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The Prince Of Egypt |
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$240 million at the box office and is now poised to take home video by storm. Dreamworks Home Video have prepared an exhaustive special edition DVD for this film and you can learn more about the practical details in our exclusive Production Diary. |
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He tries to convince his brother to release the slaves but Rameses denies. Outraged at the sheer idea of subjugating to a God he knows nothing about he doubles the slaves’ workloads. As a result God decides to show Egypt his powers. He turns the sea red with blood, sends hordes of locusts, fire from the skies and the plague. He forces Rameses to release the Hebrew people and allow Moses to deliver them into freedom. |
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to his brother is exemplary in its study of human emotions and mannerisms. Moses catches a breath, holds it, lets it out and says “Goodbye Rameses”, then turns around, stops, looks back one more time in despair, catches another deep breath and holds it for seconds until eventually he lets go with an expression of bleak hopelessness on his face and walks away. |
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light and colors on their canvases and from the first to the last frame, "The Prince Of Egypt" feels like a piece of art with its many pastel tones and the stalwart contrasts. |
To top it all off, the film excels in the way it tells its story. I have been a medial dramatic storyteller myself for many years and as a result I have learned certain axioms and pragmas about the art of bringing a story to life. And yet, I was simply speechless at the flawless execution in "The Prince Of Egypt". It culminates everything that is known about storytelling in a linear medium. The most dazzling example here is the sequence when the God sends the plague at night. Notice how the film builds to that point and the voice-over explains what is going to happen. In anticipation we are glued to the images as the music fades and everything falls silent. Seconds that seem to run for minutes keep building the tension until it is finally released when the gates of Heaven open to release the deathbringer upon Egypt with a roar. |
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be no doubt that this DVD sets the standards against which all future animated feature releases will have to measure up to. |
Hardly surprising the same is true for the disc’s audio presentation. "The Prince Of Egypt" comes with an English 5.1 channel Dolby Digital mix that is rich and engulfing. At the same time it has a remarkable clarity and transparency that carefully layers |
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"The Prince Of Egypt" features a very good music score by Hans Zimmer. I have to admit I have never been overly impressed with Zimmer’s very traditional way of scoring and orchestrating, without a real personal note, but with his work on this movie he finally won me over. It is a dramatic score that immensely helps the picture, and it is also a rather elaborate score at times making good use of traditional Egyptian sounding motifs and instruments. Although it still sounds overly synthetic on a selected number of occasions it is always working for the given moment and resembles Maurice Jarre’s work on David Lean’s desert-epos “Laurence |
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Simon Wells. This commentary track is fun to listen to and at the same time it is very informative, giving viewers a lot of information about the process of the creation of this remarkable film and some personal notes that lead to these results. |
There are also a number of featurettes about varying aspects of "The Prince Of Egypt" on the disc. A behind-the-scenes documentary gives viewers the chance to see and hear the people involved in the project from taped brainstorming sessions all the way to voice talent recording sessions and interviews with the cast and crew. It gives audiences a good idea how much passion went into this project from all these people involved. |
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The undisputed highlight of the DVD for me is the multi-language presentation of the song “When You Believe” over the film’s grandiose Exodus sequence. As we had described in our Production Diary for "The Prince Of Egypt" already, this 6-minute segment presents the song in all 28 different languages, one line at a time. Even after watching this piece for the 6th time or so now, I am still in utter awe every time I see it. |
A gallery of design art and production stills and two of the movie’s trailers round out the package, combined with cast & crew biographies and extensive production notes. There’s also a special treat on the disc in the form of a sneak preview on two upcoming theatrical features from Dreamworks, but I don’t want to spoil you fun here. I believe you should check these out for |
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