Movie Background

King of Kings

Who is Jesus, and why does he affect everyone he encounters? He is revered and reviled, emulated and accused, beloved, betrayed, and ultimately crucified. Yet that terrible fate would not be the end of the story.

Director(s)

Orson Welles

Nicholas Ray

Noël Howard

Sumner Williams

Carlo Lastricati

José María Ochoa

José López Rodero

Julio Sempere

Simon Mizrahi

Cast & Crew

Orson Welles

Orson Welles

-

George Coulouris

George Coulouris

Camel Driver

Frank Thring

Frank Thring

Herod Antipas

Harry Guardino

Harry Guardino

Barabbas

Rip Torn

Rip Torn

Judas

Ray Milland

Ray Milland

Satan (voice) (uncredited)

José López Rodero

José López Rodero

-

Grégoire Aslan

Grégoire Aslan

Herod

Viveca Lindfors

Viveca Lindfors

Claudia

David Davies

David Davies

Burly Man

Luis Prendes

Luis Prendes

Good Thief / Roman Soldier

Royal Dano

Royal Dano

Peter

Jeffrey Hunter

Jeffrey Hunter

Jesus

Frank Braña

Frank Braña

Roman Soldier/Barrabas Soldier (uncredited)

Conrado San Martín

Conrado San Martín

General Pompey

Robert Ryan

Robert Ryan

John the Baptist

Barry Keegan

Barry Keegan

Bad Thief

Gérard Tichy

Gérard Tichy

Joseph

Maurice Marsac

Maurice Marsac

Nicodemus

Aldo Sambrell

Aldo Sambrell

Judea Soldier (uncredited)

Guy Rolfe

Guy Rolfe

Caiaphas

Antonio Mayans

Antonio Mayans

Young John

Carlo Lastricati

Carlo Lastricati

-

Hurd Hatfield

Hurd Hatfield

Pontius Pilate

Nicholas Ray

Nicholas Ray

-

Fernando Sancho

Fernando Sancho

Mad man

Rubén Rojo

Rubén Rojo

Matthew

Ron Randell

Ron Randell

Lucius

Paul Naschy

Paul Naschy

Herod Antipas' Servant/Roman Soldier (uncredited)

José María Ochoa

José María Ochoa

-

John Kerr

John Kerr

Man at Sermon on the Mount (uncredited)

José Nieto

José Nieto

Caspar

Cris Huerta

Cris Huerta

Jewish Rebel (uncredited)

Adriano Rimoldi

Adriano Rimoldi

Melchior

Bud Strait

Bud Strait

John the Apostle (uncredited)

Brigid Bazlen

Brigid Bazlen

Salome

Siobhán McKenna

Siobhán McKenna

Mary

Rita Gam

Rita Gam

Herodias

Carmen Sevilla

Carmen Sevilla

Mary Magdalene

Edric Connor

Edric Connor

Balthazar

Michael Wager

Michael Wager

Thomas

Félix de Pomés

Félix de Pomés

Joseph of Arimathea

Rafael Luis Calvo

Rafael Luis Calvo

Simon of Cyrene

Tino Barrero

Tino Barrero

Andrew

Paco Morán

Paco Morán

Blind Man

Antonio Montoya

Antonio Montoya

Roman Soldier (uncredited)

Randy Paar

Randy Paar

Extra in Palm Sunday Scene (uncredited)

Ron Veto

Ron Veto

Bit part (uncredited)

Noël Howard

Noël Howard

-

Sumner Williams

Sumner Williams

-

Julio Sempere

Julio Sempere

-

Simon Mizrahi

Simon Mizrahi

-

Details

GenresDrama, History
Runtime2h 51 mins
Released on11 Oct 1961
Languageen
Produced InUnited States of America
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Reviews

John Chard

8/10

The best of the Christ story epics. King Of Kings is a good film, and certainly one that is better than its reputation suggests. It's for sure better than the poorly put together The Robe from 1953 and the gargantuan excess that would be The Greatest Story Ever Told four years post this MGM piece. Produced by legendary Samuel Bronston and directed with assurance and imagination by Nicholas Ray, the film tells of the 33 years of Jesus Christ's life. From his birth in Bethlehem to his Crucifixion, to the Resurrection and finally the Ascension. A familiar story that is nicely spread to a movie under three hours long, takes in the Apostles selection, John The Baptist, 40 days in the desert, the miracles (though we are short changed here), Sermom on the Mount, Judas' betrayal and of course The Last Supper. The film contains a narration by Orson Welles, which was written by Ray Bradbury. It's a wise move for it helps the narrative immensely, while lets face it here, Orson had a great voice, perfectly biblical and it lends a touch of class to the material. Of the cast, Jeffrey Hunter has the glory role of Christ. A relative unknown (this helps I feel), Hunter is effective with his steely blue eyes, while Robert Ryan is first rate as the doomed John The Baptist. Also turning in good performances are Harry Guardino (Barabbas), Viveca Lindfors (Claudia), Royal Dano (Peter) and Rip Torn (Judas). Though not hurting the movie, Hurd Hatfield as Pontius Pilate is a touch too animated, while Frank Thring as Herod Antipas takes the woe is me mantra a step too far. Naturally with a budget of $8 million the film has considerable scope. Thousands of extras are a given of course, all captured among the Spanish locations in 70mm Technicolor (Cinematography by Manuel Berenguer, Milton R. Krasner & Franz Planer). While the sets (almost 400 used) are very pleasing on the eye and Miklós Rózsa provides a suitably effective score. The writing from Philip Yordan is lean, there's no heavy filler and for a film of this type it's a pleasant surprise to see such restraint. Ultimately it's just real good story telling given a good technical work out. The appearance of Judas for the first time still sends a shiver down the old spine and the Crucifixtion instills a sadness that is hard to shake off once the credits have rolled. Job done really. 8/10

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King of Kings (1961)
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