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Exodus: Gods and Kings

 Exodus: Gods and Kings
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TVTItem
 Exodus: Gods and Kings
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Exodus: Gods and Kings
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ExodusGodsAndKings
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Exodus: Gods and Kings is an Epic Film based on the Book of Exodus from The Bible from director Ridley Scott. It stars Christian Bale as Moses, Joel Edgerton as Pharaoh Ramses II, Golshifteh Farahani as Nefertari, John Turturro and Sigourney Weaver as Ramses's parents Pharaoh Seti I and Queen Tuya, Aaron Paul as Joshua, and Ben Kingsley as Joshua's father Nun. It is produced by 20th Century Fox and was released in December 2014.Compare with the previous major adaptations of the Book of Exodus, The Ten Commandments and the animated The Prince of Egypt.Trailer 1, Trailer 2, Trailer 3.
 Exodus: Gods and Kings
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2024-04-17T06:14:54Z
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2024-04-17T06:14:54Z
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DBTropes
 Exodus: Gods and Kings / int_121b3725
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Age Lift
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Age Lift: Like The Prince of Egypt, Moses is substantially younger at the time of the Exodus than in the Book of Exodus, which says he was 80 years old when he first confronted the Pharaoh.
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 Exodus: Gods and Kings / int_15b2cab3
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Tempting Fate
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comment
Tempting Fate: Whilst Ramses is praying to his gods, he hears a noise and believes it to be Moses hiding in the shadows. He threatens to unleash his own "plague" by slaughtering many Hebrews in retaliation for the plagues that have beset upon Memphis, and challenges who is better in killing: him or his god. Seeing as to how he says this before the final plague... God Wins, Flawless Victory!
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 Exodus: Gods and Kings / int_17ce80aa
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All There in the Manual
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All There in the Manual: God does not explicitly mention there will be ten plagues, but those familiar with the Book of Exodus will know what's going on.
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 Exodus: Gods and Kings / int_218b2ee8
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Ancient Egypt
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Ancient Egypt: The setting.
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 Exodus: Gods and Kings / int_21f3aa44
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Good Is Not Nice
 Exodus: Gods and Kings / int_21f3aa44
comment
Good is Not Nice: God is not nice. But given that this is the God of the Old Testament, it's not too surprising. He certainly does care for the Hebrews and wants Moses to lead them, but he continuously and condescendingly questions the leader of the exodus.
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 Exodus: Gods and Kings / int_23473ae7
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Adaptation Expansion
 Exodus: Gods and Kings / int_23473ae7
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Adaptation Expansion: Like The Ten Commandments and The Prince of Egypt, the film identifies the unnamed Pharaoh of the Exodus as Ramses II. Like The Prince of Egypt, the film puts Moses and Ramses in a brotherly relationship before events drive them apart.
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 Exodus: Gods and Kings / int_29bd6ffc
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Warning Mistaken for Threat
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Warning Mistaken for Threat: Moses tries and fails to persuade Ramses to free the Hebrews, telling him "This goes beyond you and I, this is about Egypt's very survival," and ultimately tells Ramses to "protect your child, protect your child," with Ramses commenting "Is that a threat?" when in fact it was an attempt to avert the upcoming final plague.
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 Exodus: Gods and Kings / int_33d5b7f2
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Adapted Out
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Adapted Out: Moses doesn't have his iconic staff.
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 Exodus: Gods and Kings / int_37b5c1b0
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Big Badass Battle Sequence
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comment
Big Badass Battle Sequence: Early in the film, Moses and Ramses fight in the Battle of Kadesh against the Hittites. In real life, Ramses fought the battle when he was already Pharaoh.
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 Exodus: Gods and Kings / int_392372f9
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Actor Allusion
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Actor Allusion: Joel Edgerton co-leads a movie about (or in this very film's case, would be) estranged brothers. Likewise, Christian Bale plays a person who comes from wealth who wishes to protect the innocent. (Also, the second Batman to play Moses). Director Allusion - Ramses says to his sleeping son "You sleep so well, because you know you are loved", a line from Ridley Scott's Gladiator. Both times the line is delivered by the film's main antagonist. It's very appropriate that Ben Kingsley gives Moses advice, since he was Moses himself in a 1995 film.
