EXCLUSIVE: Steven Spielberg is near to etching in stone with Warner Bros on that biopic portraying the Jewish leader as the warrior to beat all warriors. With a working title of Gods And Kings, what’s envisioned is “a movie like a Braveheart-ish version of the Moses story,” an insider tells us. “Him coming down the river, being adopted, leaving his home, forming an army, and getting the Ten Commandments.” And despite the awesome screen possibilities of the parting of the Red Sea, the movie isn’t being contemplated in 3D. Back in 1956, Paramount released The Ten Commandments in VistaVision to give moviegoers a more spectacular experience of scenes like that. But this film is as far from a remake of the Cecile B. DeMille-directed epic as you can get even though they cover similar ground. Instead Warner Bros wants Spielberg to direct it with the gritty reality of Saving Private Ryan, which is considered a masterpiece redefining battle movies. ”There have been glossy versions of the Moses story but this would be a real warrior story,” an insider tells us.
The studio has wanted Spielberg on the project since last September when he first read the script. (See previous, Warner Bros Goes To The Mountaintop For Moses Epic.) Getting Spielberg seemed a long shot because his deals are always complex and his dance card is always full. Talks intensified, and now insiders tell us the dialogue should consummate by the end of the month. Warner Bros wants to start production sometime in March or April of 2013.
Producer Matti Lesham came to the studio with a treatment that was bought for development. The film is being produced by Dan Lin and Lesham. The two writers are Stuart Hazeldine (the upcoming epic Paradise Lost for Legendary/Warner Bros and inspired by the John Milton poem) and Michael Green (co-writer of Warner Bros’ Green Lantern and the upcoming ABC midseason series The River for Spielberg”. It’s the first time they’ve scripted together.
Spielberg just finished directing Lincoln and is already working on Robopocalypse: both are DreamWorks pics co-financed by Twentieth Century Fox. Spielberg wants a big film next and this is it: Ten Commandments was one of the most profitable films of its era, grossing $65 million in 1956 — which in today’s dollars is equivalent to close to $1 Billion theatrical. Spielberg helmed another seminal Jewish movie, Schindler’s List which won seven Oscars at the 66th Academy Awards, including Best Picture and Best Director. He was just overlooked for a Best Director nomination on Tuesday for War Horse even though it received a Best Picture nod.
Meanwhile this marks the second high-profile film Warner Bros is developing on a seminal Jewish hero. Mel Gibson and Joe Eszterhas are collaborating on their pitch to tell the story of Jewish warrior Judah Maccabee, who teamed with his father and four brothers to lead the Jewish revolt against the Greek-Syrian armies that had conquered Judea in the 2nd century B.C. Gibson has the first option to direct, and he will produce the film through his Icon Productions banner.







A bad idea, there is only one Moses.
Mel Brooks.
sacha baron cohen as moses
bill maher as the voice of god
Actually, Bill Maher in the sniveling and scheming, Edward G. Robinson role is more fitting.
Oh, great. It’ll be “gritty realism.” That means we’ll be treated to Hollywood’s concept of the ancient world: “Everyone wore brown!” I’m getting damned tired of that one.
Ha ha ha!!! “Everyone wore brown!” That’s the best line in this whole thread. Thank you for that.
If they’re striving for realism, I hope they try to do it in the original languages — Hebrew and Egyptian — instead of English. That would be interesting. And they have to keep the plagues, etc. but it would be great to see them done in a believable manner instead of distracting CGI.
There were several Jewish warriors before Samson. Joshua, Gideon, the sires of the twelve tribes, they were all busy killing other people’s armies, children and women. It was how things were done.
Spielberg for a Moses epic? I would have guessed another Jesus biopic because, well, you know…Spielberg can never say no to themes revolving around emotionally distant fathers and their sons.
Finally!!! A Film by Steven Spielberg I will go to a theater and watch. Just as long as he does NOT include the following:
Aliens
Dinosaurs
Monkeys
Dog sized Ants
Rocket sleds
Mushroom clouds
Oprah
Janusz Kaminski
CGI
MoCap
Kids on Bikes
Twenty minute speeches
&
And please, for the love of all things sacred and holy.
NO SHIA.
LOL, Shia IS Joshua! I’m joking, please God let me be joking.
Wow, who do you cast in this? Also what ever happened to that Aronofsky “Noah” movie? Is Fassbender going to do it?
Now here’s a thought, what about Christian Bale?
I agree completely but I had to laugh when I saw Russel, even though i strangely have the same sentiments. But the character has got to be played like someone who is “of” that region, otherwise it will be farcical. That being said, I’d vote for Fassbender
the prince of egypt was a FLOP. speilburg was all over that piece of crap.
Tom Cruise as moses??
PRINCE OF EGYPT was more like a disappointment than a flop. In ancient 1998 dollars, it did $218,613,188 globally.
Forgot to mention Prince of Egypt.
You said it. Oy.
