Ben-Hur (1925 film)

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Ben-Hur
Image:Ben-Hur-1925.jpg
Theatrical Poster
Directed by Fred Niblo
Produced by Louis B. Mayer
Written by Story:
Lew Wallace
Screenplay:
June Mathis
Carey Wilson
Starring Ramon Novarro
Francis X. Bushman
May McAvoy
Betty Bronson
Release date(s) December 30 1925
Running time 143 min.
Country Image:US flag 48 stars.svg United States
Language Silent film
English intertitles
All Movie Guide profile
IMDb profile

Ben Hur was a 1925 silent film directed by Fred Niblo. It was a blockbuster hit for newly merged Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer. This was the second film based on the novel Ben-Hur by Lew Wallace.

Contents

[edit] Plot

Judah Ben-Hur is a wealthy Jew and boyhood friend of the powerful Roman, Messala. When an accident 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 sent to work in the galley of a Roman warship. Along the way he unknowingly encounters Christ, 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.

Ben-Hur is eventually reunited with his mother and sister, who are suffering from leprosy but are miraculously cured by Christ.

[1]

[edit] Cast

[edit] Background

Costing between 4 and 6 million dollars, Ben-Hur is the most expensive silent film ever made.

Ben-Hur was a big success as a novel, and also as a stage play. Stage productions had been running 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.

Shooting began in Italy in 1923, starting two years of difficulties, accidents, and eventually a move back to Hollywood. Additional recastings (including Ramon Navarro as Ben-Hur) and a change of director helped skyrocket the production's budget. The studio's publicity department was shameless, advertising the film with lines like: "The Picture Every Christian Ought to See!" Although audiences flocked to Ben-Hur after its premiere in 1925 and the picture grossed nine million dollars, its huge expenses and the deal with Erlanger made it a loser for MGM. MGM was unable to regain its $4,000,000 investment.[2][3]

A total of 60,960 m (200,000 feet) of film was shot for the chariot race scene which was eventually edited down to 229 m (750 feet). This scene has been much imitated. It was re-created virtually shot for shot in the 1959 remake, and more recently imitated in the pod race scene in Star Wars Episode I: The Phantom Menace which was made almost 75 years later. Some scenes in the film were in two-strip Technicolor. One of the assistant directors for this sequence was a very young William Wyler, who would direct the 1959 remake.

[edit] Reissue

A 1931 reissue added music, by the original composers William Axt and David Mendoza, and sound effects. As the decades passed, the original Technicolor segments were replaced by black-and-white dubs. These scenes were considered lost until the 1980s when Turner Entertainment (who by then had acquired the rights to the film) found the crucial sequences in a Czech film archive.

[edit] Restoration

Current prints of the 1925 version are from the Turner-supervised restoration. The restoration 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.

Ben-Hur has been selected for preservation by the United States National Film Registry.

It can be found on DVD, complete with the Technicolor segments, in the four-disc collector's edition of the 1959 version starring Charlton Heston.

[edit] See also

[edit] Footnotes

  1. ^ Plot Summary for Ben Hur. Classic Film Guide. Retrieved on 2007-01-26.
  2. ^ The Making and Release of Ben-Hur. findarticles.com. Retrieved on 2007-01-26.
  3. ^ Commentary on Ben-Hur. www.albany.edu. Retrieved on 2007-01-26.

[edit] External links

es:Ben-Hur (1925) fr:Ben-Hur (film, 1925) pt:Ben-Hur: A Tale of the Christ sv:Ben-Hur (1925)

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