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King of Kings Poster

King of Kings

Of good and evil, of love and hate, of peace and war.
1961 | 171m | English

(9653 votes)

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Popularity: 3 (history)

Director: Nicholas Ray
Writer: Philip Yordan
Staring:
Details

Who is Jesus, and why does he impact all he meets? He is respected and reviled, emulated and accused, beloved, betrayed, and finally crucified. Yet that terrible fate would not be the end of the story.
Release Date: Oct 11, 1961
Director: Nicholas Ray
Writer: Philip Yordan
Genres: Drama, History
Keywords christianity, bible, crucifixion, biography, epic, 1st century, jesus christ, christian film
Production Companies Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer, Samuel Bronston Productions
Box Office Revenue: $14,500,000
Budget: $5,037,000
Updates Updated: Feb 01, 2025 (Update)
Entered: Apr 13, 2024
Trailers and Extras

International Posters

Full Credits

Name Character
Jeffrey Hunter Jesus
Siobhán McKenna Mary
Hurd Hatfield Pontius Pilate
Ron Randell Lucius
Viveca Lindfors Claudia
Rita Gam Herodias
Carmen Sevilla Mary Magdalene
Brigid Bazlen Salome
Harry Guardino Barabbas
Rip Torn Judas
Frank Thring Herod Antipas
Guy Rolfe Caiaphas
Royal Dano Peter
Robert Ryan John the Baptist
Edric Connor Balthazar
Maurice Marsac Nicodemus
Grégoire Aslan Herod
George Coulouris Camel Driver
Conrado San Martín General Pompey
Gérard Tichy Joseph
Antonio Mayans Young John
Luis Prendes Good Thief / Roman Soldier
David Davies Burly Man
José Nieto Caspar
Rubén Rojo Matthew
Fernando Sancho Mad man
Michael Wager Thomas
Félix de Pomés Joseph of Arimathea
Adriano Rimoldi Melchior
Barry Keegan Bad Thief
Rafael Luis Calvo Simon of Cyrene
Tino Barrero Andrew
Paco Morán Blind Man
Orson Welles Narrator (Voice)
Ray Milland Satan (voice) (uncredited)
Name Job
Manuel Berenguer Director of Photography
Anna Cristofani Hairstylist
Georges Wakhévitch Costume Design, Set Designer
Lee LeBlanc Special Effects
Stanley Detlie Property Master
Norton Kurland Electrician
Maciek Piotrowski Draughtsman
Sumner Williams Second Unit Director
José María Ochoa Assistant Director
Mario Van Riel Makeup Designer
Franklin Milton Recording Supervision
Eric Seelig Costume Supervisor
Franz Planer Director of Photography
Harold F. Kress Editor
Enrique Alarcón Set Decoration
Stanley Goldsmith Production Manager
Carl Gibson Technical Supervisor
Alex Weldon Special Effects
Carlo Lastricati Assistant Director
Charles E. Parker Makeup Designer
Basil Fenton-Smith Sound Recordist
Betty Utey Choreographer
Nicholas Ray Director
Philip Yordan Screenplay
Milton Krasner Director of Photography
Miklós Rózsa Original Music Composer
Noël Howard Second Unit Director
José López Rodero Assistant Director
Name Title
Samuel Bronston Producer
Alan Brown Associate Producer
Jaime Prades Associate Producer
Organization Category Person
Popularity Metrics

Popularity History


Year Month Avg Max Min
2024 4 28 40 20
2024 5 26 40 15
2024 6 27 48 15
2024 7 25 44 15
2024 8 23 41 16
2024 9 18 26 13
2024 10 23 40 16
2024 11 19 34 16
2024 12 23 54 13
2025 1 20 36 14
2025 2 15 22 3
2025 3 7 24 1
2025 4 13 29 3
2025 5 5 12 3
2025 6 3 5 2
2025 7 3 4 2
2025 8 2 3 1

Trending Position


Year Month High Avg
2025 4 936 937

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Reviews

John Chard
8.0

The best of the Christ story epics. King Of Kings is a good film, and certainly one that is better than its reputation suggests. It's for sure better than the poorly put together The Robe from 1953 and the gargantuan excess that would be The Greatest Story Ever Told four years post this MGM piec ... e. Produced by legendary Samuel Bronston and directed with assurance and imagination by Nicholas Ray, the film tells of the 33 years of Jesus Christ's life. From his birth in Bethlehem to his Crucifixion, to the Resurrection and finally the Ascension. A familiar story that is nicely spread to a movie under three hours long, takes in the Apostles selection, John The Baptist, 40 days in the desert, the miracles (though we are short changed here), Sermom on the Mount, Judas' betrayal and of course The Last Supper. The film contains a narration by Orson Welles, which was written by Ray Bradbury. It's a wise move for it helps the narrative immensely, while lets face it here, Orson had a great voice, perfectly biblical and it lends a touch of class to the material. Of the cast, Jeffrey Hunter has the glory role of Christ. A relative unknown (this helps I feel), Hunter is effective with his steely blue eyes, while Robert Ryan is first rate as the doomed John The Baptist. Also turning in good performances are Harry Guardino (Barabbas), Viveca Lindfors (Claudia), Royal Dano (Peter) and Rip Torn (Judas). Though not hurting the movie, Hurd Hatfield as Pontius Pilate is a touch too animated, while Frank Thring as Herod Antipas takes the woe is me mantra a step too far. Naturally with a budget of $8 million the film has considerable scope. Thousands of extras are a given of course, all captured among the Spanish locations in 70mm Technicolor (Cinematography by Manuel Berenguer, Milton R. Krasner & Franz Planer). While the sets (almost 400 used) are very pleasing on the eye and Miklós Rózsa provides a suitably effective score. The writing from Philip Yordan is lean, there's no heavy filler and for a film of this type it's a pleasant surprise to see such restraint. Ultimately it's just real good story telling given a good technical work out. The appearance of Judas for the first time still sends a shiver down the old spine and the Crucifixtion instills a sadness that is hard to shake off once the credits have rolled. Job done really. 8/10

May 16, 2024