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Hallelujah! Ten Films Featuring the Man Upstairs
RT looks at ten movies with appearances by the Almighty
by RT Staff | March 20, 2008
Blog Article | Discuss Article


Since the earliest days of film, stories from the Bible have been used as inspiration for a variety of movies. Both the Old and New Testament show up as source material, both as strict story outlines, or merely a jumping off point for a more original idea. The upcoming Easter holiday had us thinking about movies based on the Bible, and more specifically, movies have some kind of portrayal of God himself. So we've put together a list of ten the highest-rated films with a certain, shall we say, divinity.


The Ten Commandments - 96%

Based on the story of Moses and the Israelites, director Cecil B. DeMille's final film is arguably his best, and probably his biggest as well. The film's scale is simply staggering, with location filming in Egypt and a cast of thousands (literally). Charlton Heston stars as Moses, who grows up as a prince of Egypt, but later becomes a prophet, and eventually leads the Israelites out of captivity. Although the movie takes some liberties with the source material, the main points are still there; the burning bush, the plagues, the parting of the Red Sea, and of course, the titular commandments. The film is definitely dated, and it's more than a little bit hokey, but the sheer spectacle of the sets and locations (in the days before CGI) are still impressive.





Raiders of the Lost Ark - 95%

In 1981, Steven Spielberg and George Lucas teamed up to create a modern version of the serialized adventure movies from the 30s and 40s. The end result is one of the greatest adventure films ever made. Just in case you've been in a cave since the early 80s, here's the story: a very "hands-on" archeologist named Indiana Jones (Harrison Ford) is enlisted by the U.S. government to find the Lost Ark of the Covenant before the Nazis do (obviously that would be a Bad Thing). Along the way, he hooks up with an old flame, runs from the Nazis, and dodges venomous snakes. Jones can't keep the Ark once he's found it though, and loses it to the Nazis, who find that opening the Ark results is some old school, Old Testament-style wrath of God.





Time Bandits - 94%

On a mad dash through both history and legend, director Terry Gilliam stops for brief visits with Agamemnon, Robin Hood, and Napoleon, plus a quick ride on the Titanic. The story focuses on a young boy who meets up with six hapless little people that used to be employees of the Supreme Being. Fed up with their work, they stole a map from their boss that shows the "holes" in the universe and turned to a life of crime; stealing from history's richest figures and jumping through the holes in the universe to escape to a completely different time. That may sound like a good plan, but the Supreme Being wants his map back, and Evil wants the map too. Sound crazy? It is, but it's a lot of fun, too. And Ralph Richardson turns in a great perfomance as the Supreme Being, appearing as a kindly and wise (but slightly befuddled) English gentlemen.





The Gospel According to St. Matthew - 92%

Christ's life is presented with respect for the traditional religious doctrine of the Church, but Pasolini's trademark naturalism "humanizes" his subject and makes him his own. The documentary-style camera captures Christ's meetings with the men who were to become his disciples, the Last Supper, the betrayal by Judas, and the Crucifixion. The impassioned music of Bach, Mozart, and Prokofiev lends a further aura of spiritual intensity to the proceedings.








The Last Temptation of Christ - 81%

This striking vision from the mind of director Martin Scorsese offers an allegorical interpretation of the last days of Jesus Christ, based on the book by Nikos Kazantzakis. Based strictly on Kazantzakis's book, the film has a very different focus than past portraits of the "Messiah." This Jesus (Willem Defoe) is a man wracked with doubt over his position among his followers and fear of the role God has chosen for him, as well as the pain that must accompany it. He is unsure whether the messages he receives come from God or Satan, and he is tempted by a mortal life filled with earthly possessions and sensual love, resulting in a controversial, though genuinely sympathetic, account of Christianity's most revered figure.





King of Kings - 79%

Nicholas Ray's lavish and beautifully constructed widescreen epic about the life of Jesus of Nazareth. "King of Kings" is built upon a series of narrative parallels and contrasts between Jesus and Barrabas. The film portrays the thief as a rebel leader of the Jewish resistance; unlike Jesus, who preaches a message of peace, Barrabas advocates violence as a means to an end. By building his drama around this religious and philosophical conflict, Ray establishes a tension that defamiliarizes this well-known story. Highlights include the Sermon on the Mount and the scene in which Salome asks King Herod for the head of John the Baptist.






The Prince of Egypt - 79%

A full-length, animated musical version of the story of Moses. After being raised as the son of a Pharoah, Moses learns that he is a Hebrew and must accept his destiny as the leader of his people. Moses' brother Rameses refuses to let the Hebrews go, and brings down the wrath of God upon Egypt. A triumph of animated storytelling and colorful design.









