Karry
Best movie of this year hands down!
GamerTab
That was an excellent one.
Chirphymium
It's entirely possible that sending the audience out feeling lousy was intentional
BelSports
This is a coming of age storyline that you've seen in one form or another for decades. It takes a truly unique voice to make yet another one worth watching.
weezeralfalfa
Cecil DeMille's take on this well-known Old Testament story is quite entertaining and beautifully photographed in 3-strip Technicolor. I checked out the story in the Bible to get an idea how much DeMille had elaborated on it. Quite a bit, as I had anticipated! The relationship between Sampson and Delilah is much more complex than that described in the bible. It's a mutual love-hate relationship. Quite against the advice of his family and friends, Sampson decided to marry a Philistine princess: Semadar(Angela Lansbury). While preparing for the wedding, Semadar's younger sister, the beautiful Delilah, made herself known to Sampson. They rode a chariot out into the desert to a lion's den, and Sampson grappled with a lion, finally strangling it. Delilah was most impressed, and they kissed. However, when given a choice between the two, Sampson still chose Semadar, perhaps because of her golden hair. Delilah was very disappointed, and vowed to see Samson brought to his knees. Semadar, along with her father, was soon murdered by her own people. Delilah blamed Sampson as the indirect cause, making her hate him more, and yet still loving him at times. Semadar's death reopened the question whether Delilah might take Semadar's place in Sampson's life. Delilah was offered a fortune by the Philistine council, if she could learn the secrete of Sampson's extraordinary strength. Sampson came to her and, at first, offered false leads. Eventually, he told her that his faith in God and his long hair was the source of his strength. Thus, Delilah gave him a sedative in his drink, putting him in a deep sleep, then cut his hair. When he awoke, he was bound and surrounded by spears. After Delilah left, the Saran(George Sanders), ordered that Samson be blinded by a red-hot knife, before being bound to a grain mill stone, as oxen were.Delilah enjoyed seeing Samson doing slave labor, but was horrified when she discovered that Sampson had been blinded, for she still had feelings for him. She secretly told him she would be his eyes from now on. A Hebrew woman who had long hoped Samson would marry her, showed up and requested that she be allowed to take Sampson home. But, Delilah responded that she would not allow any other woman to romance Sampson, even now that he was blind. During the public humiliation of Sampson in the temple of Dagon(Philistine god), Sampson requests that Delilah lead him to the pillars that held up the back portion of the temple, including the idol of Dagon. This she does, and he tells her to leave the temple. But she refuses. If he succeeds in toppling the temple, clearly he will die, and the implication is that she wishes to die with him.Given all the Philistines that Sampson had killed prior to the temple collapse, it's a wonder he wasn't killed immediately after his capture. But that wasn't what Delilah wanted, and she seemed to rule his destiny at this point. Of course, the strange claim by Sampson that his strength was derived from his hair is silly. If he lost any strength from the cutting of his hair, he soon regained it in pulling the grindstone around and toppling the temple. It's strange that his head wasn't shaved, to keep him weak.In this period , Victor Mature was the ideal person to play Sampson, despite the problems DeMille had with him. He was beefy, well spoken, and definitely looked Mediterranean. This was the first of a string of films over the next 5 years rooted in the ancient world that Mature would star in...Hedy Lamarr was perfect as Delilah, although I don't consider her quite the beauty some others do. She also had a Semitic look, aside from her blue eyes. The other major actors were also good. Angela Lansburg didn't have that much to do.
PWNYCNY
This is a great movie, utterly impossible not to like. A hero with flaws betrayed by a woman who later has regrets and wants to atone. Victor Mature plays Samson and Hedy Lamarr Delilah. The chemistry between the two is immediately apparent. This drives the entire story and provides its emotional power. The story itself is intense. It is about political oppression and redemption. Lamarr gives a powerful performance as Delilah. Her character undergoes a dramatic transition from sinister vixen to s strong and dignified woman. By the end of the movie, she is a figure worthy of admiration. Although both Samson and Delilah are principal characters, the movie ultimately is about Delilah, the agent throughout Samson's destiny is realized. This movie is outstanding.