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 Exodus: Gods and Kings / int_3ae6199a
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Psychopathic Manchild
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comment
Psychopathic Manchild: The film pretty much portrays God (or at the very least, the Angel of Death) as one; he appears as a small boy, and Moses becomes quite disillusioned with the extent of the misery he visits on the Egyptians. He expresses the desire to make the Pharaoh, who thinks of himself as a god, to grovel and beg for the plagues to end and suffer before stopping the plagues. And he never does get around to answering Moses' question of why he waited so long to do anything. Instead he directs the question back at Moses, a behavior he consistently portrays throughout the film.
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 Exodus: Gods and Kings / int_474e3977
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You Have Failed Me
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You Have Failed Me: Ramses hangs a wise man for not solving the plagues. Later he also does the same to the High Priestess.
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Would Hurt a Child
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Would Hurt a Child: God unleashing the tenth plague.
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 Exodus: Gods and Kings / int_4977559e
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Our Angels Are Different
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Our Angels Are Different: When Moses sees the Burning Bush, there's also a child who speaks God's lines. In the credits he's named "Malak" after the Hebrew word for "messenger", later translated in Greek as "angelos" (and thus English "angel") which also means messenger.
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 Exodus: Gods and Kings / int_4b0ef86e
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Advertised Extra
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comment
Advertised Extra: While Sigourney Weaver's part was fairly publicized before the release of the movie, she only appears in the film for about five minutes. Her role was most likely minimized in the theatrical cut of the movie.
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 Exodus: Gods and Kings / int_56515a39
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Artistic License – History
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Artistic License – History: The subject matter's historicity is already much debated so this is inevitable. The identity of the Pharaoh(s) in Exodus is uncertain, but Ramses II (and his predecessor Seti) is a popular choice, cemented by The Ten Commandments. This despite the fact that Ramses and Seti were two of Egypt's greatest kings, who led it into a golden age, rather than it being destroyed by the anger of God. While the Egyptians have chariots, they also have cavalry. In real life, their horses were too small to carry men, so they depended on chariots. The Battle of Kadesh as depicted at the beginning of the film was very different in real life; the Hittite forces equipped several thousand chariots as well as the Egyptians, the battle was much less decisive than depicted in the movie (where the Egyptians completely rout the Hittites), and most importantly, was fought under Ramses, not Seti. The Egyptians didn't have the technology to produce the rather delicate and fancy glassware the royal family is shown using. If he were raised as a prince, Moses' head would have been kept shaved, as Ramses' is. There was no pyramid under construction at the time of Seti and Ramses. The Egyptian government and archaeologists actually pointed out to the filmmakers that hanging didn't exist as a form of execution in Egypt during the time of Moses. This makes the scenes of Ramses hanging people laughably inaccurate. Women in ancient Egypt were only allowed to be priests of certain gods and couldn't have been the chief high priests as shown in the film. The Hittites in the films beginning are portrayed by dark-skinned or Middle Eastern actors. However, research has revealed they were not even Middle Eastern. They were white Indo-Europeans, coming from modern-day Eastern Europe. In fact, accounts of the time described them as having light-colored eyes and it's generally agreed they were most likely very fair. A minor one due to having been filmed in one of the Canary Island: Moses is seen eating some plants which could not exist in any Egyptian desert as they are actually an invasive species from Mexico named Agave Americana. For the Battle of Kadesh, Ramses wears a gold headdress◊. This would be unremarkable except for the fact that he's wearing the vulture headdress, a crown reserved exclusively for queens and definitely not something a would-be king would put on. It's like if a grizzled military general wore a tiara into battle.
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 Exodus: Gods and Kings / int_62434fe2
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Sanity Slippage
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His wife Nefertari also suffers from it, as well as Sanity Slippage, as she silently and repeatedly rocks an empty cradle.
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 Exodus: Gods and Kings / int_63d861f8
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Even Evil Has Loved Ones
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Even Evil Has Loved Ones: Though Ramses condones the horrible conditions for slaves, he is a loving brother, husband, and father.
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 Exodus: Gods and Kings / int_65262dae
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Goo-Goo-Godlike
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Goo-Goo-Godlike: God (or rather, the Angel speaking for God) is portrayed as a child, though the Burning Bush still appears.
