8 out of 10 people found the following comment useful :- "Gripping, powerful, and faithful to Scripture!", 31 January 1999
Author:
jerry Parks (jeryrom828@aol.com) from Lexington, KY
As a teacher of ancient history with an earned doctorate in Biblical
theology, I must compliment the producers of 'Joseph' for doing the
impossible: staying faithfully true to Biblical text, and holding the
attention of young and old alike for three hours.
'Joseph' captures the power, pathos, and splendor of the greatest of Bible
characterizations--Joseph, the hated brother, becomes not only lord over his
entire family, but the second most powerful man in the ancient world. Ben
Kingsley, as he did in 'Moses', and Martin Landau (as Jacob) steal the show,
but Paul Mercurio does an admirable job as the main character. Vincenzo
Nicoli is outstanding as the vengeful brother Simeon, and, as the last to
confront the powerful Joseph--now his savior, Nicoli does nothing less than
reduce us to tears.
The film is also true to the many nuances of Egyptian and Hebrew history,
which most audiences would neither notice, nor care to notice; yet, such
nuances prove highly effective! To note the Egyptians' penchant for
cleanliness, and to depict Joseph's famous coat as not necessarily 'many
colored' shows the expert research which went into this
film.
Although some explicit (though historically accurate) sexual scenes must be
screened from the very young, this film captures not only the drama and
climactic ascension to a powerful emotional conclusion, but also the
characterization of moral goodness so extant in Joseph. I watched 'Joseph'
with my middle school students, and as they busily synthesized their thirty
or so 'characteristics of a role model' into an essay, one of them asked why
there were no such heroes today. The question at once revealed not only the
impression this film made, but also the perceptive dearth of role-models in
our modern society.
Though including a few anachronistic liberties (such as Joseph's "My God, my
God..." paraphrase of Christ's cry from the cross, 'Joseph' is a winner! It
is THE best of the TNT series, of which only 'Jacob' was a flop. Kudos for
the direction, musical score, and casting directors; they are well-deserving
of the awards which this film has earned. To quote Potifer: "...what matters
most is the truth", and 'Joseph' delivers it with Biblical reverance and
Hollywood expertise. HIGHLY RECOMMENDED!
4 out of 4 people found the following comment useful :- I was deeply touched by this film, 12 June 2003
Author:
joyce benedict (candleinheart) from Hyde Park, New york
I happened to catch the TV movie Joseph a few weeks ago. Didn't
see the beginning but it captured my attention immediately. I am a
senior and usually 'fade' around 10 PM, but this movie had me
alert and involved until over at 11 or midnight! The realism, the
scenery, the accuracy; it was great! Martin Landau was the best I
have ever seen him as the Patriarch Father. I absolutely LOVED
the Pharaoh portrayed by Stephen Landisi. He was perfect. But
Paul Mercurio gets 10 stars in this role. He was superb!!!
Throughout he portrays the slave role with quiet dignity; his faith
and belief in God absolutely marvelous, convincing, pure. The
scene where he reveals himself as Joseph, not as second in
command of all Egypt, to his brothers tearfully, poignantly is one
of the best acting scenes I have seen in years. How refreshing the
movie was, so revealing of human frailties, evil; so full of
compassion, forgiveness. Mr. Mercurio has emotional depths
there to hopefully portray many powerfully moving roles in the
future. Bravo! THE BEST movie I've seen in years. I bought it and
have since viewed it three times. My two sons loved it, my sister (a
savvy New York theater goer) loved it, and now my future
daughter-
in-law
is to see it with son who wants to see it a second time. It moved
me deeply. Mercurio is wonderful. Isn't this the epitome of great
film? To bring history alive?To touch hearts and lift the spirit?
4 out of 5 people found the following comment useful :- A great story from the Bible!, 17 November 2004
Author:
gazineo-1 from Brasilia, Brazil
The story of Joseph and his brothers is one of the most impressing and
rich of significance stories amongst the many others great legends from
the Bible. Even the Nobel Prize winner - German author Thomas Mann -
wrote a novel called 'Joseph and his Brothers' giving his personal
interpretation of this intense, gripping and compassionate episode of
the Bible. However, the cinema never pays much attention to this story.
