com Retrieved May 26 2013 Hall Sheldon Neale Stephen April 15 2010 Epics Spectacles and Blockbusters A Hollywood History Wayne State University Press p 163 ISBN 978 0 8143 3008 1 Brownlow Kevin 1968 The Parade s Gone By New York Bonanza Books p 409 ISBN 978 0 5200 3068 8 Brownlow p 413 Bowman James 1998 Prince of Egypt The article published 1 December 1998 online journal of the Ethics and Public Policy Center EPPC Washington D C Retrieved 13 August 2021 MrRazNZ 2021 The Pod Race How George Lucas copied transformed and combined on YouTube scene by scene video comparison of race in Star Wars Episode I The Phantom Menace with the races in Ben Hur and in the 1975 Norwegian stop motion animated feature The Pinchcliffe Grand Prix uploaded 12 August 2021 to YouTube San Bruno California Retrieved 13 August 2021 The Shadow Stage Photoplay New York March 1926 Retrieved August 26 2015 Hoffman Scott W 2002 The Making and Release of Ben Hur St James Encyclopedia of Pop Culture Archived from the original on May 5 2009 Retrieved August 12 2021 via BNET Hagopian Kevin Film Notes Ben Hur New York State Writers Institute Archived from the original on December 5 2006 Retrieved August 12 2021 Ben Hur A Tale of the Christ 1926 Rotten Tomatoes Retrieved November 16 2021 8 troubling tales of animal abuse on film shoots The Week November 19 2012 Retrieved August 12 2021 Yingjin Zhang 1999 Cinema and Urban Culture in Shanghai 1922 1943 Stanford University Press p 190 ISBN 978 0 8047 3572 8 Further reading EditKeel A Chester The Fiasco of Ben Hur Photoplay November 1924 p 32 External links Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to Ben Hur 1925 film Wikisource has original text related to this article Ben Hur A Tale of the Christ 1925 film Wikiquote has quotations related to Ben Hur A Tale of the Christ 1925 film Ben Hur essay by Fritzi Kramer at National Film Registry 1 Ben Hur essay by Daniel Eagan in America s Film Legacy The Authoritative Guide to the Landmark Movies in the National Film Registry A amp C Black 2010 ISBN 0826429777 pages 109 111 2 Ben Hur at IMDb Ben Hur at the American Film Institute Catalog Ben Hur at the TCM Movie Database Ben Hur at AllMovie Ben Hur at Rotten Tomatoes Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Ben Hur A Tale of the Christ 1925 film amp oldid 1109137402, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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