dougdoepke
It's hard not to mock this comic book version of the Bible's Book of Judges. However, if you can put up with the non-stop palaver, exterior sets and spotty acting, there is a big payoff at the end. That's when the heathens' temple of Dagon collapses in grand fashion thanks to Samson's eye-bulging strength and the Israelites' vengeful god. Catch all those cheering heathens getting suddenly creamed by ten-ton cardboard rocks. It's a Technicolor doozy and a real tribute to Paramount's special effects department.Nonetheless, the movie's other big action sequence— Samson swinging the jawbone—makes you wonder if the Philistines ever discovered the use of the spears they carry. Too bad that the staging there is about as credible as Wiley and the Roadrunner. Still, I could gaze into LaMarr's very non-Semitic blue eyes all day long. She and the hunky Mature definitely incarnate Hollywood's over-the-top imagination. But pity the clunky lines they have to recite. Stuff like "The Philistine dogs over our green fields do pass". Hollywood was always at its dialog worst when putting poetic excess like this into the mouths of unfortunate ancients and ethnics.Okay, I tried not to mock the movie, but it's just too hard to resist. On the other hand, the production remains a colorful eyeful, along with fancy costuming still fit for a royal court. Plus, there's the incomparable George Sanders at his snooty best. But these Biblical epics were too often commercial traps Hollywood just couldn't resist— that is, guaranteed big bucks in return for comic book treatments. Unfortunately, this is one of them.(In passing— contrary to the movie's version, this is how Samson actually got the cloaks to pay off his riddle wager: " And the spirit of the LORD came upon him {Samson}, and he went down to Ashkelon and slew thirty men of them {Philistines}, and took their spoil {cloaks}, and gave change of garments unto them which expounded the riddle." Judges 14:19. In short, De Mille and Co. turned the unacceptable mass murder in the Bible into the movie's rather comical crime of thievery, presumably to make the story more acceptable to ticket- buying audiences. How fitting.)
Jimmy L.
I give DeMille credit for trying. The costumes, the temple set, all of the extras... The feel of a biblical epic. This film just didn't do it for me. It doesn't hold up against the cynicism of a modern audience. It just seems to me like DeMille, who'd built up his career during the early silent days, did everything the "old" way. And it shows.Whether it's a lingering shot of a bulky stuntman who's not named Vic Mature, a sloppily edited brawl, a stuntman hanging by wires to simulate Samson's strength, stagey sets, clunky acting, or the fact that it is all taken so seriously, this is a film whose intended power is compromised by its unintentional silliness. (Mature, who'd fought rear-projection reptiles nine years earlier in ONE MILLION B.C., valiantly wrestles with a stuffed lion skin.) I know modern effects technology did not exist in 1949, but I doubt SAMSON AND DELILAH employs cutting-edge techniques, even for the time. Or if it does, DeMille doesn't do a great job passing the tricks off. It just seems like an old-fashioned movie made at a time when movies had already advanced past that.Or maybe that's just me. The film was a box office hit.One thing the movie does have is the beauty of Hedy Lamarr in the role of the wicked seductress Delilah. Lamarr may never have looked better than in the revealing Old Testament costumes of this film, and in glorious Technicolor.Victor Mature plays the lead role of Samson, a Hebrew shepherd with superhuman strength, which he attributes to his devotion to God. After a spoiled wedding night (and much bloodshed), Samson becomes Public Enemy No. 1 among the Philistines. Samson is a threat to an entire army, even unarmed, and cannot be taken into custody while he has his power. The Philistines send the jilted Delilah to win Samson's trust so that she may learn the source of his strength. (Hell hath no fury...)George Sanders gives a solid performance as the Philistine king, who desires Delilah but knows better than to trust her. It's also nice to see a youthful Angela Lansbury as Delilah's sister and the original object of Samson's affection.It took me a while to get into this epic, but I did take interest in Samson's great comeback. I was only vaguely familiar with the story of Samson from the Bible. After his betrayal I wanted to see his redemption, which leads up to the heathen temple set piece. Again, the scene seems dated today, but you can tell what they're trying to say with it. The finale does pack some punch. It's really a good story, Samson's, if you ignore DeMille's sometimes cheesy presentation.