In fact, anyone can easily remember movies like 'The Ten Commandments'
which tells the adventure of Moses in his search for the Promised Land
or 'Sanson and Dellila'. But the drama of the betrayed Joseph, his
suffer among the Egyptians and his conquer of power and fortune, was
never at the first line of consideration by the producers of Hollywood.
This movie, produced in Italy, bring to us this entranced story with an
average success. The movie is a bit overlong (180 min) but never
boring; the sets and costumes are accurate and the movie has a great
photograph. Martin Landau gives a convinced performance as Jacob, Ben
Kingsley is correct as Potifar but Paul Mercurio is very bad as Joseph.
Maybe another actor with more intensity could give more strenght and
energy to the movie. Anyway, if you find this one in a DVD/VHS rent
store and if you like Biblical movies, don't lose this one. It's really
worthwhile.
5 out of 7 people found the following comment useful :- I liked this film alot, 10 May 2002
Author:
camibear7 from USA
Godly principles shown in this story of Joseph. We all know the story of
Joseph being favored of his father and given a coat of many
colors.
Then the jealousy of his brothers who ultimately sold him into
slavery.
A true story of how God made provision for Joseph's family during the
famine
so they would not starve.
It will encourage you in your Faith in God.
The whole story can be read in the Bible starting in Genesis
30.
God did and does Provide for His own.
Great film. I liked the cast. Sets were great. It made the whole story come
to life.
1 out of 1 people found the following comment useful :- An Accurate and Enriching Bible Film, 17 April 2007
Author:
erosegem from United States
It's no secret of Hollywood that if you hire a group of talented actors
and actresses, stress high quality storytelling over special effects,
and choose diverse but realistic settings, then you're likely to create
a great film.
This is not Webber's "Technicolor" musical or the Dreamworks animated
version of Joseph. Nor is it an epic-scaled romance such as DeMille's
"The Ten Commandments". Its accuracy pays homage to the text of Genesis
and it is full of drama, bitterness, provocative character, and
spiritual development. This is the "Joseph" movie that an older
audience can enjoy and appreciate while youngsters may learn something
new. (Parents may still want to omit the seduction scene for their
children.) The film is long enough to flesh out the complexities of
Joseph's background without taking away from the protagonist's ongoing
journey. There is underlying tension and rivalry felt in Jacob's family
of four wives and 12 sons. As told by Joseph through flashbacks,
cataclysmic events began when his sister was raped in Shechem.
Vengeance becomes a powerful motif in the film when Simeon and Levi
wipe out Shechem as punishment. Other examples follow. The brothers
despise Joseph's superior piety and sell him. Potiphar's wife seeks to
destroy Joseph after he refuses to lie with her. Joseph contemplates
punishing his brothers when they come to Egypt. It is vengeance that
tests humanity in "Joseph" until the final scene.
Since my high school class covered the story of Joseph in depth with
the assistance of Torah commentaries, I appreciate the remarkable
precision in the film from a Jewish perspective. Some lesser-known
actions and events include Joseph's meeting with a "man", his title as
"Tzapaneth Paneah", the brothers return to Egypt with gifts, Benjamin's
name change upon his mother's deathbed, and Judah's scandal with his
daughter-in-law.
The parallelism between Joseph and Judah's stories in the second half
of the film is interesting. Both men have been separated from their
family and fallen from grace: Joseph is wrongly imprisoned in Egypt
while Judah has left his father's encampment. Judah's difficult story
with Tamar is a notable act of honesty. Watching him confess his erred
judgment to her before crying to himself is an echo of Joseph's
anguished cry to G-d in jail. Whereas Reuben, Simeon, and Levi have
lost their father's approval, Judah takes responsibility for his
actions and redeems himself as the leader of 10 brothers.
The casting is well-credited with Ben Kingsley (superb as ever) as
Potiphar. Paul Mercurio has removed the shoes of an eccentric lively
dancer in "Strictly Ballroom" and transformed himself into a striking
impression of Joseph. One can see the strained torment on his face when
he is sold to Potiphar and must endure the tauntings of the foreman and
resist the temptations of Potiphar's nefarious wife. Mercurio carries
his role throughout the film with grace and determination. I almost
laughed aloud at Pharaoh's mannerisms in the courtroom. The most
powerful ruler in Egypt is really pompous, arrogant, superstitious, and
perhaps more than just a little scared of this G-d-fearing Semite.
