

“I tried to stay out of the way of the directors on his sets but I definitely would ask them tons of questions.

Robinson (as Dathan, the overlord) are shown in a scene from “The Ten Commandments.” Paramount Pictures Yul Brynner (as the Pharaoh) and Edward G.
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Heston, an accomplished producer, writer and director (he directed his famous father in the 1990 film “Treasure Island” and “The Crucifer of Blood” in 1991) credits his filmmaking skills, in part, to the years he spent on movie sets with his dad, and to his mother’s adventurous spirit. There were no optical effects all the special effects were done in the camera or with models through clever tricks, like running water backwards and using matte photography. “DeMille used every trick in the book to make the film a culmination of filmmaking art of the period. “There were no computers, no CGI at the time,” Heston said. Heston calls the film the first real cinematic epic, and the influence of so many grand-scale epics that followed decades later, such as “Gladiator” and even “Game of Thrones,” due to the film’s ability to captivate an audience, even on the small screen. And I learned later on that the on-set social worker was holding me as I’m dripping wet and my father came over, and in his best Moses voice told her, ‘Give me that baby!’ And she did.”įraser Heston made his first film appearance as the baby Moses in “The Ten Commandments,” which starred his famous father, the legendary Charlton Heston. “What people don’t know is that the basket I was in started to sink when we were doing the scene. In fact, the first telegram Mom got was from DeMille to me saying, ‘You got the part.’ 22, 1955, just in time for the film shoot.

“Mom at the time was pregnant with me, and DeMille told my dad if it’s a boy he can have the part of baby Moses. DeMille (background) looks on, the baby Moses, played by Fraser Heston, is tended to by his famous real-life dad Charlton Heston during this scene being filmed on the backlot of Paramount Studios in 1955. How he got cast for the role is another story. “If I live long enough I will be the last actor to have worked with Cecil B. “I’m thrilled to have been part of the film,” the 65-year-old Heston said. In the movie, he portrays the baby Moses placed in a basket on the Nile River to escape the pharaoh’s decree that “the first-born of Israel shall die.” That cameo appearance is one that Heston only remembers from seeing himself on the big screen years after it happened. This now looks like you could just step into the pyramids or the Red Sea and cross with Moses.” They went back to square one, stripped it and cleaned every frame. “I think they transferred it to 6K from the original negatives. “It looks great,” said Fraser Heston, Charlton Heston’s son, who, in the film, has one of the most famous movie cameos of all time. The 1956 version was filmed on location in Egypt and the Sinai with a then extraordinary budget of $13.2 million it grossed more than $122 million, an incomparable feat at the time. The three-disc set also includes a newly restored version of DeMille’s 1923 silent version of the film, a 16-page booklet of photos and facts on both films, the 2011 documentary “The Ten Commandments: Making Miracles,” theatrical trailers, photo galleries and hand-tinted footage of key scenes from the 1923 version.
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“The Ten Commandments” has been released in a new, fully restored Blu-ray Digibook. The film recounts the biblical tale of Moses (played by Heston in a career-making performance) and his nemesis, the pharaoh Rameses (Brynner), whose worlds collide over the exodus of the Hebrew slaves from Egypt. Robinson, John Derek, Anne Baxter and Yvonne DeCarlo. DeMille classic starring Charlton Heston, Yul Brynner, Edward G. Released last month in a new Blu-ray “digibook,” “The Ten Commandments” is now viewable in a spectacular newly restored version of the 1956 Cecil B. With Easter weekend upon us - make that “virtual” Easter, thanks to the coronavirus pandemic that has closed churches across the world - there’s no better time to get reacquainted with “The Ten Commandments,” one of the most iconic films of all time, not to mention a film that has played a role in Easter season television viewing for years.
