Most Popular Result
Other Hollywood.com Results
| ▪ |
The Ten Commandments (2007) PG (Feature Film - Drama, Animated, Religion) |
| |
He is an ordinary man, a humble shepherd who, despite a turbulent past, has found peace in a simple life and a loving family. But the day comes when his peaceful life is shattered by the sudden awesome appearance of God, who has a mission for Moses. It's a mission that will thrust Moses onto…
|
| ▪ |
Soldiers Under Command (Feature Film - Music, Documentary) |
| |
Behind the scenes at the ten-year reunion of the first Christian metal band, Stryper.
|
| ▪ |
The Ten Commandments (Remake) (Feature Film - Drama, Historical, Religion) |
| |
The life of Moses and his leading of the Israelites to the Promised Land.
|
| ▪ |
Charlton Heston ( aka. Charles Carter) |
| |
A commanding male lead, a one-person Hollywood trek through the pages of world history and a forceful, Republican vision of a world in which America always wins, Charlton Heston first met with success on Broadway in Katherine Cornell's production of "Anto
|
| ▪ |
The Ten (2007) R (Feature Film - Comedy, Satire, Religion) |
| |
Ten blasphemous comedic stories inspired by the Biblical Commandments. Each tale unfolds in a different style, but with characters and themes that overlap, as told by a narrator who, in turn, has his own moral problems.
|
| ▪ |
The Ten Commandments (1923) NR (Feature Film - ) |
| |
After a prologue depicting the Biblical stories from Exodus, the story picks up in modern-day San Francisco where two brothers, John and Dan McTavish, love Mary Leigh. She chooses Dan, who becomes a wealthy building contractor by using inferior materials and bribing the building inspector, Redding.…
|
| ▪ |
Commandments (1997) R (Feature Film - Comedy, Drama, Religion) |
| |
A man''s wife dies and he attempts to take revenge on God by breaking every one of the Ten Commandments.
|
| ▪ |
Anne Bauchens |
| |
Entered film in 1919 and worked on over 25 Cecil B. DeMille films, from "The Ten Commandments" (1923) to "The Ten Commandments" (1956).
|
BACK