Last of all, the stirring music is suited to the mood of every
different scene and the Moroccan landscape is beautiful on screen. All
of these admirable qualities are what makes "Joseph" such a
praiseworthy film. It is an underestimated masterpiece of one of the
Bible's most well known and unforgettable stories. Whether others are
watching this film for educational, spiritual, or personal reasons, I
hope they enjoy it as much as I did.
2 out of 3 people found the following comment useful :- Biblically accurate, 10 January 2001
Author:
ken-342 from San Diego, California
One of an excellent series of movies that depect events as described in
the
Bible. This one (as are the others) is very accurate and a pleasure to
watch for any student of the Bible. Further, it has a top notch cast,
Kingsley, Landau, Warren. This is one film that members of my family
return
to again and again.
Best "Joseph" ever!, 12 March 2008
Author:
margaretwestlake from Glendale, CA
Every time this 1995 version of Joseph's profound story is on TV again,
I watch it. I'm mesmerized by the beautiful Soul of Joseph as depicted
by the really likable Paul Mercurio. He brings Joseph's kind and
courageous spirit to life.
Also excellent is Ben Kingsley, Martin Landau, Leslie A. Warren. This
film is thoughtful, beautifully photographed and directed. For me it is
essential viewing for audiences who want accurate Biblical stories, as
well as for those who simply like well-produced movies.
Joseph truly has a character to aspire to as followers of the deeper
nature of humanity, and his characterization is both believable and
amazing in this rendition. Because it isn't certain who really made
this story work, I have to give everyone in the production credit.
The best film of a Bible story I have ever seen, 3 October 1999
Author:
DavidT-5 from Reading,England
The film was the most faithful Bible adaptation I have seen. It kept
faithful to the Bible with intelligent in-filling of Biblical gaps of plot
and character. The drama was maintained with real depth and passion to the
characters
2 out of 4 people found the following comment useful :- Entertaining and fun, 2 December 2001
Author:
joshualieder from Warwick, RI, USA
Very accessible Bible film. The leads are great. I take exception to the
Christlike "My God...why have you forsaken me" (which would have been more
fitting in a film about David) Joseph utters when thrown into prison
though.
Major blunder that one - but still well meaning.
Mercurio was perfect for the role and Kingsley is always
exceptional.
What a shame this film and others like it are not out on DVD. Pardon my
saying so, but thats a sin!
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Joseph (1995) (TV)
8 out of 10 people found the following comment useful :-

"Gripping, powerful, and faithful to Scripture!", 31 January 1999
Author: jerry Parks (jeryrom828@aol.com) from Lexington, KY
As a teacher of ancient history with an earned doctorate in Biblical theology, I must compliment the producers of 'Joseph' for doing the impossible: staying faithfully true to Biblical text, and holding the attention of young and old alike for three hours.
'Joseph' captures the power, pathos, and splendor of the greatest of Bible characterizations--Joseph, the hated brother, becomes not only lord over his entire family, but the second most powerful man in the ancient world. Ben Kingsley, as he did in 'Moses', and Martin Landau (as Jacob) steal the show, but Paul Mercurio does an admirable job as the main character. Vincenzo Nicoli is outstanding as the vengeful brother Simeon, and, as the last to confront the powerful Joseph--now his savior, Nicoli does nothing less than reduce us to tears.
The film is also true to the many nuances of Egyptian and Hebrew history, which most audiences would neither notice, nor care to notice; yet, such nuances prove highly effective! To note the Egyptians' penchant for cleanliness, and to depict Joseph's famous coat as not necessarily 'many colored' shows the expert research which went into this film.
Although some explicit (though historically accurate) sexual scenes must be screened from the very young, this film captures not only the drama and climactic ascension to a powerful emotional conclusion, but also the characterization of moral goodness so extant in Joseph. I watched 'Joseph' with my middle school students, and as they busily synthesized their thirty or so 'characteristics of a role model' into an essay, one of them asked why there were no such heroes today. The question at once revealed not only the impression this film made, but also the perceptive dearth of role-models in our modern society.
Though including a few anachronistic liberties (such as Joseph's "My God, my God..." paraphrase of Christ's cry from the cross, 'Joseph' is a winner! It is THE best of the TNT series, of which only 'Jacob' was a flop. Kudos for the direction, musical score, and casting directors; they are well-deserving of the awards which this film has earned. To quote Potifer: "...what matters most is the truth", and 'Joseph' delivers it with Biblical reverance and Hollywood expertise. HIGHLY RECOMMENDED!
