USA drama
1927
bw 112 min.
Director: Cecil B. DeMille
CLV: $49.95 - available
           1 disc, catalog # CC1295L
Hollywood Boulevard was
mobbed on the evening of May 18, 1927, as Cecil B. DeMille's The King of
Kings premiered, the christening feature of Sid Grauman's sumptuous new
Chinese Theater. 100,000 people, the largest crowd ever to greet any kind of
theatrical opening, were there either gawking at celebrities or hoping to buy an
extra ticket -- which cost, in today's money, between $75 and $200. Inside, an
army of ushers outfitted in Chinese robes escorted the wealthy and well-connected
to their seats. D.W. Griffith began the ceremonies by declaring DeMille the
greatest producer of all time, followed by paeans heaped upon him by Mary
Pickford and movie czar Will Hays. The audience even had to endure a half-hour
prologue, "Glories of the Scripture," before the curtain went up on DeMille's
latest spectacle.The King of Kings turned out to be the silent
screen's most elaborate realization of "the greatest story ever told."
Variety founder Sime Silverman began his review, "Tremendous is The
King of Kings -- tremendous in its lesson, in the daring of its picturization
for a commercial theater and tremendous in its biggest scene, The Crucifixion of
Christ." The film cost at least $1,265,000 (inflated by press agents to
$2,300,000), with sets and crowd scenes rivaling D.W. Griffith's
Intolerance in scale and ornateness. The monumental devastation unleashed
by Christ's crucifixion dwarfs even the cataclysmic Holy Grail finale of
Indiana Jones and the Last Crusade. Raw material and non-union labor gave
more bang for the buck in 1927, and DeMille, who produced the film independently,
had found a wealthy Wall Street angel with strong religious
convictions.
Because the Son of God is divine rather than ordinary, H.B. Warner
as Jesus generally avoided emotional expressiveness in his performance. Christ's
charisma is evoked through the power of cinema -- a mesmerizing repertoire of
special effects, lighting and editing -- rather than through compelling acting.
Whether Christ walks on water or reattaches a severed ear, Warner exudes a kind
of sacred boredom. Most often, he moves through darkened space radiating a divine
glow by means of an ill-defined halo. At such moments, the film becomes a
somewhat cloying combination of Oriental kitsch and sanctimonious storytelling.
Yet there are other moments when DeMille's talents shine forth, as with his
intercutting of Judas' suicide and Christ's crucifixion, which remains
emotionally powerful even today.
The New Testament sequel to DeMille's earlier
The Ten Commandments (1923) was as controversial in its day as Martin
Scorsese's The Last Temptation of Christ was in 1988. Although DeMille
made his film under the pious supervision of clergy, he managed to titillate
audiences with the same heady mixture of sex and moralism that had made The
Cheat (1915), Why Change Your Wife (1920) and fifty other earlier
films so successful. The King of Kings opens with a lengthy and lavish
orgy, originally filmed in two-strip Technicolor, hosted by Mary Magdalen
(Jacqueline Logan). The courtesan's favorite, Judas Iscariot (Joseph
Schildkraut), is missing -- apparently seduced away by a lowly carpenter. Despite
this humiliating rejection, she goes to find Judas in a chariot drawn by a trio
of zebras, the gift of a Nubian king. She finds her lover, a '20's version of the
young Richard Gere, but fails to win him back. Rather, under Christ's tonic gaze,
the Seven Deadly Sins flee her body, and she is effectively purified and
reborn.
Theatrical representations of Christ have often been controversial. In
the nineteenth century, it was virtually impossible for an actor to perform the
role of Christ on the American stage. James O'Neill (Eugene O'Neill's father)
once tried in San Francisco during the Lenten season of 1879 and was thrown in
jail. However, the projected image with its dematerializing beam of light somehow
eliminated the threat of sacrilege. The Passion Play of Oberammergau
(1898), a faked recreation of the Bavarian drama, actually had been praised by
clergy. The makers of The King of Kings, nevertheless, remained actively
concerned about the charge of blasphemy. DeMille arranged for representatives of
every major religion to offer their blessings on the first day of filming. The
production's Jesuit advisor offered sunrise services for the crew each morning,
and H.B. Warner was veiled and transported in a closed car between dressing room
and set. Nonetheless, there were doubts about DeMille's tastefulness. Mordaunt
Hall of the New York Times complained that not enough had been left to the
imagination: "The presence of Jesus on the screen creates a feeling akin to
resentment, largely because Mr. DeMille has insisted on having his camera too
close to the player." (In the 1925 version of Ben-Hur, one saw only
Christ's hand.)
In the sound era, DeMille cut the picture from approximately
155 to 112 minutes (the original version no longer exists) and added a
synchronized music track. It was shown on television, and in the mid-1950s the
elderly director liked to boast that more than 800,000,000 people had seen it.
Ultimately, it was superseded by a Cinemascope, stereophonic synch-sound version
directed by Nicholas Ray (The King of Kings, 1961), but it was DeMille's
breakthrough film that made Jesus Christ a movie star.
-- CHARLES
MUSSER
Credits
Produced and Directed by: Cecil B.
DeMille
Scenario Written by: Jeanie Macpherson
Cinematographer: J. Peverell
Marley
Transfer
This edition of King of Kings was
transferred from a 35mm master print.