Steven Spielberg, leave Cecil B. DeMille’s masterpiece subject matter alone. There’s no better Ra-messes than Yul Brynner, no better Nefertari than Anne Baxter, and you’ll be answering to Charlton Heston’s fists in the afterlife if you do this.
There are many mysteries to the Bible. Moses knew the Promised Land, and knew how to lead his people to it, but would not till the time of his own death. Why is a mystery, but Moses was appalled by the apostasy of his own people, that is clear, and he was also close to God, so he knew what he was doing.
It’s mostly forgotten now, but the second animated Dreamworks movie was “Prince of Egypt.” It’s actually a pretty good movie, and this is a remarkable sequence (with an Oscar winning song):
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Gur8ccqrQ9c
Granted, Jeff Katzenerg deserves more credit than Spielberg, but it’s not bad, so far as animated movies about Moses go. Certainly better than the DVDs they sell at Dollar General.
Anyone who disses Spielberg as another Hollywood atheist has never seen the Raiders movies, 1 and 3. In 1, the just God is quite manifest in his final dealings with the Nazis. In 3, the Grail is real, the depiction is respectful, down to Dad Jones slapping Junior ‘for blasphemy’ and Marcus Brody crossing himself when the Grail cures Dad’s gunshot. I have confidence in Spielberg and his track record of reverence when it is called for.
…not to mention the Miklos Rosza-type music…..
My vote for the lead is Viggo Mortenson.
Spielberg is a genious and makes spectacular films. I’m sure it will be amazing. I’m looking forward to it!
Geez all this negativity and the guy hasn’t even officially committed to it yet. I will reserve judgement until after I see it. At least it’s going in the right direction away from all the vampire crap that’s been out there lately.
Let me guess, John Williams will do the score…
Acts 7:22 “And Moses was learned in all the wisdom of the Egyptians, and was mighty in words and in deeds.”
Yes indeed. There is rampant speculation that Moses was taught in the ways of the Aton, and that the Aton was the basis for his concept of God. Akenaton was the Pharaoh just before Moses was likely born, and might have spent time studying the ideas of the Akenaton. Certainly the idea of haloes for people beloved by God has its echoes in the first monotheistic historical source.
Tough project. Spielburg’s going to have to walk a fine line if his marching orders are to create a warrior film about Moses. To do that with historical accuracy, the film would focus on Moses activities when he was acting on behalf of Pharaoh. There is little historical record of those events, so the film would be mostly conjecture. Plus, who cares about minor Egyptian skirmishes that history has largely ignored?
On the other hand, if Spielberg fabricates a ‘Jewish warrior storyline’ and distorts the facts, his target religious audience will be outraged and will not pay to see it. Islamists, on the other hand, will use it as a propaganda piece to unjustly demonize Israel.
The story of Moses is the story of a devout man following God’s counter-intuitive call. The successful warrior and heir to the Egyptian throne, being called by God to lead a complaining generation on an unsuccessful journey. According to God’s command, Moses died outside the promised land with the generation he led. Joshua was used by God to take the next generation to the home he prepared for them. Moses story is one of transformation and obedient endurance. It is not the story of a warrior.
I can’t help noticing no one speaks of the inconguity of Mel “the madman” Gibson, who most recent disgrace was a anti semetic tirade in L.A. now attempting to redem himself by producing a movie about the Maccabee’s?
Now I’m all for a movie to tell this heroic story but seriously Mel shouldn’t be allowed in the theater to even see it no less make it.
Mel Gibson is a brilliant director. Any story would be lucky to have him be the one to tell it.
Wait. Matti Lesham??? Hmmm, Matti you say? Isn’t he married to someone in the business? I think so… Oh yeah, I remember now, his wife is a TOP EXECUTIVE AT WARNERS. Good to know they live by the 11th Commandment “Thou Shalt Hire Thy Husband”.
Josephus was alive after the life of Christ. This was (conservatively) 2000 years AFTER Moses did his thang. So to base any information about Moses on what Josephus says is mere speculation (at best) and is not biblical.
Anything else you’d like to try?
True indeed. But in those days written records were few and far between. Their art was the story telling. NO TV, cell, internet, newspapers. Nothing. Just people repeating what they ‘saw’ over and over. Not perfect and not as inaccurate as telling a story once, but not bad.
Two words… “Epic Fail” ! Todays Pagan Hollywood to remake religious epic masterpiece….NOT!
Semi-ot: what happens about Aronofsky’s Noah? (after Bale didn’t accept the role,does Fassbender accept?)
You guys do know that Spielberg is Jewish, right?
I don’t know how religious he is, but I’m pretty sure he’ll give the story of Moses the proper respect.
Besides, he’s pretty much the closest thing to Cecil B. DeMille we have today.
And so what if this story has been told before (Ten Commandements, Price of Egypt)? How many Sherlock Holmes adaptations have been made since the dawn of cinema and television? If it’s a great story, it will continue to be told and retold.
Spielberg doing a Biblical epic should be pretty exciting if you ask me.