It's time again for that annual
Easter event, the marathon 4½-hour showing of Cecil B. DeMille's "The Ten
Commandments" Easter weekend on ABC.
Why ABC shows it on Easter is
beyond me, since the story really is about Passover. Fortunately for the
network, Passover and Holy Week overlap this year; but that doesn't usually
happen.
This year, I propose a drinking game:
Every time a character utters an outlandish line, you take a drink. For
instance:
"Catch a lotus and you catch a
wish!"
"Are you a master builder or a master butcher?"
"A charging chariot knows no rank!"
And my favorite: "Oh,
Moses, Moses, you stubborn, splendid, adorable fool!"
Needless to say, "The Ten Commandments" doesn't have anything
to do with religion. It's about what most Hollwood religious movies are about:
sex, sex and more sex, all dressed up in Biblical trappings. And DeMille was
the master.
The most elaborate scene is the big orgy going on at the foot of Mount Sinai
while Moses is up on the summit getting the tablets. It took more than three
weeks to film, and according to Charlton Heston's autobiography, the process
was so grueling, one of the female extras was overheard complaining, "Who
do I have to [sleep with] to get OUT of this movie?"
Incidentally, Heston wasn't DeMille's first choice to play Moses. He
wanted William Boyd, television's Hopalong Cassidy, but Boyd turned him down.
Anne Baxter wasn't the first choice to play Nefretiri, either. Audrey
Hepburn was slated for the role, but DeMille vetoed her at the last moment for
being "too slim." (Cecil
liked his leading ladies voluptuous.)
The movie is a treasure trove of bad acting, and the worst has to be Heston
himself.
"That Chuck Heston is a nice guy," said fellow actor Aldo Ray,
"but what a hamola!"
There's a longstanding rumor that one of the 25,000 extras was a young
man named Fidel Castro, playing an Egyptian soldier. In her autobiography,
Shirley MacLaine said she asked Castro about it when she met him, and she
received an ambiguous answer.
So how did DeMille achieve the movie's crowning special effect, the
parting of the Red Sea? Simple: They poured 300,000 gallons of water into a
tank and then played the film backwards.
Incidentally, you won't be seeing the entire movie Sunday night. Even 4½
hours (including commercials) aren't long enough for the whole thing, so ABC
always cuts a few minutes here and there to squeeze it into the time frame,
leading one critic to quip, "It's been trimmed to seven
commandments."
I don't mean to pick on DeMille. Sex-and-sandal movies have been a
Hollywood staple since the silent era.
But if you're in the mood for a truly religious film, a handful do exist.
Among them: "Monsieur Vincent" (about Saint Vincent de Paul), "Francis
of Assisi" (which affected actress Dolores Hart, who played Saint Claire, so
deeply that she quit Hollywood and became a nun), "The Passion of Joan of
Arc," "The Passion
According to Saint Matthew" by Pier Paolo Pasolini, and – believe it or
not – "Monty Python's Life of Brian," which has more true
spirituality in any given five minutes than "The Ten Commandments"
has in 4½ hours.
Happy Easter, and
happy Passover, too.