King of Kings Poster

King of Kings (1961)

Biography | History 
Rayting:   7.1/10 7.1K votes
Country: USA
Language: English
Release date: 20 December 1961

The temporary physical life of the Biblical Savior, Jesus Christ.

Movie Trailer

Where to Watch

User Reviews

prman-5 9 April 2006

This is one of the classic portrayal's of Jesus Christ and the message of hope He gave to us. Jeffery Hunter did a riveting portrayal (the best I think that has been done)of the person of Christ. The intensity and the sheer majestic quality, shows just how much the writers, producer, and everyone involved wanted to portray Jesus the man and Jesus the Son of God with the total commitment of bearing witness to who the Son of God was, and is. I have the original collectors soundtrack from 1961, complete with hardback book, and the newer version on the CD with the added 30 minutes taken directly from the original movie film master. The soundtrack so greatly enhanced the already magnificent movie. I never tire of watching this classic. I have watched it about 25 times, the sermon on the mount part over 50 times. What a delivery! Jeffery Hunter was a great actor and the only one that could pull off this portrayal of Jesus. Amen!

bkoganbing 12 February 2007

Fmovies: A few years earlier than George Stevens mammoth all star film about the life of Jesus was this film by Nicholas Ray. Taking, it's title from the Cecil B. DeMille silent film, this version of King of Kings is in no way a remake of the DeMille epic. This King of Kings is a moving reverential account of the life of the obscure carpenter from Galilee whose thoughts still move millions today. The voice you hear doing the narration bridging of the various episodes of Jesus's life is the familiar one of Orson Welles.

Nicholas Ray shot this film in Spain with the broad central plain serving as Judea in the early years of AD. Unlike Stevens, Nicholas Ray used second line players for the most part, the biggest name in the cast is that of Robert Ryan as John the Baptist.

Jesus is played by Jeffrey Hunter and if you were to ask today's movie fans what they most remember about Hunter, they will either say his role in the original Star Trek pilot as Captain Christopher Pike, or his two roles in John Ford films, The Searchers and Sergeant Rutledge. Some reviewers have remarked about Hunter's blue eyes, personally I think Nicholas Ray might have cast Hunter with those baby blues to mark Jesus as indeed unique among the populace of Judea. In any event it's a sincere portrayal that Hunter gives. He's most effective in the Sermon on the Mount scene.

King of Kings takes a great deal more liberties with the four Gospels than does the Greatest Story Ever Told. It fleshes out the peripheral characters in the Bible giving them more identity than Scripture does. Barabbas as played by Harry Guardino is a guerrilla leader rather than a bandit and Rip Torn who is Judas is one of his associates who leaves Barabbas after the Sermon on the Mount.

Judas's motives for betrayal are explained as an effort to force Jesus's hand. He wants Jesus to use his power of miracles to aid in the freedom fight against Rome. I think most people view Judas as doing what he did because he totally failed to understand the mission and nature of who he was following, What Ray does here is deepen that context.

There are a few scenes in their besides this part of the storyline that are not biblically found. After Jesus saves Mary Magdalene, Carmen Sevilla as Mary goes searching for him and visits with Mary his mother who is played by Siobhan McKenna. They talk for a bit, McKenna describes some of the miracles attributed to her son.

Jesus himself drops out of biblical dialog in a scene where he asks to visit John the Baptist. The scene is with the Centurion Lucius who was present at the massacre in Bethlehem and later would pronounce His epitaph at the cross. Ron Randell plays Lucius and his Lucius is a world weary professional soldier, sickened by the court of Herod the Great and his successor Herod Antipas. He hates having to serve these people because Rome is backing them as surrogate leaders. Randell has a key role here, he serves as a prototype for the gentiles who Jesus says his disciples must minister to.