Oh, God! - 73%

Jerry Landers (a terrifically surprising John Denver) is an average guy in every sense of the word. He lives a completely normal, dull life, working at the local supermarket (where everybody, of course, knows him and likes him) and never doing anything out of the ordinary. That's why no one is more surprised than he is when God chooses to make himself known to the world through Jerry by sending him a typewritten, misspelled note granting him an audience with the Supreme Being. Jerry doesn't believe his eyes when God turns out to be an old, scrawny man (who looks a lot like George Burns). This wry, thoughtful comedy from Carl Reiner, based on the novel by Avery Corman, carries a serious message about religion, faith, and the way people care for the world they've been given.





Dogma - 67%

Imaginative theology and a bigger than usual budget make Kevin Smith's fourth film a kind of post-Catholic fantasy that only a comic-book enthusiast of his caliber could dream up. The plot is set in motion by two banished angels, Loki (Matt Damon) and Bartleby (Ben Affleck). After a few millenia in Wisconsin, they've discovered a loophole in Catholic doctrine that would allow them back into heaven--but prove the fallibility of God and destroy the universe. Unaware of the peril, they make their way to New Jersey to receive a plenary indulgence. Meanwhile, God has dispatched a seraphim (Alan Rickman) to recruit lapsed-Catholic Bethany (Linda Fiorentino) to stop the angels. She finds help in muses, prophets (Jay and Silent Bob), and the forgotten 13th apostle, Rufus (Chris Rock). Before long, all hell breaks loose (literally), and God (Alanis Morrisette) has to put in an appearance of her own.





Jesus Christ Superstar - 57%

This famous rock opera depicts the last week of Christ's life. Norman Jewison directed this adaptation of Tim Rice and Andrew Lloyd Webber's musical, starring Ted Neeley as Jesus and Carl Anderson as Judas Iscariot. Among the classic songs in the film are "I Don't Know How to Love Him," "Hosanna," and "King Herod's Song (Try It and See)." The song score was nominated for an Academy Award.


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Comments (1-20 of 47 posts) | Reply
bethehero7404 writes:
on Mar 21 2008 04:51 AM

What, no Passion of the Christ? Oh well. Has anyone ever wondered why some of these God films arent nominated for Best Adapted Screenplay? These are stories from a written medium.

(Reply to this)
446558
crystalwhiteeyes writes:
on Mar 21 2008 05:01 AM

That's probably because Hollywood hates Jesus films, or they won't nominate movies that would anger people. I don't get it. I thought Passion of the Christ was the greatest movie of that year and should be nominated for several awards. Heck, it's not even a movie...more of an experience. Hollywood wanted nothing to do with it in the beginning, so I guess they were forced to nominate junk which they do on a yearly basis anyway.

(Reply to this)
180570
cdude2k4 writes:
on Mar 21 2008 05:09 AM

I'm Catholic and I love Jesus, but I didn't think Passion of the Christ was very good, I thought it was too violent and brutal to show all of Jesus' love. Anyways, I've never seen any of these movies except for The Prince of Egypt, but that's because I'm only 15. Maybe, I'll check out Raiders and the Ten Commandments one day.

(Reply to this)
251948
AgentIndigo writes:
on Mar 21 2008 05:27 AM

Man, you're 15 and you haven't seen Raiders of the Lost Ark? Run, don't walk to your nearest rental store...!

(Reply to this)
DarthRage writes:
on Mar 21 2008 05:39 AM

You haven't lived until you've seen Raiders! My God boy, watch it immediately! Right now! Get up, go rent it! Now!

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516217
Phantom_Lord writes:
on Mar 21 2008 05:42 AM

Maybe it's just me, but the reason these types of films arent big come awards time is obvious. There just not that entertaining, as is the idea of Jesus period! Come on people.








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Phantom_Lord writes:
on Mar 21 2008 05:43 AM

"Temple of Doom" was, and will always be, the greatest!

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457516
kobe8byrant writes:
on Mar 21 2008 06:59 AM

Didn't It's A Wonderful Life feature the Man Upstairs?

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457516
kobe8byrant writes:
on Mar 21 2008 07:00 AM

Didn't It's A Wonderful Life feature the Man Upstairs?

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471677
Tim-A writes:
on Mar 21 2008 08:36 AM

Jesus was a carpenter, he doesn't need gold.

That....and 90% of movies based off of the Bible suck.


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252550
IMAmoose24 writes:
on Mar 21 2008 08:42 AM

Temple of doom was, and will always be, THE WORST!