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 Exodus: Gods and Kings / int_71748a39
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Named by the Adaptation
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Named by the Adaptation: Like the previous adaptations of Exodus, the film identifies the unnamed Pharaoh(s) as Ramses II (and Seti).
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 Exodus: Gods and Kings / int_736d791f
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Adaptational Badass
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Adaptational Badass: Moses leads armies and engages in massive battles. This was very briefly touched on in The Ten Commandments as well.
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 Exodus: Gods and Kings / int_7453bc5b
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Spared by the Adaptation
 Exodus: Gods and Kings / int_7453bc5b
comment
Spared by the Adaptation: The Pharaoh, Ramses, inexplicably makes it to the shore after being hit by the brunt of the Red Sea's wave, but isn't a Karma Houdini because he knows that his arrogance and vengeance have cost him everything.
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 Exodus: Gods and Kings / int_75c33176
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Saved by Canon
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Saved by Canon: Ramses II historically died of old age. Thus, Ramses manages to make to shore and live instead of drowning like the rest of his army.
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 Exodus: Gods and Kings / int_823c6e3e
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Large Ham
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Large Ham: In addition to Ramses chewing some hog in the quote above A God Am I, Moses gets to really let loose as well, especially towards God.
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 Exodus: Gods and Kings / int_85557b38
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Reality Is Unrealistic
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Reality Is Unrealistic: As of 2016, it has been discovered that Ramesses II was fair skinned.
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 Exodus: Gods and Kings / int_87380797
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Bible Times
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Bible Times: The movie is based on the Biblical story of Moses.
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Black-and-Gray Morality
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Black-and-Gray Morality: God has shades of this. When Moses calls Him out on sending the tenth plague, He says it is justified after 400 years of abuse.
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 Exodus: Gods and Kings / int_89631688
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The Chosen One
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The Chosen One: During the second trailer, Nun mentions to Moses that he's this to lead the Jews from their oppression, according to a prophecy made before his birth. The Exodus account doesn't mention such a prophecy but it shows up in The Antiquities of the Jews by Flavius Josephus. The Ten Commandments also refers to this prophecy.
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 Exodus: Gods and Kings / int_957e5fc2
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Villainous Breakdown
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Villainous Breakdown: The "I AM A GOD!" scene comes after nine of the ten plagues hit Memphis, at which point Ramses has lost his shit.
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 Exodus: Gods and Kings / int_966da803
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Defiant to the End
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Defiant to the End: Ramses continues pursing the Israelites even after all ten plagues.
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 Exodus: Gods and Kings / int_970c790a
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Big Bad
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Big Bad: Pharaoh Rameses.
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 Exodus: Gods and Kings / int_98e1780e
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Sword and Sandal
 Exodus: Gods and Kings / int_98e1780e
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Sword and Sandal: Moses fights in the Egyptian army as an officer.
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 Exodus: Gods and Kings / int_a4414a05
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Adaptation Dye-Job
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Adaptation Dye-Job: Ramses the Great was discovered to be red-haired in 1994. Joel Edgerton is quite obviously brown haired.
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 Exodus: Gods and Kings / int_a6275bef
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Cool Sword
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Cool Sword: Seti gives Ramses and Moses swords inscribed with their names, but switches them so that they will be reminded to protect each other.
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 Exodus: Gods and Kings / int_af4d6174
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Setting Update
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Setting Update: A minor example. Rabbinical Jewish tradition says that Moses' lifespan corresponds to 1391-1271 BC, telling us the Exodus happened in 1311 BC and thus that the Pharaoh of the Exodus would have been Horemheb, the predecessor of Ramses I who is the father of Seti. Jerome, on the other hand, gives Moses' year of birth as 1592, meaning the Exodus would have been in 1512 with Thutmose I as the Pharaoh, and Ussher gives Moses' year of birth as 1571, meaning the Exodus would have been in 1491 with the Pharaoh being Thutmose II.
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 Exodus: Gods and Kings / int_af6eb96f
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Pinball Protagonist
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Pin Ball Protagonist: Moses seems to just act as a mouthpiece for God and does nothing to influence his own story - bouncing from plot point to plot point without any apparent motivation.
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 Exodus: Gods and Kings / int_b4a6ae4c
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Everyone Has Standards
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Everyone Has Standards: While Moses agrees to work with God to free his people, he sees God's plan for the tenth plague as being too extreme.
