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Samson's “Thorn bush” tagging of Delilah within Cecil B. Demille's Samson and Delilah (1949): Pricking one's scriptural conscience?

Version 2 2024-06-19, 01:43
Version 1 2023-10-26, 04:27
journal contribution
posted on 2024-06-19, 01:43 authored by AK Kozlovic
Legendary producer-director Cecil B. DeMille was a seminal cofounder of Hollywood, a progenitor of Paramount Pictures, and an unsung auteur who was not only an early pioneer of the religion-and-film genre but became the undisputed master of the American biblical epic. However, the many deftly engineered sacred subtexts, thematic preoccupations, and aesthetic skills of this movie trailblazer were frequently denied, derided or dismissed during his lifetime and decades thereafter. This situation is in need of re-examination, rectification and renewal. Consequently, following a close reading of Samson and Delilah (1949) and a selective review of the critical DeMille, film and religion literature, this article uses Delilah’s (Hedy Lamarr) “thorn bush” tag, given to her during the wedding feast confrontation scene with Samson (Victor Mature), to explicate ten thorn bush themes that reveal some of the hidden depths of C.B.’s biblical artistry. Utilising textually-based humanist film criticism as the guiding analytical lens, this article concludes that DeMille was a far defter biblical filmmaker than has hitherto been appreciated. Further research into DeMille studies, biblical epics, and the religion-and-film field is warranted, recommended and already long overdue.

History

Journal

Journal of Religion, Media and Digital Culture

Volume

3

Pagination

74-106

Location

Leiden, The Netherlands

ISSN

2588-8099

eISSN

2165-9214

Language

English

Publication classification

C1.1 Refereed article in a scholarly journal

Issue

3

Publisher

Brill Academic Publishers

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