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242010
rgallitan writes:
on Mar 21 2008 09:40 AM

RT has really gotten into making lists these days, haven't they? Probably bored, or power-mad, or just under pressure to boost readership. Good to see Dogma on there at least.

"So we've put together a list of ten the highest-rated films with a certain, shall we say, divinity."

As Oz from Buffy once said, you've really mastered the single-entendre.


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445284
dahluzz writes:
on Mar 21 2008 09:56 AM

In reply to this comment (#1645022)
you wonder why hollywood didn't give more love to "The Passion"? get real. hollywood is run by, among others, a whole lot of jews. "The Passion" is one of the most blatantly anti-semetic films ever made (created, no less, by a guy who has made openly anti-semetic remarks). yeah, jeze, wonder why it wasn't more whole-heartedly embraced come awards season...

(Reply to this)
445284
dahluzz writes:
on Mar 21 2008 09:58 AM

In reply to this comment (#1645022)
semitic*

(Reply to this)
498727
Dinobot77 writes:
on Mar 21 2008 10:27 AM

First of all, to the kid (Cdude2k4) who said that he has never seen Raiders. YOU ARE NOT ALLOWED TO POST ON THESE FORUMS UNTIL YOU HAVE SEEN THE INDIANA TRILOGY!!!!!!! That is sacrileg in itself.

I am glad to see Oh God!, Raiders, and Dogma on here. They were all tramendous movies and could have been omitted. I think Oh God! was one of George Burns best movies, and who would of thought John Denver could act. Additionally, Dogma shows that RT is not afraid to put a controversial film in the mix.

I am surprised that Ben-Hur is not on this list. That movie will always be one of my favorites of all time and definetly has Jesus in the movie (via the crucifixtion encounter). I think that Ben-Hur, with an 88% rating, is the only place where RT got this list wrong.



(Reply to this)
insanemansam5 writes:
on Mar 21 2008 10:35 AM

I don't knwow why RT would need to make a list to promote Passion of the Christ or Bruce Almighty it's one of the most widely seen films of the decade. I'm glad that they decided to instead promote smaller more offbeat projects like Dogma.

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446558
crystalwhiteeyes writes:
on Mar 21 2008 10:55 AM

In reply to this comment (#1645343)
I understand that, but do you really want to dilute the facts?? Call it anti-semitic if you want to, but that is what really happened!! That's my beliefs anyway. Did I walk out wanting to kill or hurt a bunch of jewish people? No! Did I hate them before or after watching it?? No! People who think the film is anti-semitic didn't watch the same film that I did. You assume it is, but clearly that's not the case. I enjoyed the movie and it clearly deserved a lot of positive recognition for what it is.

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470934
vaodsi writes:
on Mar 21 2008 10:59 AM

Yeah.... i was surprised by the absence of Ben Hur as well, especially since it's won the most awards in academy history (who says the oscars hate jesus movies?)
Now, before everybody starts saying "WHAT! TITANIC WON JUST AS MANY AND SO DID LORD OF THE RINGS!!!!" let me clarify that Ben Hur is considered to be the most awarded because of the CATEGORIES for which it was awarded. It won best actress AND best actor. Titanic only won one acting award and that was best actress (i think... correct me if i'm wrong). Return of the king (one of my favorite movies though i like the first LOTR the best) wasn't even nominated for best acting.... which was sad..... cause Andy Serkis was brilliant and put a TON into that role (He wore full body spandex..... talk about dedication!)
this was a cool list. i thought it would either be ridiculously mocking or overly reverent but found it very balanced. BRAVO!!!! Oh.... and a side note..... EVERY BIBLE STUDY SHOULD HAVE TO WATCH RAIDERS OF THE LOST ARK!!!!!! EVERY CHRISTIAN AS WELL!!!! AND EVERY JEW!!!! AND EVERYBODY IN THE WORLD!!!!!! AND EVERY FIFTEEN YEAR OLD BOY (even though at that age i don't consider them human..... they're more like a strange breed of alien at that age.) gosh i'm tired. i'm making lame jokes. i need to stop. Good morning.... and good luck....


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A Delicious Pudding writes:
on Mar 21 2008 11:03 AM

umm... Ben Hur?

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vaodsi writes:
on Mar 21 2008 11:08 AM

the ten commandments...... my parent's turned that on last night after we had the Passover. Hokey is the word when it comes to melodrama. i kept on laughing at the serious parts. My favorite line-
Moses' egyptian mother says, "These are lies spun by Ramses!"
MOSES takes out swaddling clothes, "DID RAMSES SPIN THIS?" awkward silence.
a total must see. plus, the scope is amazing. And Yul brynner (YEAH... i know i spelled that name wrong) is freaking WICKED!!!!


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