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EpicFilm
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Epic Film: To be expected, given the source material and director.
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 Exodus: Gods and Kings / int_b51a2dd8
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Demythification
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comment
Demythification: The film goes by the naturalistic explanations theory for most of the supernatural events in the Exodus account, though it "doesn’t completely shy away from the miraculous". When the plagues occur, one such servant to Ramses tries his best to come up with rational explanations for the phenomena - most of which actually make quite a bit of sense, enough for Rameses to not believe that these were actually acts of God. The said servant and the priests, however, end up on a death row when their explanations/prayers stop being effective at getting out of these problems. First of the plagues are part of one big chain reaction. They start with a rash of crocodile attacks, which in turn churn the clay in the Nile - which seems to be more than usual for that year - and make the water red as blood, killing the fish and driving out the frogs. The frogs die off, their rotting corpses attract gnats and flies, which in turn spread pestilence (disease) among both livestock and humans, specifically causing boils for the latter, and killing off a large portion of the cattle. Storms and hail, as well as dark clouds blotting out the sun, are an Unusually Uninteresting Sight to people of Europe, but in Egypt, were something as scary as a sudden volcanic eruption or fire raining from the sky would be to modern people, even without any added supernatural subtext. A Mediterranean volcano is one of the most popular explanations for all of the above. Locust swarms, which are scary enough in themselves, are also one existing explanation for the death of the firstborn plague. The diseases carried by locusts infect the grain, which was a primary element of diet in Egypt; firstborn children, traditionally, would eat first (top layers) and get double rations. Hebrew, who mostly lived off meat and milk, not grain, would not be affected; Moses made sure they culled the lambs to have enough meat for the time being. The "parting of the Red Sea" is caused by the water receding due to a tsunami, which hits the pursuing Egyptians. Still, it's just at the right time for the Israelites. And this is actually a more faithful portrayal of what is recorded in the Bible than the popular Charlton Heston image. There are prominent Jewish philosophers who maintain that most (if not all) miracles are exactly of this sort - an unnaturally convenient occurrence of natural (if slightly exaggerated) phenomena.
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Exodus: Gods and Kings / int_b51a2dd8
 Exodus: Gods and Kings / int_b6e75430
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Bald of Authority
 Exodus: Gods and Kings / int_b6e75430
comment
Bald of Authority: Pharaoh Ramses II is completely bald, as was custom for pharaohs at the time, and has a major god complex, thinking and acting as if he was the true sole authority in Ancient Egypt.
 Exodus: Gods and Kings / int_b6e75430
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 Exodus: Gods and Kings
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Exodus: Gods and Kings / int_b6e75430
 Exodus: Gods and Kings / int_b82ca416
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Rage Against the Heavens
 Exodus: Gods and Kings / int_b82ca416
comment
Rage Against the Heavens: Moses does this a few times.
 Exodus: Gods and Kings / int_b82ca416
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 Exodus: Gods and Kings / int_b82ca416
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 Exodus: Gods and Kings
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Exodus: Gods and Kings / int_b82ca416
 Exodus: Gods and Kings / int_c75df49a
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Shout-Out
 Exodus: Gods and Kings / int_c75df49a
comment
Shout-Out: When Moses returns to Pithom, he is introduced to his brother Aaron, who he then introduces his son to Moses. He then declares to his son that his "famous" uncle was once a Prince of Egypt.
 Exodus: Gods and Kings / int_c75df49a
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Exodus: Gods and Kings / int_c75df49a
 Exodus: Gods and Kings / int_cb70651c
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Maybe Magic, Maybe Mundane
 Exodus: Gods and Kings / int_cb70651c
comment
Maybe Magic, Maybe Mundane: The encounter with the Burning Bush happens after Moses wakes up after hitting his head during a landslide, so his wife thinks he was just dazed. Only Moses can see God, so when other people see Moses talking to God, to them it looks like he's talking to air.
 Exodus: Gods and Kings / int_cb70651c
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 Exodus: Gods and Kings / int_cb70651c
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Exodus: Gods and Kings / int_cb70651c
 Exodus: Gods and Kings / int_ceec4df5
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Roaring Rampage of Revenge
 Exodus: Gods and Kings / int_ceec4df5
comment
Roaring Rampage of Revenge: God delivering 400 years worth of justice on the Egyptians all at once. Moses even calls him out on this, where God responds that it was long in coming.
