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THE LOST CITY OF CECIL B. DE MILLE – A DOCUMENTARY ADVENTURE
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THE LOST CITY OF CECIL B. DE MILLE – A DOCUMENTARY ADVENTURE

It makes you wonder some times what happens to the sets that were built after making a film. Some of the western sets actually turned into towns or attractions, while others are torn down and the materials used to build a setting for another. But, this documentary The Lost City of Cecil B. DeMille shows where the famous producer buried some of his famous set for The Ten Commandments. It was DeMille’s final masterpiece and this film tells all as to why he would trash something so magnificent.

 

Hand painted still of one of the twenty full size Sphinx’s built by DeMille for the 1923 version of “The Ten Commandments.” [Source: DeMille Estate; Hand painted by Alan Simmons]
DeMille’s had a number of blockbusters as producer and director starting with the silent movie The Ten Commandments (1923) and then Adam’s Rib (1923) and a couple years later The King of Kings (1927) among and many others. When the talkies came into being, DeMille was ready for the new age bringing Cleopatra starring Claudette Colbert as the sultry Queen of Egypt (1934) and The Buccaneer with Fredric March as the swarthy swashbuckler Jean Lafitte (1938), Sampson and Delilah with Hedy Lamarr and Victor Mature as the beauty and the strongman (1949) and three years later The Greatest Show on Earth with James Stewart and Charlton Heston under the big top Circus tent (1952). But this story honors his greatest achievement and not the remake of The Ten Commandments starring Charlton Heston and Yul Brynner as Moses and Rameses with Anne Baxter playing Nefretiri (1956).

Photo # 7: Photo by Kelvin Jones. Archaeologist John Parker and Director Peter Brosnan at site of The Lost City circa 1990.

The documentary plays out like a behind the scenes and actually the audience being the proverbial “fly on the wall” as filmmakers provide an adventure to uncover the set that brought the 1 million dollar The Ten Commandments (1923) to the screen. It was a shot in the dark by Peter Brosnan and co-discoverer Richard Eberhardt. Included in the show is DeMille’s inspirations in an energized biography. With the use of old photos, treasured film clips, press, video, interviews with his daughter, grandchildren, actors and crew and other means the two researchers/documenters provide the biographical adventure of a lifetime.

Photo by Jack McIlroy. Archaeologist Kholood Abdo Hintzman discusses excavation strategy with Filmmaker Peter Brosnan during the 2012 dig on the site of The Lost City of Cecil B. DeMille.

While I give high marks on the biography and look back at the historical tribute of how the film was made, the findings at the site are not as dramatic an expectation and a bit of a letdown. That said however, the imagination and adventure involved does entertain and is worth the watch.

FINAL ANALYSIS: A nice look back at one of America’s greatest show makers. (3 out of 5 Stars)

Specifications and additional video information:
Cast: Cecil B. DeMille, Agnes DeMille, Charlton Heston, Cecilia DeMille Presley
Directed and Written by: Peter Brosnan
Genre: Documentary, Adventure, Biography
MPAA Rating: No Rated, no offensive material
Running Time: 1 hr. 26 min.
Video Release Date: April 10, 2020
Distributed by: Random Media
Released on: Blu-ray, DVD at Walmart, Target, Best Buy and Amazon.

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Writer, critic, film editor John Delia, Sr. has been on all sides of the movie business from publications to film making. He has worked as a film critic with ACED Magazine for more than 20 years and other publications for a total of 40 years. He earned a Bachelor’s degree in communications from the University of Florida. John is a member of the Southeastern Film Critics Association and Critics Association of Central Florida Send John a message at jdelia@acedmagazine.com