『Ben-Hur (1959)』のカバーアート

Ben-Hur (1959)

Ben-Hur (1959)

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概要

Ben Hur. 1959. Eleven Oscars. And yeah — it earned every single one of them.

This week on Movie Wars, Kyle, Seth, and John Datoy sit down to dig into what might be the greatest epic ever put on film. We're talking about a movie so massive, so meticulously crafted, that it basically wrote the rulebook for every sword-and-sandals film that came after it. No Ben Hur? No Gladiator. No Kingdom of Heaven. No Lord of the Rings. Honestly, no pod racing either. This thing casts a shadow over cinema that most films can only dream about.

Seth — who watched the actual movie plus three full-length documentaries about it — breaks down the wild history of this story, from a Civil War general writing biblical fiction in the 1880s to the chaotic 1925 adaptation where they literally set ships on fire in the Mediterranean Sea and realized too late that a bunch of extras had lied about being able to swim. We also get into William Wyler's vision for the film — how he deliberately set out to take the Cecil B. DeMille-style epic and strip away the theatrical cheese to make something that was genuinely character-driven at its core. Spoiler: he pulled it off.

We break down the legendary chariot race, the Heston vs. Boyd dynamic, the custom wide-format lenses that sat in a box untouched until Quentin Tarantino found them for The Hateful Eight, and why Kyle thinks Wyler somehow had more control over this production than Coppola ever had on Apocalypse Now. We also rate the film across our four War Zone categories — and yeah, this one's a clean sweep of yeses.

Plus: the 2016 remake somehow got Morgan Freeman, and somehow was still unwatchable. Three separate sittings. Seth only finished it out of respect.

Takeaways:

  1. Ben Hur's production scale was genuinely unprecedented — the sets, the budget, the custom lenses built specifically for this film — and it shows in every single frame.
  2. William Wyler's genius wasn't just spectacle. It was knowing how to wrap intimate, character-driven drama inside the biggest movie ever made at that point.
  3. The film's influence runs deeper than most people realize — it's essentially the blueprint for every major epic that followed over the next 60 years.
  4. The cinematography was so ahead of its time that the lenses sat unused in a display case until Quentin Tarantino spotted them and used them for The Hateful Eight.
  5. Films & Studios Referenced: MGM, Titanic, Return of the King, Gladiator, Kingdom of Heaven, Lord of the Rings, Wicked, Schindler's List, 12 Years a Slave, Apocalypse Now, The Godfather, The Ten Commandments, Jason and the Argonauts, The Hateful Eight

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