4 out of 4 people found the following comment useful :-

I was deeply touched by this film, 12 June 2003
Author: joyce benedict (candleinheart) from Hyde Park, New york
I happened to catch the TV movie Joseph a few weeks ago. Didn't see the beginning but it captured my attention immediately. I am a senior and usually 'fade' around 10 PM, but this movie had me alert and involved until over at 11 or midnight! The realism, the scenery, the accuracy; it was great! Martin Landau was the best I have ever seen him as the Patriarch Father. I absolutely LOVED the Pharaoh portrayed by Stephen Landisi. He was perfect. But Paul Mercurio gets 10 stars in this role. He was superb!!! Throughout he portrays the slave role with quiet dignity; his faith and belief in God absolutely marvelous, convincing, pure. The scene where he reveals himself as Joseph, not as second in command of all Egypt, to his brothers tearfully, poignantly is one of the best acting scenes I have seen in years. How refreshing the movie was, so revealing of human frailties, evil; so full of compassion, forgiveness. Mr. Mercurio has emotional depths there to hopefully portray many powerfully moving roles in the future. Bravo! THE BEST movie I've seen in years. I bought it and have since viewed it three times. My two sons loved it, my sister (a savvy New York theater goer) loved it, and now my future daughter- in-law is to see it with son who wants to see it a second time. It moved me deeply. Mercurio is wonderful. Isn't this the epitome of great film? To bring history alive?To touch hearts and lift the spirit?
4 out of 5 people found the following comment useful :-

A great story from the Bible!, 17 November 2004
Author: gazineo-1 from Brasilia, Brazil
The story of Joseph and his brothers is one of the most impressing and rich of significance stories amongst the many others great legends from the Bible. Even the Nobel Prize winner - German author Thomas Mann - wrote a novel called 'Joseph and his Brothers' giving his personal interpretation of this intense, gripping and compassionate episode of the Bible. However, the cinema never pays much attention to this story. In fact, anyone can easily remember movies like 'The Ten Commandments' which tells the adventure of Moses in his search for the Promised Land or 'Sanson and Dellila'. But the drama of the betrayed Joseph, his suffer among the Egyptians and his conquer of power and fortune, was never at the first line of consideration by the producers of Hollywood. This movie, produced in Italy, bring to us this entranced story with an average success. The movie is a bit overlong (180 min) but never boring; the sets and costumes are accurate and the movie has a great photograph. Martin Landau gives a convinced performance as Jacob, Ben Kingsley is correct as Potifar but Paul Mercurio is very bad as Joseph. Maybe another actor with more intensity could give more strenght and energy to the movie. Anyway, if you find this one in a DVD/VHS rent store and if you like Biblical movies, don't lose this one. It's really worthwhile.
5 out of 7 people found the following comment useful :-

I liked this film alot, 10 May 2002
Author: camibear7 from USA
Godly principles shown in this story of Joseph. We all know the story of Joseph being favored of his father and given a coat of many colors. Then the jealousy of his brothers who ultimately sold him into slavery. A true story of how God made provision for Joseph's family during the famine so they would not starve. It will encourage you in your Faith in God. The whole story can be read in the Bible starting in Genesis 30. God did and does Provide for His own. Great film. I liked the cast. Sets were great. It made the whole story come to life.
1 out of 1 people found the following comment useful :-

An Accurate and Enriching Bible Film, 17 April 2007
Author: erosegem from United States
It's no secret of Hollywood that if you hire a group of talented actors and actresses, stress high quality storytelling over special effects, and choose diverse but realistic settings, then you're likely to create a great film.
This is not Webber's "Technicolor" musical or the Dreamworks animated version of Joseph. Nor is it an epic-scaled romance such as DeMille's "The Ten Commandments". Its accuracy pays homage to the text of Genesis and it is full of drama, bitterness, provocative character, and spiritual development. This is the "Joseph" movie that an older audience can enjoy and appreciate while youngsters may learn something new. (Parents may still want to omit the seduction scene for their children.) The film is long enough to flesh out the complexities of Joseph's background without taking away from the protagonist's ongoing journey. There is underlying tension and rivalry felt in Jacob's family of four wives and 12 sons. As told by Joseph through flashbacks, cataclysmic events began when his sister was raped in Shechem. Vengeance becomes a powerful motif in the film when Simeon and Levi wipe out Shechem as punishment. Other examples follow. The brothers despise Joseph's superior piety and sell him. Potiphar's wife seeks to destroy Joseph after he refuses to lie with her. Joseph contemplates punishing his brothers when they come to Egypt. It is vengeance that tests humanity in "Joseph" until the final scene.
