The King of Kings (1927)



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Synopsis:
Having scored big-time box office with his first Biblical epic, The Ten Commandments (1923), Cecil B. DeMille hoped to top this success with his 1927 The King of Kings. Inasmuch as he was now dealing with the life of Christ, DeMille had to be careful to serve up equal amounts of showmanship and reverence. The first creative challenge: how to "introduce" Christ in a tasteful manner? The answer: as a blind child is cured through Jesus' intervention, DeMille cuts to the child's point-of-view, slowly fading in on the kindly countenance of H.B. Warner as the Son of Man. Still, DeMille remained DeMille, especially in his handling of the character of Mary Magdalene (Jacqueline Logan). No longer a tattered streetwalker, Mary Magdalene is now a glamorous courtesan, replete with legions of gorgeous slave girls (one of whom is "bubble dancer" Sally Rand) and dressed in revealing Hollywood-style gowns. In fact, the film opens on this character, as she ruminates over the defection of her favorite customer, Judas Iscariot (Joseph Schildkraut), who is spending far too much time with Jesus of Nazareth. Upon visiting Jesus herself, she immediately repents, casting off all her prior sins. Once again, the efficacy of the Cecil B. DeMille formula is proven: redemption has no dramatic value unless the film shows viewers why the sinner needs to be redeemed. Once he's gotten his box-office considerations out of the way, DeMille adheres faithfully to the particulars of Jesus' life, betrayal, trial, Crucifixion, and Resurrection. (Again, however, the director improves a bit upon his source material: the storm that follows the Crucifixion is of the same spectacular dimensions as the parting of the Red Sea in Ten Commandments, while the Resurrection is filmed in vibrant Technicolor). To back up the authenticity of his images, DeMille -- with an assist from scenarist Jeannie Macpherson -- utilizes Scriptural quotes in his subtitles. And to avoid any untoward publicity while filming, DeMille required all of his actors to sign legal documents preventing them from indulging in any sort of "sinful" activity; this meant that poor old H.B. Warner had to steer clear of alcoholic beverages for nearly a year, though he more than made up for lost time after his contract ran out. Prepared to mercilessly lambaste The King of Kings, DeMille's critics were disarmed by his reverent, tasteful approach to the subject. Years after the film's release, a specially prepared 60-minute version of the 18-reel King of Kings was making the rounds of religious groups, church basements, and Easter-weekend telecasts. The film was remade in 1961 by producer Samuel Bronston and director Nicholas Ray, with Jeffrey Hunter as Jesus.

~ Hal Erickson, All Movie Guide

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Full Cast & Crew

Theatrical Release
4/19/1927
Director Credit
Cecil Blount de Mille Director
Cast Credit
Stanton Heck
Muriel McCormac The Blind Girl
George F. Marion
Edward Piel Sr.
Andre Cheron A Wealthy Merchant
Fred Cavens
Jere Austin
Curt Furberg
Josef Swickard
Carl Stockdale
Wilson Benge
George Calliga
Fred Becker
Charles H. West
Jim Mason Gestas, the Unrepentant Thief
Richard Neill
Anielka Eller
Theodore Lorch
May Robson The Mother of Gestas
Fred Huntley
Edythe Chapman
Bud Chase
Charles Clary
Will R. Walling
Dick Richards Soldier of Rome
Albert Prisco
Paul Weigel
Sidney Franklin
Tom Shirley
A. Palasthy
Charles Sellon
Robert Ober
Louis Payne
Julia Faye Martha
Lucille E. Brown
Stanhope Wheatcroft
William Strauss
Walter Shumway
Malcolm Denny
Peggy Schaffer
Charles Stevens
Edward Lackey
James Marcus
Bert Hadley
Bernard Siegel
Warren Rodgers
William P. Burt
Robert St. Angelo
Frank O'Connor
Brandon Hurst
Edwin J. Brady
Joe Bonomo
Josephine Crowell
Baldy Belmont
Mark Strong
David Dunbar
Earl Metcalfe
Louis Natheaux
Viola Louie The Woman Taken in Adultery
Bertram Marburgh
Herbert Pryor
H.B. Warner Jesus Christ
Dorothy Cumming Mary, the Mother
Ernest Torrence Peter
Joseph Schildkraut Judas Iscariot
James Neill James
Joseph Striker John
Jacqueline Logan Mary Magdalene
Robert Edeson Matthew
Sidney D'Albrook Thomas
David Imboden Andrew
Charles Belcher Philip
Clayton Packard Bartholomew
Robert Ellsworth Simon
Charles Requa James, the Less
John T. Prince Thaddeus
Rudolph Schildkraut Caiaphas, high priest
Sam de Grasse The Pharisee
Casson Ferguson The Scribe
Mihaly Varkoni Pontius Pilate. Governor of Judea
Majel Coleman Proculia, Wife of Pilate
Montague Love The Roman Centurion
Bill Boyd Simon Of Cyrene
Theodore Kosloff Malchus, Captain of the High Priest's Guard
Josephine Norman Mary Of Bethany
Charles Kenneth Thompson Lazarus
Alan Brooks Satan
Clarence Burton Dysmas, the Repentant Thief
Dorothea Farley Maid Servant of Caiaphas
Hector V. Sarno The Galilean Carpenter
Leon Holmes The Imbecile Boy
Jimmie Dime Soldier of Rome
Richard Alexander Soldier of Rome
Budd Fine Soldier of Rome
James Farley An Executioner
Otto Lederer Eber, a Pharisee
Bryant Washburn A Young Roman
Lionel Belmore A Roman Noble
Monty Collins A Rich Judean
Sojin Jr. Prince Of Persia
William Costello A Babylonian Noble
Sally Rand Slave To Mary Magdalene
Mark Noble Johnson A Charioteer
Emily Barrye
Edna Mae Cooper
Kathleen Chambers
Frances Dale
Milla Davenport
Anna de Linsky
Lillian Elliott
Dale Fuller
Evelyn Francisco
Winifred Greenwood
Julia Swayne Gordon
Inez Gomez
Eulalie Jensen
Jane Keckley
Lydia Knott
Alice Knowland
Claudelle Kaye
Gertrude Norman
Patricia Palmer
Gertrude Quality
Evelyn Selbie
Barbara Tennant
Mabel Van Buren
Production Credits Credit
Cecil Blount de Mille Producer
Art Department Credit
Antocz Franziszek Grozewski Art Director
Mitchell Leisen Production Designer
Film Camera Credit
J. Peverell Marley Cinematographer
F.J. Westerberg Cinematographer

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