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Noah's Ark (1928)
In this melodramatic epic, a silent film (and part-talkie)
directed by Michael Curtiz - told in parallel narratives with both
a modern-day story (set in 1914) and a Biblical story, using the
same actors in similar roles, and with primitive (but deadly) special
effects - the parallel intercutting in the film was reminiscent of
D.W. Griffith's Intolerance (1916),
with actors playing roles in both sections - in its original premiere
form, it was about 135 minutes in length, although later shortened
by about a half-hour. The surviving prints are about 108 minutes
long:
- the intercut sequences of the Biblical story of
the 'Great Flood', with a climactic flood sequence - that mixed
minatures, double-exposures, and the full-scale destruction of
actual sets
- the early religious epic about Biblical times and
the sins of mankind was intercut with a parallel melodramatic romance
story about soldiers in the Great War (WWI) - with moralizing about
the hedonistic sins of the Jazz Age and Wall Street speculation
- in the Biblical segment, a scene reminiscent of Cecil
B. DeMille's earlier epic The Ten Commandments (1923), Noah
(Paul McAllister) (a Moses figure) went on a mountain trek where,
in a dramatic scene, he experienced a Burning Bush and the creation
of two giant stone tablets on a mountainside with flaming letters
(written by lightning) warning of a giant flood; he was commissioned
by God to build an Ark to escape: ("And behold, I, even I, do
bring a flood of water upon the Earth to destroy all flesh - Make
thee an Ark of gopher wood and thou shalt come into the Ark, thou
and thy sons and thy wife, and thy sons' wives with thee - And of
every living thing of all flesh two of every sort shalt thou bring
into the Ark")
Three Flaming Tablets - Noah Commanded to Build
Ark
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- just before the flood, virginal Miriam (Dolores
Costello), Noah's handmaiden (betrothed to Noah's youngest son
Japheth (George O'Brien)) was randomly chosen to be sacrificed
by King Nephilim (Noah Beery) of Akkad to his God Jaghuth - as
the high priest's archer drew back his bow and arrow to execute
her high upon an altar, he was struck by lightning, and Miriam
was saved from execution
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Archer Struck by Lightning
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Miriam Atop Altar
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- the flood commenced with a fierce storm; another
lightning bolt destroyed the temple and torrents of water caused
a massive flood that ravaged everything
- the imprisoned but now-freed (but blinded) Japheth
heard Miriam's cries for help as she was threatened with being swept
away in the currents; he rescued her from the water by picking her
up to save her from drowning; with the water flowing down his face,
his blindness was miraculously cured, as he brought her to the Ark
on the outskirts of the city
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Brought Into Ark
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Miriam's Thankfulness
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- those pagans that were still alive clamored to enter
the Ark as it slowly floated away; King Nephilim's attempt failed
when the door slammed onto his hand; all others were unsuccessful "and
all living things - PERISHED!"
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The Great Flood: Storms and Torrents of Water
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Noah (Paul McAllister) on Mountain
The Building of the Ark
Animals in Pairs Entered Ark
The Destruction of the Temple
Miriam Rescued by Japheth From Flood Waters
King Nephilim's Vain Attempt to Enter Ark
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