 Exodus: Gods and Kings / int_ceec4df5
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Exodus: Gods and Kings / int_ceec4df5
 Exodus: Gods and Kings / int_cf92fea8
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Cassandra Truth
 Exodus: Gods and Kings / int_cf92fea8
comment
Cassandra Truth: Ramses does not believe in God's power until seeing his son die in a supernatural manner.
 Exodus: Gods and Kings / int_cf92fea8
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1.0
 Exodus: Gods and Kings / int_cf92fea8
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Exodus: Gods and Kings / int_cf92fea8
 Exodus: Gods and Kings / int_d39e327f
type
What the Hell, Hero?
 Exodus: Gods and Kings / int_d39e327f
comment
What the Hell, Hero?: God and Moses engage in these kinds of conversations most of the time they speak with one another. It makes quite a bit of sense when you note that the Israelites are "those who wrestle with God" (as pointed out in the film). Two men mistaking you for a slave? Kill them. You are exiled, in the middle of the desert, your horse died and you have two men saying they came to see you? Kill them. He even takes their horses afterwards. Although this is explained afterwards as them being assassins.
 Exodus: Gods and Kings / int_d39e327f
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1.0
 Exodus: Gods and Kings / int_d39e327f
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Exodus: Gods and Kings / int_d39e327f
 Exodus: Gods and Kings / int_d52d28b6
type
Hypocrite
 Exodus: Gods and Kings / int_d52d28b6
comment
Hypocrite: After God killed all the Egyptian children, Ramses confronts Moses and calls him out for worshiping a child-murdering God. He should technically be right, but his argument loses weight when he threatened to do exactly the same thing to the Hebrews the day before, right after insisting he was himself a god.
 Exodus: Gods and Kings / int_d52d28b6
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 Exodus: Gods and Kings / int_d52d28b6
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Exodus: Gods and Kings / int_d52d28b6
 Exodus: Gods and Kings / int_d7c3ba61
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Race Lift
 Exodus: Gods and Kings / int_d7c3ba61
comment
Race Lift: Most prominent characters are played by white people, not actual Hebrews or Egyptians.
 Exodus: Gods and Kings / int_d7c3ba61
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1.0
 Exodus: Gods and Kings / int_d7c3ba61
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Exodus: Gods and Kings / int_d7c3ba61
 Exodus: Gods and Kings / int_d99a228f
type
Unusually Uninteresting Sight
 Exodus: Gods and Kings / int_d99a228f
comment
Storms and hail, as well as dark clouds blotting out the sun, are an Unusually Uninteresting Sight to people of Europe, but in Egypt, were something as scary as a sudden volcanic eruption or fire raining from the sky would be to modern people, even without any added supernatural subtext. A Mediterranean volcano is one of the most popular explanations for all of the above.
 Exodus: Gods and Kings / int_d99a228f
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Exodus: Gods and Kings / int_d99a228f
 Exodus: Gods and Kings / int_d9cf40fa
type
Screw This, I'm Outta Here
 Exodus: Gods and Kings / int_d9cf40fa
comment
Screw This, I'm Outta Here: As the waters of the Red Sea return, Ramses' chariots break off pursuit and try to get back to shore. They don't make it.
 Exodus: Gods and Kings / int_d9cf40fa
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1.0
 Exodus: Gods and Kings / int_d9cf40fa
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Exodus: Gods and Kings / int_d9cf40fa
 Exodus: Gods and Kings / int_dc0ca62a
type
Public Execution
 Exodus: Gods and Kings / int_dc0ca62a
comment
Public Execution: In an attempt to make the slaves give up Moses to him, Ramses hangs a family of three in public, and threatens to hang one family every day.
 Exodus: Gods and Kings / int_dc0ca62a
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1.0
 Exodus: Gods and Kings / int_dc0ca62a
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Exodus: Gods and Kings / int_dc0ca62a
 Exodus: Gods and Kings / int_dc1761bd
type
A God Am I
 Exodus: Gods and Kings / int_dc1761bd
comment
A God Am I: Ramses gets to thinking this way at one point. It's Truth in Television (culturally speaking) as the Pharaohs believed that they were gods.