Being inveterate star gazer I am, I do like The Greatest Story Ever Told better. But King of Kings is still a fine retelling of that selfsame story.

lonesome64075-1 13 October 2005

This was a movie that everyone if they're not dead or from another planet, had to be moved by. Jeffery's eyes alone was enough to cut right through a person to make them believe!! Sure wish they had movies like this one today. A movie that could keep my attention and interest for that period of time when if I remember right, I think I was probably about 9 or 10 when I first saw it, had to be special! Even as a kid it made the hair stand up on the back of my neck, and It also made me interested in what was said in the bible. Today since the world has gone to pot, morally, this movie still I believe would generate much interest. I believe no one ever since has ever caught the real image of Jesus Christ and even though we don't know what he looked like, I believe that most people who ever watched this movie went away believing that Jeffery Hunter was Jesus Christ!

inspt71-1 27 May 2004

King of Kings fmovies. This movie is so underrated. I think it's one of the best movies about Christ which was well played by Jeffery Hunter. There was also a great supporting cast that included Sobian McKenna, Robert Ryan and many others. Why this film

didn't get any attention at the 1961 Oscars, i'll never know. I would have given this film an Oscar Nomination for Miklos Rosza's music score which is one of his best scores ever. I think also the set designs were pretty good and worth of an Oscar nomination as well. The Cinematography was pretty good even though

there was better work at that time. I think this movie beats 1965's "The Greatest Story Ever Told" which went way too long and just wasn't as interesting as this one. Nicholas Ray did a great job with this one and this film deserved a lot more than it got.

ctkoppel-2 25 May 2000

There certainly has been a plethora of films about Jesus over the years, from deMille's silent "King of Kings" up to the present day TV mini-series. I feel that this version is clearly the winner. The film is never sensational or vulgar, as are so many biblical "epics," but is extremely moving in its dignified manner. The screenplay is intelligent, the photography gorgeous, and the acting, by an unusual cast not known for its stellar draw, is uncommonly good. Nicholas Ray's direction is first-rate, and the soaring Miklos Rozsa score is unforgettable. Jeffrey Hunter was unfairly ridiculed when the film was first released, and I believe gives a highly underrated performance as Christ. Even the minor players are superb, with the late Brigid Bazlen a frighteningly disturbed Salome. Compared to "King of Kings," George Stevens' "The Greatest Story Ever Told" is embarassingly bad. All in all, a highly worthwhile film experience, told without the glitz and excesses native to so many of those of its ilk.

fwmurnau 15 April 2001

The story of Jesus has been told many times from the very beginning of the movies, but this version, underrated when first released, is one of the best.

KING OF KINGS creates and sustains a dignified yet highly entertaining tone that is unique among biblical epics. The screenplay is extremely intelligent and effective, concentrating not just on Jesus, but on the society and personalities that surround him. Pilate, Caiaphas, Mary, John the Baptist, Mary Magdalene, the apostles, and a sublimely oversexed Salome are all well-drawn characters and well-cast, especially in contrast to the uncomfortable "superstar cameo" approach George Stevens used in his inferior "Greatest Story Ever Told".

The political background is well handled, making clear the wish of Judas and others that Jesus foment a revolution to free the Jews from Roman rule.

Handsome, myopic Jeffrey Hunter may not be a great actor, but his low-key, measured performance matches the overall design of the film very well. Orson Welles' rapt, mellifluous narration is a plus, as is Roschka's passionate musical score.

Definitely see this letter-boxed to appreciate the gorgeous scenery, photography, and spectacular scenes.

Similar Movies

7.4
'83

'83 2021

6.9
Munich: The Edge of War

Munich: The Edge of War 2021

6.6
Being the Ricardos

Being the Ricardos 2021

6.6
Benedetta

Benedetta 2021

7.1
The Electrical Life of Louis Wain

The Electrical Life of Louis Wain 2021

6.8
Worth

Worth 2020

7.1
The Eyes of Tammy Faye

The Eyes of Tammy Faye 2021

9.6
Methagu

Methagu 2021


Share Post

Direct Link

Markdown Link (reddit comments)

HTML (website / blogs)

BBCode (message boards & forums)

Watch Movies Online | Privacy Policy
Fmovies.guru provides links to other sites on the internet and doesn't host any files itself.