Difference between revisions of "Category:Cinema--1930s"

From 4 Enoch: : The Online Encyclopedia of Second Temple Judaism, and Christian and Islamic Origins
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[[File:Film 1933 Elvey.jpg|thumb|150px|[[The Wandering Jew (1933 Elvey), feature film]]]]
[[File:Film 1933 Elvey.jpg|thumb|150px|[[The Wandering Jew (1933 Elvey), feature film]]]]
[[File:Film 1935 Schoedsack.jpg|thumb|150px|[[The Last Days of Pompeii (1935 Schoedsack), feature film]]]]
[[File:Film 1935 Schoedsack.jpg|thumb|150px|[[The Last Days of Pompeii (1935 Schoedsack), feature film]]]]
* [[Fiction (1930s)]] -- [[Art (1930s)]]
* [[Dance (1930s)]] -- [[Literature (1930s)]]
* [[Music (1930s)]] -- [[Theatre (1930s)]]
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Latest revision as of 15:58, 6 December 2019


Highlights (1930s)
Highlights (1930s)



1930s.jpg

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Languages
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History of Research (1930s) -- Notes

Due to the lasting success of Kings of Kings (1927), no major Jesus movie was produced in the United States in the 1930s. The most ambitious project was completed in France, Golgotha(1935), by Julien Duvivier with an exceptional cast of French actors.

Filmmakers and screenwriters focused their attention rather on the background(s) of the New Testament.

Cecil DeMille reached another smashing success in 1932 with the film The Sign of the Cross. The third, and most famous, film version of Barrett's drama presented a combination of spectacle, violence, sex, and the moral victory of religion, which proved to be very popular with moviegoers all around the globe. Following DeMille's footsteps, the 1935 version of The Last Days of Pompeii by Ernest B. Schoedsack departed radically from the original plot, to turn the story into a moral tale about the life and suffering of early Christians until the climatic finale with God's revenge through the eruption of Mount Vesuvio. In a similar fashion, the 1938 British movie The Life of St. Paul / The Crown of Righteousness, directed by Norman Walker, explored Christian Origins, first making Paul of Tarsus the protagonist of the story.

The film The Great Commandment (1939) was the first feature film to focus on the Jewish background of the Gospel. It portrayed the conversion to Christianity of a young Zealot, Joel, and the Roman soldier Longinus. DeMille's Cleopatra (1934) also had some impact in Second Temple Studies as among the major characters it included Herod the Great, played by Joseph Schildkraut.

"Joseph in the Land of Egypt" (1932) was the first talkie filmed in Yiddish. The film was well received in the United States and became a hit in Poland.

Broadcast on 2 April 1939 by the BBC, the Passion play Caesar's Friend was the first fictional work of biblical subject to be aired on television.