Since my high school class covered the story of Joseph in depth with the assistance of Torah commentaries, I appreciate the remarkable precision in the film from a Jewish perspective. Some lesser-known actions and events include Joseph's meeting with a "man", his title as "Tzapaneth Paneah", the brothers return to Egypt with gifts, Benjamin's name change upon his mother's deathbed, and Judah's scandal with his daughter-in-law.
The parallelism between Joseph and Judah's stories in the second half of the film is interesting. Both men have been separated from their family and fallen from grace: Joseph is wrongly imprisoned in Egypt while Judah has left his father's encampment. Judah's difficult story with Tamar is a notable act of honesty. Watching him confess his erred judgment to her before crying to himself is an echo of Joseph's anguished cry to G-d in jail. Whereas Reuben, Simeon, and Levi have lost their father's approval, Judah takes responsibility for his actions and redeems himself as the leader of 10 brothers.
The casting is well-credited with Ben Kingsley (superb as ever) as Potiphar. Paul Mercurio has removed the shoes of an eccentric lively dancer in "Strictly Ballroom" and transformed himself into a striking impression of Joseph. One can see the strained torment on his face when he is sold to Potiphar and must endure the tauntings of the foreman and resist the temptations of Potiphar's nefarious wife. Mercurio carries his role throughout the film with grace and determination. I almost laughed aloud at Pharaoh's mannerisms in the courtroom. The most powerful ruler in Egypt is really pompous, arrogant, superstitious, and perhaps more than just a little scared of this G-d-fearing Semite.
Last of all, the stirring music is suited to the mood of every different scene and the Moroccan landscape is beautiful on screen. All of these admirable qualities are what makes "Joseph" such a praiseworthy film. It is an underestimated masterpiece of one of the Bible's most well known and unforgettable stories. Whether others are watching this film for educational, spiritual, or personal reasons, I hope they enjoy it as much as I did.
2 out of 3 people found the following comment useful :-

Biblically accurate, 10 January 2001
Author: ken-342 from San Diego, California
One of an excellent series of movies that depect events as described in the Bible. This one (as are the others) is very accurate and a pleasure to watch for any student of the Bible. Further, it has a top notch cast, Kingsley, Landau, Warren. This is one film that members of my family return to again and again.
Best "Joseph" ever!, 12 March 2008
Author: margaretwestlake from Glendale, CA
Every time this 1995 version of Joseph's profound story is on TV again, I watch it. I'm mesmerized by the beautiful Soul of Joseph as depicted by the really likable Paul Mercurio. He brings Joseph's kind and courageous spirit to life.
Also excellent is Ben Kingsley, Martin Landau, Leslie A. Warren. This film is thoughtful, beautifully photographed and directed. For me it is essential viewing for audiences who want accurate Biblical stories, as well as for those who simply like well-produced movies.
Joseph truly has a character to aspire to as followers of the deeper nature of humanity, and his characterization is both believable and amazing in this rendition. Because it isn't certain who really made this story work, I have to give everyone in the production credit.
The best film of a Bible story I have ever seen, 3 October 1999

Author: DavidT-5 from Reading,England
The film was the most faithful Bible adaptation I have seen. It kept faithful to the Bible with intelligent in-filling of Biblical gaps of plot and character. The drama was maintained with real depth and passion to the characters
2 out of 4 people found the following comment useful :-

Entertaining and fun, 2 December 2001
Author: joshualieder from Warwick, RI, USA
Very accessible Bible film. The leads are great. I take exception to the Christlike "My God...why have you forsaken me" (which would have been more fitting in a film about David) Joseph utters when thrown into prison though. Major blunder that one - but still well meaning.
Mercurio was perfect for the role and Kingsley is always exceptional. What a shame this film and others like it are not out on DVD. Pardon my saying so, but thats a sin!
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