 Exodus: Gods and Kings / int_dc1761bd
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1.0
 Exodus: Gods and Kings / int_dc1761bd
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 Exodus: Gods and Kings
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Exodus: Gods and Kings / int_dc1761bd
 Exodus: Gods and Kings / int_dda99fa8
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Despair Event Horizon
 Exodus: Gods and Kings / int_dda99fa8
comment
Despair Event Horizon: Ramses crosses it after his firstborn son dies. His wife Nefertari also suffers from it, as well as Sanity Slippage, as she silently and repeatedly rocks an empty cradle.
 Exodus: Gods and Kings / int_dda99fa8
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Exodus: Gods and Kings / int_dda99fa8
 Exodus: Gods and Kings / int_e4ba33fc
type
Disaster Dominoes
 Exodus: Gods and Kings / int_e4ba33fc
comment
First of the plagues are part of one big chain reaction. They start with a rash of crocodile attacks, which in turn churn the clay in the Nile - which seems to be more than usual for that year - and make the water red as blood, killing the fish and driving out the frogs. The frogs die off, their rotting corpses attract gnats and flies, which in turn spread pestilence (disease) among both livestock and humans, specifically causing boils for the latter, and killing off a large portion of the cattle.
 Exodus: Gods and Kings / int_e4ba33fc
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Exodus: Gods and Kings / int_e4ba33fc
 Exodus: Gods and Kings / int_e57198a4
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Advancing Wall of Doom
 Exodus: Gods and Kings / int_e57198a4
comment
Advancing Wall of Doom: The sunset horizon after the tenth plague is unleashed.
 Exodus: Gods and Kings / int_e57198a4
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 Exodus: Gods and Kings / int_e57198a4
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Exodus: Gods and Kings / int_e57198a4
 Exodus: Gods and Kings / int_f005700f
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Conspicuous Consumption
 Exodus: Gods and Kings / int_f005700f
comment
Conspicuous Consumption: Ramses chows down on some king crab, demonstrating the wealth and power of Egypt as it would have been an extreme extravagance to transport the crab from Scandinavia to Egypt quickly enough so it wouldn't spoil before it reached the pharaoh's table.
 Exodus: Gods and Kings / int_f005700f
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Exodus: Gods and Kings / int_f005700f
 Exodus: Gods and Kings / int_f3d5d15f
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Creepy Child
 Exodus: Gods and Kings / int_f3d5d15f
comment
Creepy Child: God, of all people (or possibly the Angel talking for him), appears to Moses as one. The implication seems to be that the child is an angel. When he first appears, it is next to the burning bush traditionally associated with YHWH. Later, Moses yells at the boy in frustration that he is tired of talking to messengers (presumably, what the boy is).
 Exodus: Gods and Kings / int_f3d5d15f
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Exodus: Gods and Kings

The following is a list of statements referring to the current page from other pages.

 Exodus: Gods and Kings
hasFeature
Ancient Egypt / int_3483eb3c
 Exodus: Gods and Kings
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Bald of Authority / int_3483eb3c
 Exodus: Gods and Kings
hasFeature
Bible Times / int_3483eb3c
 Exodus: Gods and Kings
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Big Badass Battle Sequence / int_3483eb3c
 Exodus: Gods and Kings
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Brownface / int_3483eb3c
 Exodus: Gods and Kings
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Christian Fiction / int_3483eb3c
 Exodus: Gods and Kings
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Demythification / int_3483eb3c
 Exodus: Gods and Kings
hasFeature
Demythtification / int_3483eb3c
 Exodus: Gods and Kings
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Epic Movie / int_3483eb3c
 Exodus: Gods and Kings
hasFeature
Films of 2010–2014 / int_3483eb3c
 Exodus: Gods and Kings
hasFeature
Judaism and Jewish Culture in Media / int_3483eb3c
 Exodus: Gods and Kings
hasFeature
Sand Bridge at Low Tide / int_3483eb3c
 Exodus: Gods and Kings
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Sword and Sandal / int_3483eb3c
 Exodus: Gods and Kings
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Warning Mistaken for Threat / int_3483eb3c
 exodusgodsandkings
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Exodus: Gods and Kings