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The Prince of Egypt Poster

The Prince of Egypt

The power is real. The story is forever. The time is now.
1998 | 99m | English

(159902 votes)

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Popularity: 7 (history)

Details

The strong bond between two brothers is challenged when their chosen responsibilities set them at odds, with extraordinary consequences.
Release Date: Dec 16, 1998
Director: Brenda Chapman, Steve Hickner, Simon Wells
Writer: Philip LaZebnik
Genres:
Keywords egypt, pyramid, exodus, kingdom, governance, ancient egypt, pharaoh, awestruck, powerful, 13th century bc
Production Companies DreamWorks Pictures, DreamWorks Animation
Box Office Revenue: $218,613,188
Budget: $70,000,000
Updates Updated: Jan 13, 2026
Entered: Apr 13, 2024
Trailers

Extras

Full Credits

Name Character
Val Kilmer Moses (voice)
Ralph Fiennes Rameses (voice)
Michelle Pfeiffer Tzipporah (voice)
Sandra Bullock Miriam (voice)
Jeff Goldblum Aaron (voice)
Danny Glover Jethro (voice)
Patrick Stewart Seti (voice)
Helen Mirren Queen (voice)
Steve Martin Hotep (voice)
Martin Short Huy (voice)
Bobby Motown Rameses Son (voice)
Eden Riegel Young Miriam (voice)
Ofra Haza Yocheved (voice)
James Avery Additional Voices (voice)
Aria Noelle Curzon Additional Voices (voice)
Stephanie Sawyer Additional Voices (voice)
Francesca Marie Smith Additional Voices (voice)
Shira Roth Hebrew Child (singing voice)
Michel Patrician Hebrew Child (singing voice)
Christopher Rodriguez Marquette Hebrew Child (singing voice)
Justin Timsit Hebrew Child (singing voice)
Andrew Johnson Boy Soloist (singing voice)
Jack Angel Egyptian (voice) (uncredited)
Amick Byram Moses (singing voice) (uncredited)
Brenda Chapman Miriam (singing voice) (uncredited)
Sally Dworsky Miriam (singing voice) (uncredited)
Jon Robert Hall (voice) (uncredited)
Phillip Ingram (voice) (uncredited)
Brian Stokes Mitchell Jethro (singing voice) (uncredited)
Linda Shayne The Queen (singing voice) (uncredited)
Brian Tochi (voice) (uncredited)
Mariah Carey The 2nd Balladeer (voice) (uncredited)
Whitney Houston The Balladeer (voice) (uncredited)
Name Job
Nick Fletcher Editor
Mick Cassidy Animation
Ken Tsumura Production Manager
Luc Desmarchelier Visual Development
Mick De Falco Layout
Manny DeGuzman Animation
Jean-Francois Rey Animation
Harald Kraut Layout
John MacFarlane Visual Effects
Noe Garcia Visual Effects
Barry E. Jackson Visual Development
Fabrice Joubert Animation
Darlie Brewster Supervising Animator
Adrienne Lusby Script Coordinator
Darek Gogol Production Design
Kathy Altieri Art Direction
Richie Chavez Art Direction
Cinzia Angelini Animation
Lon Bender Supervising Sound Editor, Sound Designer
Shawn Murphy Sound Re-Recording Mixer
Brad Morris Animation
Brenda Chapman Director
Steve Hickner Director
Simon Wells Director
James Baxter Animation
Carter Goodrich Character Designer
Wylie Stateman Supervising Sound Editor, Sound Designer
Anna Behlmer Sound Re-Recording Mixer
Stephen Schwartz Songs
Hans Zimmer Original Music Composer
Simon Otto Animation
Andy Nelson Sound Re-Recording Mixer
Philip LaZebnik Writer
Nicholas Meyer Additional Writing
Name Title
Penney Finkelman Cox Producer
Sandra Rabins Producer
Ron Rocha Associate Producer
Jeffrey Katzenberg Producer
Organization Category Person
Academy Awards Best Animated Feature N/A Nominated
Popularity Metrics

Popularity History


Year Month Avg Max Min
2024 4 62 77 52
2024 5 58 72 40
2024 6 55 98 41
2024 7 63 100 45
2024 8 49 95 36
2024 9 45 53 34
2024 10 52 76 33
2024 11 48 87 37
2024 12 47 61 37
2025 1 49 56 40
2025 2 34 53 8
2025 3 15 50 3
2025 4 14 26 7
2025 5 9 19 7
2025 6 8 11 6
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2025 8 7 10 5
2025 9 6 11 4
2025 10 8 10 6
2025 11 7 11 6
2025 12 6 8 4
2026 1 6 8 5

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2024 12 209 693
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Reviews

Geronimo1967
7.0

So if you’ve seen Charlton Heston and Yul Brynner have at it in Cecil B. DeMille’s epic from 1956, then you’ll have a rough idea of what this is about. Rameses is heir to the Pharaoh Seti but is usually just getting himself involved in some mischief with his half-brother Moses. The pair are as thick ... as thieves, but the King knows that his son has to mature if he is to wear the two crowns, so gives him a regency and more responsibility. The first thing he does with that is to appoint his brother chief architect and with a city to build, that gives Moses a chance to get out amidst the slaves who makes the bricks. That’s when he gets quite a shock that rocks him and his brother to the core. Aware, now, of his true provenance he must lead his newfound people to safety - and that is not a plan the now new Pharaoh can support. With these hitherto loving siblings now at loggerheads it is up to the conflicted Moses to cross the Red Sea. Now not wishing to get all philosophical here, but it did strike me as rather odd that a culture that built the pyramids and the great city of Thebes should somehow have been expected to surrender it’s workforce to a glorified goatherd whose God was every bit as brutal and ruthless as those of the society they wished to leave. Let my people go or I shall murder every one of your first born infant sons! Hmmm, sound fair to you? I don’t recall anything from Horus, or Isis, or Ra espousing the routine slaughtering of innocent children if they didn’t get their way - and all the Hewbrews were being offered instead were some goats, tents and a very long trek through an arid desert so they could build another temple! Anyway, for Moses and his folks this relocation offer proves way more attractive than treading straw into mud so off they set and as per the biblical Exodus, the story unfolds. Where this does differ from the earlier Hollywood iteration is that it suggests way more of a struggle from Ramses and Moses to see a parting of the ways. It shows us a genuine affection between these two men as they must each reconcile with their diverging fates. Some of the dialogue did remind me of “Braveheart” (1995) but that didn’t have Hans Zimmer and Stephen Schwartz writing the tunes - including the power ballad “When You Believe” from the combined dulcets of Mariah Carey and Whitney Houston! The quality of the animation is a little two-dimensional, but there are plenty of emotive facial expressions and the action sequences towards the end are impressive. Bible purists might notice a few abridgements but it’s none the worst for simplifying a characterful story - and with some style, too.

Sep 04, 2025